logo
F.K. Plous: Build the CTA Super Loop to get Lincoln Yards and The 78 developed

F.K. Plous: Build the CTA Super Loop to get Lincoln Yards and The 78 developed

Chicago Tribune11-07-2025
In April, the Tribune Editorial Board asked: 'Is Lincoln Yards becoming Chicago's new Block 37?'
Block 37, for those too young to remember, was the space surrounded by State, Dearborn, Randolph and Washington streets that stood empty for 20 years until an exasperated Mayor Richard M. Daley found a developer willing to build what amounted to a disappointing assembly of retail stores.
Today, a similar drama is unfolding on a much bigger scale 2 miles north of downtown on a vacant 54-acre tract of former industrial land dubbed Lincoln Yards. Developer Sterling Bay announced its intention to build a mix of office, residential and commercial buildings on the tract back in 2019.
But in five years, Sterling Bay has finished only one Lincoln Yards project, a life sciences building that today stands empty. Famishing for capital to keep the project alive, Sterling Bay surrendered ownership of more than half the tract to Arkansas-based lender Bank OZK. Now Los Angeles-based Kayne Anderson and Chicago-based JDL are planning to acquire the entire tract for a bargain. But the partners' plans — at least at this point — suggest a much more modest scale of development than Sterling Bay's: shorter high-rises, a lower residential population, and less commercial and office space.
What went wrong with Lincoln Yards? Most of the postmortems name the usual suspects: the pandemic, the massive conversion of office work to remote work, rising interest rates and political foot-dragging by Lori Lightfoot when she was mayor and Ald. Scott Waguespack.
Those factors may have played a role, but so does another element that everyone seems to overlook: geography. The map of Lincoln Yards looks forbidding. In a flat city where all private and public property is organized into rectangles and triangles aligned with the principal points of the compass, Lincoln Yards is defined by a series of wedges, lumps and lobes that don't adjoin with the rest of the Chicago street map. Like its deviant neighbor to the south, Goose Island, Lincoln Yards is full of confusing little streets that don't line up with the Chicago grid and bear names not found in any other neighborhood.
The problem is the river. Early Chicago may have craved a clear and simple street grid, but it craved growth even more, and that meant quick access to the docks where schooners delivered the coal, salt, lumber, shingles, iron, flour and whiskey the new city needed for growth. Because the river winds, the streets accessing the docks in Lincoln Yards had to deviate in their headings. Even veteran Chicago motorists find the place confusing, and transit hardly goes there. Elston Avenue, which forms the tract's western edge, lost its CTA bus service in 1997. Elston should be the gateway to Lincoln Yards, but when a popular band is performing at the Salt Shed between Division Street and North Avenue, Elston seizes up. Should Elston attract more new businesses and residents, Lincoln Yards could become inaccessible.
By surface vehicles, at least. But more than 20 years ago, the CTA was pondering a new subway that could have provided Lincoln Yards, Bucktown, Noble Square and adjacent neighborhoods with a fast, frequent mass transit service to the Loop, Near North Side, Near West Side and the Illinois Medical District plus connections to the Blue Line to O'Hare International Airport and the Orange Line to Midway Airport.
The proposed Super Loop, sometimes known as the Circle Line, seemed achievable and practical because more than half the route would use existing CTA infrastructure. Northbound trains would follow the Red Line subway from the Loop to the North and Clybourn station. Then, just north of the station, a new underground junction would enable Super Loop trains to switch onto a new pair of tracks running west under North Avenue. That westbound segment was to include a station at North and Elston at the southwest corner of the area that would become Lincoln Yards.
From North and Elston, the underground tubes would head west half a mile, then turn south under Ashland Avenue. At the busy corner of Division Street and Ashland and Milwaukee avenues, the line would pass under the existing Blue Line subway station, where Super Loop passengers could ride an escalator up one level to transfer to trains to O'Hare or downtown. Proceeding south under Ashland, trains would stop at a new station under Chicago Avenue. Just south of the Chicago and Ashland stop, the line would swing slightly west, climb out of the tunnel and ramp up onto an unused segment of the old West Side Elevated Railway.
At Lake Street, it would cross the elevated Green Line just west of the Ashland stop, where a platform would enable passengers to transfer to Green and Pink Line trains. Continuing south on what's today known as the Pink Line, trains would stop at a new station serving the United Center, the existing station serving the West Side medical district and the 18th Street stop serving the Pilsen neighborhood.
But just south of 18th Street, where the Pink Line turns west, Super Loop trains would continue south on a new elevated right of way paralleling Ashland Avenue, crossing the sanitary canal and curving northeast to join the Orange Line elevated just west of its Ashland stop, where passengers could catch an Orange Line train to Midway. At Chinatown, trains would switch onto the Red Line and repeat their itinerary.
All seemed to be going well for the new Super Loop plan until around 2012, when the CTA quietly dropped the project. The Red Line subway lacked the capacity to handle the increased train frequencies generated by the Super Loop. Under then President Dorval Carter Jr., the CTA switched its growth focus from circulation within the urban core to outreach toward the margins with a $6 billion, 6-mile extension of the Red Line to the Far South Side at 130th Street.
But today, with the Red Line extension barely started and two giant tracts of real estate waiting for development deep inside the city, it's time to rethink the Super Loop not just as a people mover but also as a tool for jump-starting development and generating vital real estate tax revenues.
It would work like this: With the Red Line off-limits to more trains, switch those Super Loop trains at Chinatown into a new subway running parallel to the Red Line three blocks west under The 78. Build two underground stations: one at the south end of The 78 just north of 16th Street, the other a half-mile north at, or under, the Chicago Fire's proposed new soccer stadium.
Rapid transit stations serving a major stadium are essential in preventing traffic congestion on game days. One reason Chicago and New York are the only remaining cities with two Major League Baseball teams is that both ballparks in both cities are on the rapid transit system (and in Chicago, Rate Field is served by Metra as well).
Heading north from the Fire's new stadium in The 78, the Super Loop tube would cross under the South Branch of the Chicago River and head north under Canal Street to a long-overdue two-block-long underground station serving Union Station and the Ogilvie Transportation Center, neither of which was ever directly connected to the city's rapid transit infrastructure (or to each other). The new connectivity would take thousands of daily vehicles, buses and taxis out of the congested West Loop — especially on Canal, Adams, Clinton and Jackson streets — and create a long-delayed all-weather pedestrian connection between the two busy rail terminals.
Continuing north under Canal, the new subway would bring precious new mobility to the congested and fast-growing River West and Fulton River districts, two formerly obscure tracts of warehouses and railroad spurs now throbbing with residential development — and auto traffic. The next stop north would be Goose Island, another once-obscure tract of factories and rail yards now generating explosive commercial development (and congestion).
As originally proposed, the CTA Super Loop running west from North and Clybourn would have merely grazed Lincoln Yards with an underground station at the far southwestern corner of the tract, North and Elston. On its new north-south orientation, the subway could head directly northwest from Goose Island into the heart of Lincoln Yards, with two underground stations — one in the south tract at a location next to Cortland Street and the Armitage Avenue bus line, and another in the longer north tract, around Dickens Avenue. The line would access the popular 606 trail, then loop west to Ashland and turn south on the original Super Loop heading (but with a 'Gateway to Bucktown' station under the busy intersection of Ashland and North).
There's no reason to scratch heads and ponder why two large and promising tracts of urban real estate continue to stand empty in a city full of eager, experienced and well-financed developers and young families seeking an urban home. Those promising properties are inaccessible. The missing element is the mass mobility provided by a new rail transit infrastructure.
Expensive? Compared to what? Has anybody calculated the real estate taxes never paid by two empty prairies?
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Foxconn, Softbank to establish joint data center equipment factory
Foxconn, Softbank to establish joint data center equipment factory

