CTA and Metra bring holiday cheer to Chicago
By Chrissy Mancini Nichols
Dec 9, 2011
This post first appeared at metroplanning.org
Did You Know? The Chicago Transit Authority’s (CTA) Holiday Train delivers 300 food baskets to community organizations throughout the city of Chicago.
The Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) continues its traditional Holiday Train this month. The Holiday Train, decked out top-to-bottom with thousands of twinkling lights, garland, and bows, and ridden by Santa himself, will be pulling into a station near you throughout the month of December. The Holiday Train is a 20-year tradition that not only puts Chicagoans and visitors in the holiday spirit, but also brings good cheer to the less fortunate: CTA employees give of their time and money to purchase groceries and assemble 300 food baskets, which the Holiday Train delivers to community organizations across the city.
The Holiday Train will traverse every CTA rail line in December as part of regular rail service. Normal fares apply. Visit the CTA Holiday Train web site to find out when Santa will be coming to your train station.
Metra to the North Pole!
Also this month, little ones can take a magical ride to the North Pole on Metra’s Polar Express! This not-to-be missed experience is based on the delightful children’s book Polar Express, written by Chris Van Allsburg. Like the boy in the story who is awakened by a train conductor in the middle night and hops aboard headed to the North Pole, children on Metra’s Polar Express are encouraged to board in their pajamas. They will enjoy milk and cookies, meet Santa and his elves, and hear a reading of Van Allsburg’s classic Christmas tale. To take this enchanting ride to the North Pole, visit Santa in Chicago for boarding locations. Special fares apply.
MPC Headlines
Chicago-area employers unlocking gridlock through Commute Options
On Dec. 1, MPC hosted a roundtable on Commute Options, Better Commutes, Less Congestion: Employer Unlock the Region’s Gridlock. More than 80 attendees heard from area employers and the City of Chicago about what they are doing to provide workers with alternatives to the all-too-typical grinding commute.
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W. Cook County Housing Collaborative to benefit from more than $7M in state, federal funding for foreclosure recovery, housing redevelopment near transitU.S. Dept. of Housing and Urban Development announces $2.9 million Challenge Grant; Illinois Dept. of Commerce and Economic Opportunity announces $4.2 million grant.
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How the Chicago Dept. of Transporation employed Placemaking principles in the reopening of the Queen’s Landing Crossing on Lake Shore Drive.
Pace, IDOT, RTA begin Bus on Shoulder pilot project
Effective Nov. 14, Pace Express Routes 755 and 855 – which operate between free Park-n-Ride lots in the southwest suburbs and the Illinois Medical District, Loop and North Michigan Avenue in Chicago – began operating on designated portions of the shoulder on I-55, the Stevenson Expressway.
News
Local
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National
How Tomorrow's Infrastructure Will Be BuiltIn the old times – that's only ten years ago – a federal minister of planning would sit in his office and single-handedly decide whether a road, port or power-plant would be built, as well as who would build it. Contracts would then be signed behind closed doors, bulldozers would roll in, and taxpayers would foot the bill – the entire bill. Well, those days are all but gone, and a new way of building infrastructure is taking shape.
VDOT plans to build a second Midtown Tunnel in Hampton RoadsThe Virginia Department of Transportation (VDOT) has announced a $2.1 billion public/private partnership project, which would include the creation of a second Midtown Tunnel in Hampton Roads.
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Global
108 Giant Chinese Infrastructure Projects That Are Reshaping The World
There's an old Chinese saying that goes: “If you want to be rich, you must first build roads.” And, boy, have they built some roads: In the past year, we've seen the world's longest sea bridge, the world's longest gas pipeline and a high-speed railway that's left everyone else in the dust — literally. The resultant infrastructure push is incredible. A list of 108 super projects is floating around Chinese message boards and we picked out the 45 coolest ones to showcase here.
Philippines - More public-private partnership projects to be bidded out next year
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Italian govt releases Euro 5 billion for infrastructure
Italian Premier Mario Monti's government will release euro4.8 billion ($6.43 billion) from state coffers to fund major infrastructure projects to help stimulate economic growth. The move is part of Monti's program to help Italy revive its economy. The funds released will pay for highway expansion, new railways and moveable barriers to help protect Venice from floods. Many of the projects have been stalled in progress or stuck in planning.
2012 Top 100 Global Infrastructure Projects List ReleasedCG/LA Infrastructure LLC, the global leader in infrastructure project identification, announced today the release of the Top 100 Global Strategic Infrastructure Projects for 2012. The total estimated value of the projects is nearly US $800 billion, double the value of the Top 100 Projects for 2011.
Infrastructure a road block for businessesWest Australian businesses are losing commercial opportunities and paying more because of deficiencies with roads, telecommunications and energy. Chamber of Commerce and Industry WA chief economist John Nicolaou said these three areas were causing issues for local businesses and reducing their productivity. "The survey reveals that the biggest infrastructure bottlenecks facing employers are roads, telecommunications and energy," Mr Nicolaou said. Almost half of the respondents said that these three areas resulted in higher operating costs for their businesses, 43 per cent said they caused timing delays and 33 per cent said they had lost commercial opportunities because of them.