95th/Dan Ryan station

95th/Dan Ryan

95th/Dan Ryan station in April 2009
Location 15 West 95th Street
Chicago, Illinois 60620
Coordinates 41°43′21″N 87°37′28″W / 41.722596°N 87.624391°W / 41.722596; -87.624391
Owned by Chicago Transit Authority
Line(s)
Platforms 1 Island platform
Tracks 2
Connections

CTA Buses
Pace Buses

Greyhound Bus
Construction
Structure type Surface Level
Bicycle facilities Yes
Disabled access Yes
History
Opened September 28, 1969
Rebuilt 200001 (elevator added, minor renovations), 2003 (bus terminal renovations), 201418 (terminal reconstruction)
Previous names 95th, 95th/State (Station Sign)
Traffic
Passengers (2015) 3,676,215[1]Increase 0.2%
Rank 9 out of 143[lower-alpha 1]
Services
Preceding station   Chicago "L"   Following station
toward Howard
Red LineTerminus
Route map
Legend

Red Line
north to Howard

Bus lane
95th St.

95th/Dan Ryan (or simply 95th) is a rapid transit station on the Chicago 'L' system in the median of the Dan Ryan Expressway and serving Chicago's Roseland neighborhood. Currently, it serves as the southern terminus of the Chicago Transit Authority's Red Line. This station was the system's ninth busiest in 2015.[1] Trains take approximately 30 minutes to travel to the Loop, and 60 minutes to reach Howard.[2]

It is the only CTA rail terminal located in an expressway (except for UIC-Halsted, which is the terminal for Blue Line trains during weekday rush hours), and also one of the only terminals with no park-and-ride lot. Like Howard, this station has a bus terminal and connects to Pace and CTA buses, but unlike Howard, it also connects to Greyhound buses.

As part of the Red Ahead project, the Red Line is being extended south of 95th Street to 130th Street on the Far South Side of Chicago. Once the extension is complete, 95th/Dan Ryan will be renamed "95th" and the rail yard will be closed. [3]

History

Ironically, though the station is called 95th/Dan Ryan, no CTA announcement says it that way. Before the CTA changed the name of 95th/Dan Ryan to simply 95th, the destination signs, the station signs, and other signs labeled it as 95/Dan Ryan. This is possibly because of the old CTA maps labeling it as "95".

Ridership

Approximately 50,000 people go through the terminal every day. Many commuters from the far south side or south suburbs connect to 95th Street via the CTA and Pace bus systems. 95th/Dan Ryan is the southernmost stop in the CTA system. In 2006, Congressman Jesse Jackson, Jr. announced plans to extend Red Line service further south. Proposed new stations would include 103rd, 111th, Michigan, and will end at 130th.[4]

The station also serves as the Greyhound bus "Chicago 95th & Dan Ryan, Illinois" station.[5]

95th Street Terminal Reconstruction project

After the Red Line South Reconstruction project is completed in October 2013, The CTA is planning to do a reconstruction project that will cost $240 million, and will expand, improve and rebuild the entire 95th Street terminal; the terminal station will remain open during the project, and the project began on September 22, 2014 and will continue through 2017.[6] with the South Terminal opening in 2017 and the North Terminal opening in 2018.[7]

Extension

Four over four decades, the city of Chicago has been vowing to extend the CTA Red Line south of 95th/Dan Ryan. And for good reason: 95th has become overcrowded, with the station filled to capacity during a typical rush hour. Riders have complained about the inconveniences associated with bus-to-train transfers: long waits, long rides, crowded conditions, et cetera. In 2016, the CTA finalized a plan to extend the Red Line south of 95th to 130th Street. The extension would parallel a Union Pacific right-of-way and have stations located at 103rd Street, 111th Street, Michigan Avenue (at 115th Street) and a terminal station at 130th Street. These stations will be strategically located to serve the areas that, currently, CTA bus routes that operate out of 95th serve. The 95th/Dan Ryan renovation project will continue. The station is expected to remain busy, but the extension will ease overcrowding. Funding for this extension has been identified. The extension is in the final stages of planning, with construction beginning in 2022. The extension will enter service in 2026. [8]

Bus connections

CTA

Pace

Notes and references

Notes

  1. Due to possible double-counting of physically-connected stations, the CTA's official 2015 tally of stations was 146, but for ridership purposes reported having only 143 stations.

References

External links

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