Yahoo

time26 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Foxconn, Softbank to establish joint data center equipment factory

This story was originally published on Manufacturing Dive. To receive daily news and insights, subscribe to our free daily Manufacturing Dive newsletter. Apple product maker Foxconn and Japan-based conglomerate Softbank will establish a joint data center equipment manufacturing facility in Lordstown, Ohio, Foxconn Chairman Young Liu announced Monday, according to a transcript obtained by local station WFMJ. 'For the data center equipment part, we and SoftBank will each hold 50%,' Liu said. 'As for the equipment itself and the site, those will be 100% owned by SoftBank.' Foxconn announced earlier this month that it had sold the facility to an undisclosed buyer for $375 million and aims to further develop its artificial intelligence business in the United States, according to various media reports. Last week, Bloomberg reported that Softbank bought the Lordstown facility as it looks to accelerate its plans to jumpstart its $500 billion Stargate Project. The four-year project, announced in January, aims to build new AI infrastructure for OpenAI in the U.S., according to the Jan. 21 press release. Software developer Oracle and tech company MGX are also involved in the project as investors. SoftBank will take on the financial responsibility, while OpenAI will oversee operations. Additionally, Oracle, Nvidia, and OpenAI will collaborate to build and operate the Stargate computing system, according to OpenAI's press release. The buildout is currently underway and started in Texas, with plans to establish more campuses in the U.S. as the companies finalized agreements. The project's progress has been 'going slower than usual,' Softbank SVP and CFO Yoshimitsu Goto said during an Aug. 7 earnings call. One reason, at the time of the call, is the selection of a site to house the project. 'There are a lot of stakeholders,' Goto said. 'To build consensus, we need to have a lot of discussions and also technical issues and construction issues. There are a lot of things that we need to look at.' However, the joint facility plans with Softbank have been moving 'for some time,' more than 'half a year ago,' Liu said on Monday. 'We know that this cooperation project, first of all, requires electricity and land,' Liu added. 'Timing is also very important — if we wait too long, it won't work. Considering all these factors together, we feel that Ohio is a very suitable location. SoftBank feels the same way.' The joint project aligns with Foxconn's shift to AI as demand continues to grow in the U.S., rotating CEO Kathy Yang said during an Aug. 14 earnings call. 'We will utilize our Ohio campus to expand into the manufacturing of cloud and networking products,' Yang said regarding the Lordstown facility. 'This investment will further strengthen Hon Hai Precision Industry's position in the global AI industry and demonstrate our strong partnerships and comprehensive global presence.' The 'overwhelming' customer demand for AI servers had led the company to invest in expanding production at its server manufacturing facilities in Texas and Wisconsin over the next year or two, Yang added. Foxconn also aims to expand production capacity for liquid cooling and testing. Additionally, the company plans to increase production capacity for its cloud and networking-related products at its facilities in California and Ohio, Yang said. 'The U.S. is a vital part of our footprint, enabling us to better serve the rapidly growing demand from our customers for AI and data solutions across the world,' Foxconn Chief Product Officer Jerry Hsiao said in his keynote address at Taiwan Expo USA in Dallas last week. 'Foxconn invests heavily in [research and development] to innovate in areas like cooling technologies, energy efficiency, and modular server design, helping to advance the capabilities of AI infrastructure.' Earlier this year, Foxconn launched its own AI large language model, designed to support various manufacturing-related functions, including data analysis and decision support. Then in May, the Apple product maker expanded its partnership with Nvidia to build an AI Blackwell Supercomputer factory through Foxconn's subsidiary, Big Innovation Co. Foxconn previously acquired the Ohio facility from electric vehicle maker Lordstown Motors in May 2022. The electronics manufacturer initially planned to produce EV battery packs in Lordstown and Mount Pleasant, Wisconsin. The plans changed as Lordstown Motors filed for bankruptcy and sued the electronics manufacturer in June 2023. Also in the same year, Foxconn began selling some of its Mount Pleasant land, with Microsoft as one of the buyers. Elsewhere in the U.S., Foxconn has more than 40 operational sites across 12 states and employs more than 6,500 people, according to an Aug. 14 press release. Recommended Reading Foxconn launches own AI model Sign in to access your portfolio

