

Local vendors, food and drinks, while offering strikingĪnd immersive street art experiences as well as street squaresĪvailable for public purchase. This free-admission street art festival features live music, Saturday, Aug.Ģ7, on Howard Street between Paulina and Ashland, east of the Howard Red Line ‘L’ stop. National and local street artists, neighbors,įamilies, and street art lovers will transform the street surface

Howard red line full#
The CTA is collecting feedback from riders on improvements they’d like to see as the project continues in an online survey accessible here.Chalk Howard Street returns for the first time since 2019Ī free immersive experience for the public to interact withĪnd create street art, featuring nationally renowned 3D and 2DĬhalk artists, live music, dance, food and drinks, and moreĬhicago’s only chalk art festival Chalk Howard Street is proud to announce its entertainment programming and vendors list, as it makes a full return outdoor and in person for the first CTA officials said during the meeting they are aiming for a Core Capacity Grant, to qualify the proposed improvements must increase passenger capacity by at least 10%, according to the FTA website. Without grants from the Federal Transit Administration (FTA), work on improving the train lines will be unable to go ahead. One of the goals in completing the study is to devise a plan which will qualify for federal funding. Currently, Red Line trains run with eight cars and Purple Line trains run with six cars. The CTA also hopes to increase the available capacity on trains by eventually having all stations allow for 10-car Red Line trains and eight-car Purple Line trains. The extent of improvements which will be carried out on Rogers Park stations haven’t been finalized and whether any stations will need to be closed for extended periods of time remains unclear.Īnother focus in the study is identifying ways to improve the Howard Street Terminal and railyard to cut down on congestion and delays, Bader said.

So far, as part of Red Ahead, the CTA has reconstructed the Wilson station and has completed the Red-Purple bypass north of the Belmont Station, which clears a bottleneck created by converging Red and Brown Line trains.Īlso on the docket is the Red Line extension, which will extend the Red Line to East 130th Street, adding an additional 5.6 miles and four new stations to the line on the city’s South Side.Īs part of phase one construction, the Lawrence and Berwyn Red Line stations in Edgewater were closed until 2025. The next phase in the RPM Project is included in the CTA’s broader Red Ahead initiative, a program to improve Red Line service. “We’re looking at all options here, which include station location.” “There’s both old and new development that makes streaming the curve challenging,” Bader said during the meeting. The current location of the station, which is nestled closely between buildings, could pose a challenge for planners as the CTA only owns the land where the current station stands. In launching the “next phases planning study,” officials said during the meeting progress on the next segments of the line can begin soon after current construction is completed.ĭuring the meeting, emphasis was placed on the Sheridan Red Line station in Lakeview East, which is over 120 years old and lacks wheelchair accessibility.Ĭhristina Bader, project manager at CTA, said the station will have to be completely reconstructed. This phase of construction, which will bring four new fully accessible stations, is set to be completed in 2025, The Phoenix previously reported.

The CTA is currently completing work reconstructing track structures and stations on the portion of the Red Line which runs through the Uptown and Edgewater neighborhoods. Planners and officials said during the meeting they are focused on making stations better adhere to accessibility standards and updating signal systems that are decades old. The second phase of the Red and Purple Modernization (RPM) Project will focus on three segments of the Red and Purple lines on the north side and north suburbs of Chicago. One of the main areas of focus is the section of the Red Line from the Thorndale to Howard stations which runs through Loyola’s Lake Shore Campus and surrounding communities.
Howard red line update#
The Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) outlined its preliminary goals for the next phase of its ongoing efforts to update aspects of the Red and Purple train lines March 14 during a virtual public meeting.
