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FLGMwt | 7 years ago
$25 for 12 minutes from one place in the loop to O'Hare
CTA is $2.50 for 37 minutes (the $5 is if you start from O'Hare)
This is only benefitting people for whom 25 minutes is worth $20/$22.50.
$1bn or whatever absurd cost it comes out to be is much better spent on improving transit for the actual public.
Or you know, to stop shutting down schools.
EDIT: typo
gok|7 years ago
I keep hearing this argument about the Blue Line from people who really don't sound like they've tried it. I'm happy we have it as an option but it's really not ideal. A 12 minute express with short headway and space for bags would be a total game changer. Everyone within ~25 minutes of the Loop would now be able to take transit to/from the airport in 40 minutes, not just people who happen to be going to/from the central business district.
And the city isn't paying any of that $1B, they're really just giving Boring Company permission to try to pay for it on their own. It's not money that would otherwise be spent on CPS. I'm not completely convinced this is really the right solution. My personal pick would be using the Metra NCS route to run an express train and then moving the the O'Hare Transfer Station to be actually inside the airport, which would also make transfers with Amtrak and other Metra services easy. But that too would cost a lot more than $1B, and no one's jumping up to do it.
lvh|7 years ago
(Doesn't have to be the Blue Line! Metra at Jeff Park or whatever with a track to OHare makes a ton of sense too.)
Turing_Machine|7 years ago
Yep. I traveled from the Loop to O'Hare on the Blue Line with luggage. Once. Never again.
The L just isn't designed for people to be carrying anything larger than maybe a small bag of groceries.
tqi|7 years ago
If I was a business traveler, I would almost certainly prefer taking a car from wherever I was directly to the airport unless I happened to be staying/working right near the stop. The convenience of not having to get to the station, privacy, not having the transfer, etc would outweigh the 20-30 minute savings. Unless traffic was completely backed up in which case having that option is nice.
bonestamp2|7 years ago
This is not true for everyone though. Business travelers take cabs between the loop and o'hare. So, $25 is actually faster and cheaper -- so it's a great use of their money! Even if it was more expensive than a cab, most business travelers would happily spend a little more of someone else's (company) money to get there faster.
ma2rten|7 years ago
neaden|7 years ago
thomasdelteil|7 years ago
jcomis|7 years ago
handelaar|7 years ago
JumpCrisscross|7 years ago
Roads suffer from induced demand [1]. You can't build your way out of traffic. The only solutions are tolls or quotas.
In any case, if you can't find anyone willing to pay to use your infrastructure (at a price that recoups the investment), that's a sign you overbuilt.
> transit for the actual public
Cars going through this tunnel are cars off other roads.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Induced_demand
njarboe|7 years ago
The whole point of Musk's tunneling project is that with tunnels you can build as many tunnels as you want without the negative aspects of roads which are mainly taking up surface space and making a lot of noise.
dsfyu404ed|7 years ago
>Roads suffer from induced demand [1].
Demand is a good thing because it's economic activity that wouldn't have happened if the piece of infrastructure in question wasn't built out. Crappy infrastructure increases the cost of geographic distance and that's bad for everyone.
> You can't build your way out of traffic
Reducing traffic isn't the point. The point is getting more people and goods to and from where they need to be. You can slap a $100 price on a subway ticket or a $100 toll on the highway if you want to reduce traffic. That doesn't help anybody except the people rich enough to regularly pay it.
> The only solutions are tolls or quotas.
Which themselves have a bunch of negative side effects because you're basically forcing that traffic onto other roads or other forms of transit and many trips will be forgone in the process.
You can't create capacity out of thin air by manipulating the cost (money, time or some other metric) of the different transit options. You can only create the illusion of capacity by forcing traffic elsewhere.
>In any case, if you can't find anyone willing to pay to use your infrastructure (at a price that recoups the investment), that's a sign you overbuilt.
Or a sign that your prices are so high that other options are still less worse by comparison.
paulsutter|7 years ago
https://www.inverse.com/article/46041-elon-musk-s-tesla-plan...
> The only solutions are tolls or quotas.
Increasing density of traffic is another solution, for example buses or trains. Elon is proposing one more way to increase the density of traffic: up to 30 levels of tunnels (considering surface density of traffic). I don't know that he can achieve it, but I'm thrilled he's trying.
lvh|7 years ago
Isn't that a contradiction? Or are you saying induced demand only works for cars?
chapium|7 years ago
matt4077|7 years ago
And, of course, this project is far more important as a real-world proof-of-concept for the technology than it is for its expected use for travelers. Reducing tunnel costs by 95%(!) would quite obviously result in dramatic quality-of-life improvements.
microtherion|7 years ago
It's not uncommon for projects to start out that way, and then magically, public money starts appearing anyway.