These little robots are changing the way solar farms are built, saving time and money
These little robots are changing the way solar farms are built, saving time and money

CNBC

timean hour ago

  • CNBC

These little robots are changing the way solar farms are built, saving time and money

Private renewable energy projects are still moving forward despite a pullback in government support, and new technology is making that construction more efficient. Solar farms, for example, take meticulous planning and surveying, involve long hours and require significant labor. Now, robots are taking on the job. CivDot is a four-wheeled robot that can mark up to 3,000 layout points per day and is accurate within 8 millimeters. The machine can ride over rugged terrain and work through rough weather. It is the brainchild of California-based Civ Robotics. "Our secret sauce and our core technology is actually in the navigation and the geospatial -- being able to literally mark coordinates within less than a quarter inch, which is very, very difficult in an uneven terrain, outdoor surfaces, and out in the desert," said Tom Yeshurun, CEO of Civ Robotics. The data for manual surveying is uploaded into the Civ software, then the operator chooses the area they want to mark and presses go. The robot does the rest, saving both time and money. "The manual surveying equipment, if you use that in the field and you have three crews, they will need three land surveying handheld receivers. That alone is already equal to how much we lease our machines in the field, and all the labor savings is just another benefit," Yeshurun said. Civ Robotics has more than 100 of these robots in the field that are primarily being used by renewable energy companies, but they are also used in oil and gas. It is currently working with Bechtel Corporation on several solar projects. "These were usually pretty highly paid field engineers that we would send out there, and they might be able to do 250 or 350 pile marks a day. With the CivDot robot, we're able to do about 1250 a day," said Kelley Brown, vice president at Bechtel. Brown said the company has used the robot in thick and muddy terrain in Texas and out in the deserts of Nevada. "And so you have to think about things like the tires, or you may have to think about clearance. Are you trying to get over existing brush and such, across the solar field? So that's one thing that we contemplate. I think the other is, you know, this runs on batteries, so you've got to contemplate battery swaps," she added. Civ Robotics is backed by Alleycorp, FF Venture Capital, Bobcat Company, Newfund Capital, Trimble Ventures, and Converge. Total VC funding to date is $12.5 million. There are other robotics solutions for markings, but the competition is mostly doing work on highways and soccer fields. Yeshurun said those rivals can't handle the terrains that the solar industry faces as it expands into new territories.

Prop Firm Prime Trading Enters Chicago S&P 500 Options Pit
Prop Firm Prime Trading Enters Chicago S&P 500 Options Pit

Bloomberg

timean hour ago

  • Bloomberg

Prop Firm Prime Trading Enters Chicago S&P 500 Options Pit

Prime Trading has established a floor operation at Cboe Options Exchange, in a sign the 177 year-old tradition of face-to-face derivatives trading in Chicago is continuing to attract investment. Prime joins a cohort of market makers to have set up shop since Cboe revamped its open outcry floor in 2022. The growth underscores the enduring need for in-person trading to connect buyers and sellers on more complex orders, despite most volume shifting to contracts traded on the screen. The Chicago floor has pits where Russell 2000, VIX, single-stock and ETF options trade, along with the S&P 500.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store