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The Loop (Chicago Transit Authority)

The Loop
Chicago-Loop-SEcorner.jpg
The southeastern corner of The Loop
Overview
Type Rapid transit
System Chicago "L"
Status Operational
Locale Chicago, Illinois, USA
Stations 8
Services      Orange Line
     Green Line
     Purple Line Express
     Brown Line
     Pink Line
Daily ridership 74,148 (average weekday 2016)
Operation
Opened 1895–1897
Operator(s) Chicago Transit Authority
Character Elevated
Technical
Track length 1.79 miles (2.9 km)
Number of tracks 2
Track gauge 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Minimum radius 90 feet (27 m)
Electrification Third rail, 600v DC
Route map
Fifth/Lake
(closed 1899)
State/Lake
Randolph/Wells
(closed 1995)
Randolph/Wabash
(closed 2017)
Washington/Wells
Washington/Wabash
Madison/Wells
(closed 1994)
Madison/Wabash
(closed 2015)
Adams/Wabash
Quincy
LaSalle/Van Buren
Library
Dearborn/Van Buren
(closed 1949)

The Loop (historically Union Loop, or commonly Loop) is the 1.79-mile (2.88 km) long circuit of elevated rail that forms the hub of the Chicago "L" system in Chicago, Illinois. As of 2012, the branch has served 74,651 passengers every weekday. The Loop is so named because the elevated tracks loop around a rectangle formed by Lake Street (north side), Wabash Avenue (east), Van Buren Street (south), and Wells Street (west). The railway loop has given its name to Chicago's downtown, which is known as the Loop. Numerous accounts assert that the use of this term predates the elevated rail, deriving from the multiple cable car turntables, or loops, that terminated in the district, and especially those of two lines that shared a loop, constructed in 1882, bounded by Madison, Wabash, State, and Lake. However, transportation historian Bruce Moffat has concluded that "The Loop" was not used as a proper noun until after Charles Yerkes' 1895–97 construction of the elevated structure.

The Loop includes eight stations: Clark/Lake and State/Lake are on the northern leg; Washington/Wabash and Adams/Wabash are on the eastern side; Harold Washington Library – State/Van Buren and LaSalle/Van Buren are on the southern leg; and Quincy and Washington/Wells are on the western side. In 2011 20,896,612 passengers entered the 'L' via these stations.

Five of the eight 'L' lines use the Loop tracks:

Two of the remaining three lines, the Blue Line and the Red Line, run underground through the center of the Loop, connecting to Loop stations. The Yellow Line is the only CTA line that does not run on or connect to the loop.


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Wikipedia

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