If this really remains a privately financed project (financed out of the deep pockets of Musk's companies, and completed on time due to Musk's uncannily accurate forecasts), then more power to them!
fishtank|7 years ago
nelzya|7 years ago
distances|7 years ago
Well, not all for sure. Many cities just have their normal city train service extended to the airport. I'd guess the express airport trains are common in countries with privatized rail transport, as that is often one of the most lucrative lines.
kevinmchugh|7 years ago
lucdurette|7 years ago
This is a typical Chicago/Illinois gimmick again The state and the city is so corrupted, another attempt to distract from the other bull-shit they are trying to pull.
The word is, only the mayor and the governor are interested in an express train. Everyone else is happy with the blue-line.
Chicago is so parallized trying to make any decsion. I am ready to bet, the deal will fall aprat during the negocaitions
martinald|7 years ago
selectodude|7 years ago
Joeri|7 years ago
But it shouldn’t be. A brand new transportation mode is going to run at a loss until people figure out how to deploy it at scale. It would be weird for it to be profitable from day one.
l33r|7 years ago
rory096|7 years ago
This is addressed in the RFQ, which includes a model of time value split into four markets:
Business (HH income under $100K) $33
Business (HH income $100K and over) $92
Non-Business (HH income under $100K) $25
Non-Business (HH income $100K and over) $55
It includes this reasoning:
>In the Project work, the values were adapted from a previous study on express service which found that the value of time for business trips is higher than those of non-business trips to O’Hare. In many recent studies, the value of time for long distance trips and work trips has been shown to be higher than VOT for everyday short trips. Trips to/from an airport could be considered as one leg of long distance travel. Also, the total cost of air travel is much higher than the cost of everyday travel; therefore, travelers may be willing to pay more to reduce the risk of missing their flight. Willingness to pay a high fee for airport trips is reported in other studies, for example, for business trips to airports, Harvey reports $42/hour, Furuichi & Koppelman report $73/hour and Hess and Polak report a value in the range of $93-155/hour. The value of time also varies across regions with large metropolitan areas such as New York/New Jersey having higher values than smaller cities.
In the cited 2016 Airport Survey, taxi rides are still in the double digits for non-business low-income residents and drop-offs are as popular as rail (tripling the amount of time to account for, though I don't think they include this). In their reweighting of the survey (because "the Blue Line survey percentage was thought to be high due to over-represented CTA Blue Line use), the plurality took taxis in every category.
http://chicagoinfrastructure.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/...
throwaway43244|7 years ago
prof1le|7 years ago
Why would they approve this project if they didn't feel this was sufficient?
Only thing I can think is that the demand is going to be strong or they're thinking it's a steal with the contractor buying it out and are willing to experiment.
I'm all for new transit solutions and I'm really interested in this one, picking this route in particular though is what's odd to me...
moorhosj|7 years ago
This is being built for business travelers. Many people fly in and out of Chicago on a Monday-Thursday schedule, they will use this train. All of those people will now be in a separate tunnel and everyone else will have more room on the highway and Blue Line. Sounds like a win to me.
hinkley|7 years ago
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tokyo_Bay_Aqua-Line
Turing_Machine|7 years ago
Many of whom get reimbursed by their employers for transportation costs, don't forget. $20 for an airport run is going to look damned cheap to the people who process the expense accounts. It will never be questioned.
koverda|7 years ago
psychometry|7 years ago
twistedpair|7 years ago
distances|7 years ago
zajd|7 years ago
sandworm101|7 years ago
Cities should not support such things. I'm not saying that it shouldn't happen, just that the project shouldn't be given any special treatment, indemnification, or tax breaks. And what do we think will happen to the public option when all the influential people start using the premium service?
Notice also that none of the people in the renderings has any luggage. They aren't even wearing coats. To which magical airport are they headed?
koverda|7 years ago
If this project manages to reduce the cost per mile of building public transportation, the public as a whole will benefit greatly in the years to come. I'm not rich and I would love there to be many more subway lines built out in our cities.
It's the Tesla Roadster of public transit: an expensive proving ground for a technology with a mass-market demand. I'd rather the government give breaks to something with at least a sliver of hope of helping the common person - rather than tax cuts to wealthy, etc.
nickik|7 years ago
Where will you build a revolutionary first transportation system for the masses? Literally every form of transport started as a luxury.