Quote:
Originally Posted by VivaLFuego
To me, even the strip mall isn't as bad as what they did to Division street: widen it to about 7 lanes and make it basically uncrossable. The strip mall, while crappy, is at least -somewhat- accessible by foot, and -slightly- attractive as parking lots go (I know, scraping the bottom of the barrel here...) but Division is a suburban-arterial-nightmare now; it really needs an overhead pedestrian bridge or some such. I would almost suggest a tunnel, but maybe not right by Cabrini-Green.
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Agreed. Between the strip mall and the crazy weird widening of Division, they have ruined that intersection for years to come. IMO, the Park Side development is significantly improving the intersection from what was there. Though it hides less dense townhomes behind the larger condo development, the entire development certainly gives the appearance of density. Given the proximity of this area to the loop and some of Chicago's hottest real estate markets, there needs to be more density here. Even if it is POMO crap architecture.
About the widening of Division...what exactly was the purpose here? Division was widened for a single city block. Orleans was widened for about half a block. From using that intersection, the only net benefit seems to be in extra right turn lanes off of Division onto Clyborn, Sedgwick and Orleans and an extra right turn lane off of Orleans onto Division.
It seems to be netting very little benefit for a confusing maze of streets. And in some places, the planning seems to be atrocious. Why, for instance, is there dead road going west on Division between the forward lanes and the two (TWO!?!?!) right hand turn lanes? Why, again, does there need to be two right hand turn lanes feeding into a single lane street (Orleans)? Also, going East on Division, the road splits from a single lane into three highly confusing lanes. Two of these are meant as forward lanes (again feeding into a single lane road: the rest of Division) and one of these is a right turn lane onto Sedgwick and Clyborn.
All of these are fantastically bad decisions, IMO, and improve the experience for neither autos or pedestrians. It was just a bad, bad move.
Taft