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The Loop

 
Wikipedia: The Loop (CTA)
The Loop

The southeastern corner of The Loop
Info
Type Rapid transit
System Chicago 'L'
Status Operational
Locale Chicago, Illinois, USA
Stations 9
Operation
Opened 1895–1897
Operator(s) Chicago Transit Authority
Character Elevated right of way
Technical
Track length 2 miles (3.2 km)
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) (standard gauge)
Electrification Third rail

The Loop (historically Union Loop from multiple entities owned by transit baron Charles Tyson Yerkes, including two that began with the word Union) is the name given to the two mile circuit of elevated railroad that forms the hub of the 'L' rapid transit system in Chicago, Illinois. The Loop is so named because the railroad loops around a rectangle formed by Lake Street (north side), Wabash Avenue (east), Van Buren Street (south), and Wells Street (west). The surrounding area is also known as The Loop. Numerous accounts assert that the use of this term predates the elevated railroad, deriving from the multiple cable car turntables, or loops, that terminated in the district, and especially those of two lines that shared a loop, constructed in 1882, bounded by Madison, Wabash, State, and Lake.[1] However, transportation historian Bruce Moffat, after extensive research of the issue, concluded that "the Loop" was not used as a proper noun until after Yerkes's 1895–97 construction of the elevated hub.[2]

Contents

Operations

A Brown Line train departing from Madison/Wabash

The Loop includes nine stations: Clark/Lake and State/Lake are on the northern leg; Randolph/Wabash, Madison/Wabash, and Adams/Wabash are on the eastern side; Library and LaSalle/Van Buren are on the southern leg; and Quincy and Washington/Wells are on the western side. In 2007 19,758,148 passengers entered the 'L' via these stations.[3]

Five of the eight 'L' lines use the Loop tracks. Two of the remaining three lines, Blue and Red, run underground through the center of the loop, connecting to loop stations. The Yellow line is the only CTA line that does not run on or connect to the loop.

Tower 18 at the nw corner

The Purple Line Express (weekday peak hours only) and the Brown Line enter from the north at the northwestern corner. The Purple Line Express makes a full circuit in the clockwise direction while the Brown Line makes a full circuit traveling counterclockwise. The Orange Line enters from the south at the southeastern corner and the Pink Line enters from the west at the northwestern corner; both making a full clockwise circuit. Following the completion of a full circuit in their respective directions, trains of these four lines return to their terminals making stops in the reverse order they made when heading to the Loop. The Green Line runs in both directions but does not make a full circuit, using only the north and eastern sides of the Loop to move between the Lake Street Line and the South Side Elevated.

Two towers control entry to and exit from the Loop. Tower 12 stands at the southeastern corner. Tower 18 stands watch over the three-quarter union located at the northwestern corner, which at one time was the busiest elevated railroad interlocking in the world.[citation needed]

History

Prior to construction of the Union Loop, Chicago's three elevated railway lines—the South Side Elevated Railroad, the Lake Street Elevated Railroad, and the Metropolitan West Side Elevated Railroad—each had their own terminal on the edges of downtown Chicago. Charles Tyson Yerkes masterminded the linking of these railroads.[4] The Union Loop was constructed in separate sections: the Lake Street 'L' was extended along the north side in 1895; the Union Elevated Railroad opened the east side along Wabash Avenue in 1896 and the west side along Wells Street in 1897; and the Union Consolidated Elevated Railroad opened the south side along Van Buren Street in 1897. Originally there were 12 stations, with three stations on each side. The construction of the west-leg of the Union Loop over Wells Street required the removal of the southern platform of the Fifth/Lake station. The addition of the Northwestern Elevated Railroad caused the removal of the rest of the station as the remaining platform sat across the new road's entry point.[5] This left 11 stations, two on the north leg of the loop and three on each other leg.

The Loop was born in political scandal: upon completion, all the rail lines running downtown had to pay Yerkes's operation a fee, which raised fares for commuters; when Yerkes, after bribery of the state legislature, secured legislation by which he claimed a fifty-year franchise, the resulting furor drove him out of town and ushered in a short-lived era of "Progressive Reform" in Chicago.[6]

The Loop in popular culture

A CTA train travels part of The Loop in 2008.

The Loop has appeared in a number of films. In The Blues Brothers (1980) Elwood lived in a flophouse on Van Buren Street next to the 'L' tracks, and the Chicago Police car pile up was underneath the Lake Street section of the loop tracks.[7]

The lead character of While You Were Sleeping (1995) was a fare collector at State/Lake station.

In the film Spider Man 2, there is a fight scene involving an elevated train very similar in appearance to Chicago's 'L' trains. Although the movie is set in New York City, the scenes on the train were filmed in Chicago.

The medical drama ER shoots on-scene and/or features parts of The Loop frequently.

In The Matrix (1999), subway cars indicated their destination as "The Loop," as well as street locations given as Loop-related locations ("Wells and Lake").[8]

The Fugitive (1993) included many scenes involving the "L" train in parts of The Loop.

Station listing

Loop
Station Location Points of interest & Notes
Randolph/Wells 150 N. Wells St. Closed 1995; replaced by Washington/Wells
Washington/Wells Handicapped/disabled access25 railtransportation.svg 100 N. Wells Street Chicago City Hall, Civic Opera House, Chicago Mercantile Exchange

Transfer for Metra trains via Ogilvie Transportation Center

Madison/Wells 1 N. Wells St. Closed January 30, 1994; replaced by Washington/Wells
Quincy 25 railtransportation.svg 220 S. Wells Street Sears Tower

Transfer for Metra and Amtrak trains via Union Station

LaSalle/Van Buren 25 railtransportation.svg 121 W. Van Buren Street Chicago Board of Trade, Chicago Board Options Exchange

Transfer for Metra trains via LaSalle Street Station

Dearborn/Van Buren Dearborn Street and Van Buren Street Closed 1949
Library-State/Van Buren Handicapped/disabled access 1 W. Van Buren Street Harold Washington Library

Transfer station for Blue and Red Lines.

State/Van Buren 400 S. State St. Closed September 20, 1973
Adams/Wabash 201 S. Wabash Avenue Grant Park, Petrillo Music Shell, Buckingham Fountain, Art Institute of Chicago
Madison/Wabash 2 N. Wabash Avenue Jewelers Row
Randolph/Wabash 25 railtransportation.svg 151 N. Wabash Avenue Marshall Field's, Chicago Cultural Center, Millennium Park

Transfer for Metra and South Shore trains via Millennium Station

State/Lake 200 N. State Street Chicago Theatre, Gene Siskel Film Center

Transfer station for Red Line

Clark/Lake Handicapped/disabled access 100 W. Lake Street, Chicago James R. Thompson Center, Richard J. Daley Center

Transfer station for Blue Line

Fifth/Lake Wells Street and Lake Street Closed December 17, 1899

See also

References

Coordinates: 41°52′48″N 87°38′47″W / 41.88°N 87.64639°W / 41.88; -87.64639


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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "The Loop (CTA)" Read more