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Quincy (CTA station)

Quincy
20110830 17 CTA Loop L @ Quincy & Wells.jpg
Location 220 South Wells Street,
Chicago, Illinois 60606
Coordinates 41°52′44″N 87°38′01″W / 41.878752°N 87.633703°W / 41.878752; -87.633703
Owned by Chicago Transit Authority
Line(s)
  Purple Line weekday rush hours only
  Pink Line
Platforms 2 Side platforms
Tracks 2
Connections Union Station (3 blocks west)
CTA Buses
Construction
Structure type Elevated
History
Opened October 3, 1897
Rebuilt 1985–1988 (Historic Restoration), 2016–17 (accessibility improvements, historic refurbishment)
Previous names Quincy/Wells
Traffic
Passengers (2014) 2,288,353 Increase 3.1%
Rank 19 out of 143
Services
Preceding station   Chicago "L"   Following station
One-way operation
Brown Line
toward Kimball
One-way operation
Orange Line
toward Midway
Purple Line
toward Linden
Pink Line
toward 54th/Cermak
Route map
Purple, Orange and Pink Lines
North to Linden, Midway, and 54th/Cermak
Adams St.
Quincy St.
Jackson Blvd.
Brown Line
south to Kimball

Quincy is a rapid transit station on the Chicago Transit Authority's 'L' system. It is located between the Washington/Wells and LaSalle/Van Buren stations in the Loop. The station is located above the intersection of Quincy Street and Wells Street in Downtown Chicago, Illinois. Having opened in 1897, it is one of the oldest surviving stations on the 'L' system.

Designed by Alfred M. Hedley from wood and stamped metal, Quincy opened on October 3, 1897, it retained much of its original surroundings over the years and was restored in 1985–1988, so that it is considered one of "150 great places in Illinois" by the American Institute of Architects. The station is located in the South Loop Financial District and is the closest CTA rail station to the Willis Tower, approximately one block west. It is also close to Union Station, the terminal for several Metra and Amtrak routes and about three blocks west of Quincy, although the Clinton station on the Blue Line is closer.

Quincy is an elevated station, located above Quincy Street between Adams Street and Jackson Boulevard. It features two side platforms and station houses, one on the west to serve the Outer Loop track, and one on the east to serve the Inner Loop track. Turnstiles for fare payment are located in the station houses on the platform level. The station once had a transfer bridge, but this was removed in the 1980s. This means it is not possible to change from one platform to the other without paying another fare or asking for employee assistance. There are auxiliary exits to both Adams and Jackson on the Inner Loop platform, while the Outer Loop only has an auxiliary exit to Adams. Both platforms are designed to handle eight-car trains, the longest the CTA 'L' system can run.


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Wikipedia

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