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California station (CTA Blue Line)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

California
 
2800W
2300N
Chicago 'L' rapid transit station
General information
Location2211 North California Avenue
Chicago, Illinois 60647
Coordinates41°55′20″N 87°41′50″W / 41.92222°N 87.69722°W / 41.92222; -87.69722
Owned byChicago Transit Authority
Line(s)O'Hare Branch
Platforms2 Side platforms
Tracks2
Construction
Structure typeElevated
Bicycle facilitiesYes
History
OpenedMay 25, 1895; 128 years ago (1895-05-25)
Rebuilt2014; 10 years ago (2014)
Passengers
2022764,325[1]Increase 38.3%
Services
Preceding station Chicago "L" Following station
Logan Square
toward O'Hare
Blue Line Western
Former services
Preceding station Chicago "L" Following station
Logan Square
Closed 1970
Terminus
Logan Square branch Western
toward Marshfield
Location
Map

California is a station on the Chicago Transit Authority's 'L' system, serving the Blue Line, From California, trains run every 2–7 minutes during rush-hour periods, and take 12 minutes to reach the Loop.[citation needed]

California, the other two stations on the Milwaukee Elevated, and Forest Park are the only Blue Line stations that are not located in an expressway median, or underground. The Milwaukee Elevated stations are also the only stations on the Blue Line to have side platforms, as all of the subway and expressway stations on the line use island platforms.

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • CTA Transit: Budd 2600 Series & Morrison-Knudsen 3200 Series "L" Blue Lines at California Station
  • CTA Transit: 2021 CRRC Sifang 7000 Series "L" Blue Line at Western/ California Station
  • CTA Transit: Morrison-Knudsen 3200 Series & Budd 2600 Series "L" Blue Line at California Station

Transcription

History

California station opened on May 25, 1895, as part of the Metropolitan West Side Elevated's Logan Square branch. In Summer 2008, a temporary entrance immediately to the north of the station house was utilized for two weeks in order to renovate the station house. After stripping the interior, and removing the joist-supported wooden floor, the former crawl space was filled with gravel and covered by a concrete slab, the surface of which was patterned to imitate cobblestone. The repositioned agent box and farecard vending machines substantially increased the pedestrian traffic efficiency through the station house.[citation needed]

The station closed during September and October 2014 for major repairs, but the renovation plans did not include retrofitting the stop so that the elevated platform would be accessible to disabled passengers. The reopening ceremony on October 16 was attended by dignitaries including Rahm Emanuel and Dick Durbin.[2][3]

Station details

Operations and connections

Streetcars replaced cable cars on Milwaukee Avenue between Lawrence and downtown on August 19, 1906. An extension route from Lawrence to Imlay, near the Forest Preserve, opened on December 11, 1914, and the lines were through-routed on October 1, 1927. Streetcars were typically one car each in Chicago; two-car multiple-unit control trains ran on Milwaukee Avenue between March 2, 1925 and May 5, 1929.[4] As of 1928, the line had owl service between 1:05 and 5:35 a.m., wherein cars to Devon Avenue ran every 15 minutes and cars to Gale Street ran every 30 minutes;[5] during the day, streetcars in Chicago typically had intervals of eight to fifteen minutes.[6] Buses replaced streetcars on weekends on October 28, 1951, and altogether on May 11, 1952.[7]

A streetcar service ran on Fullerton Avenue from Halsted Street to Milwaukee Avenue starting in 1895, being extended west to Pulaski in 1909. A further extension west to Cicero took place on September 9, 1914, and to Long Avenue via shuttle absorption on October 21, 1918, and was finally extended to Central Avenue on October 10, 1928.[8] As of 1928, it had owl service between 1:04 and 4:43 a.m., where cars ran at intervals of eight, 24, and 30 minutes.[9] Trolleybuses replaced streetcars on December 4, 1949.[8]

"Through Route 17" (T.R. 17), a streetcar line using Kedzie and California Avenues, began on February 1, 1911, between 63rd and Kedzie and California and Elston; using Chicago Avenue to connect Kedzie and California. Also in 1911, local cars ran through the route north of 22nd Street. Starting on February 7, 1913, T.R. 17 was extended on Elston and Kedzie to Lawrence Avenue; after December 31, 1915, Milwaukee was used instead of Elston to switch from California to Kedzie. T.R. 17 was extended north to Foster on November 1, 1915, and further to Bryn Mawr on October 5, 1924.[10] As of 1928, T.R. 17 had owl service between 1 and 4:30 a.m., with night cars running every 15 minutes; all cars went between 47th and Kedzie and California and Milwaukee, and alternating between going up to Roscoe and California or Bryn Mawr and Kedzie on the north end, and 47th and Kedzie or 67th and Kedzie at the south end.[9] The Kedzie-Homan bus replaced T.R. 17 streetcars on December 4, 1949, but local streetcars continued on weekends until May 11, 1952, and on weekdays until May 29, 1954.[10]

Bus connections

CTA

  • 56 Milwaukee
  • 94 California

References

  1. ^ "Annual Ridership Report – Calendar Year 2022" (PDF). Chicago Transit Authority, Ridership Analysis and Reporting. February 2, 2023. Retrieved June 10, 2023.
  2. ^ Hilkevitch, Jon (13 October 2014), "Blue Line's California station to reopen Thursday", Chicago Tribune, archived from the original on 21 April 2015, retrieved 17 April 2015
  3. ^ Swartz, Tracy (16 October 2014), "CTA California Blue Line stop opens to fanfare", RedEye, Chicago Tribune, archived from the original on 17 April 2015, retrieved 17 April 2015
  4. ^ Lind 1974, p. 284
  5. ^ Lind 1974, p. 203
  6. ^ Lind 1974, p. 201
  7. ^ Lind 1974, p. 289
  8. ^ a b Lind 1974, p. 258
  9. ^ a b Lind 1974, p. 202
  10. ^ a b Lind 1974, p. 272

Works cited

  • Lind, Alan R. (1974). Chicago Surface Lines: An Illustrated History. Park Forest, Illinois: Transport History Press.

External links

This page was last edited on 4 April 2024, at 19:09
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