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My exploration (and proposal) of how to improve Chicago's North Lake Shore Drive as a multi-modal transportation facility and reclaim the shoreline for the City and its Citizens. A thoughtful and sustainable strategy to give urban shores and coasts a second chance
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TAG Holding LLC’s Proposal for:
Prepared by and Property of:
James Price Chuck
T: 312 507 9792 │ E: [email protected]
A: 5000 N. Marine Dr., Chicago IL 60640
09/05/2014 1
Page 2
1.4 Project Need
Improvement needs vary throughout the seven-mile study area and fall into one of five categories:
• Improve safety for all users.
• Improve mobility for all users.
• Address infrastructure deficiencies.
• Improve access and circulation.
• Improve modal connections and opportunities.
Source: http://www.northlakeshoredrive.org/
Page 3
Situation
Lake Shore Drive is an essential Chicago artery with more than 150K vehicles per day
Roadway designed 100 years ago and unable to
handle traffic demand
Congestion, curves and potholes cause crashes and gridlock that have negative social and economic costs
Physically seperates City from its Lakefront
Negatively impacts viewsheds, environment and property values
On/off ramps create
dangerous interactions with Lakefront Trail users
High Usage and Congestion A Grey Divide
5700N Red = > 100K
vehicles ave/day
Central
Business
District &
Tourism
Highest Value
Residential &
Recreational
A 12-lane
250 foot –
wide
barrier
Source: Illinois Department of Transportation
Page 4
Opportunity to Elevate Chicago
Immerse Outer Drive in offshore two-level tunnel in shallow trench; eliminate weather impact from road conditions
Expand Outer Drive to 6-lanes each direction; upgrade access points to alieviate congestion and stoppage risks
Construct segments offsite at Port of Chicago; float into place. No disruption to the Drive while new one is prepared.
Create 1000s of jobs via PPP Private, State, Federal funding
Gain 80 acres of lakefront park and car-free Lakefront Trail
Cover tunnel with beach erosion-prevention technology
Lake Depth Immersed Tunnel Cross-Section
Transformative Outcome
Shallow depth and soft lakebed
are optimal for immersed tunnel
Protection layer
General fill
Locking fill Gravel bed
Existing lakebed
Page 5
Source: Ramboll Group Note: Not actual NLSD render. For illustrative purposes only
6-lanes on two-levels of stacked tunnel + corridors for light rail and/or bus rapid transit
NLSD-I capacity 2x greater than today; 300,000 cars a day without congestion
New ingress/egress access to or “under and past” Inner Drive eliminate bottlenecks
80 acres of parks and expanded auto-free Lakefront Trail for safe capacity increase
Existing lakebed
Page 6
What?
An immersed tunnel is an underwater tunnel composed of segments made of steel or cast iron tubes lined with concrete using conventional shipbuilding techniques.
Immersed tunnels are used in conjunction with other forms of tunnel at their ends to continue the tunnel from near the water's edge to the at-grade on-land surface.
How?
1. The tunnel is made up of separate, prefabricated segments that are produced offsite and sealed at each end with bulkheads so that they can float like a boat.
2. In parallel to segment production, an underwater trench is dredged and graded along the tunnel’s planned route.
3. When a trench section and its specific segments are ready, the segments are floated to the appropriate location above the trench, then slowly sunk into place. Once in place, they are aligned and connected to the adjacent segment(s).
4. After a segment is connected, a water-tight seal is created between adjacent segments, the tunnel is emptied of water and the underwater trench is then backfilled and any necessary protection is installed.
5. Once the immersed tunnel is connected and sealed airtight from end to end, it is linked to its bored or above-ground access points. Once these connections are completed, then the roadway/infrastructure inside the tunnel can be constructed.
Where?
USA: New York City’s 63rd St. 4-bore rail tunnel; San Francisco’s TransBay subway rail tunnel; Oakland’s subway rail tunnel; Baltimore’s 4-tube Fort McHenry tunnel; Detroit-Windsor 2-lane auto tunnel; Boston’s Ted Williams 3-lane auto tunnel.
Global: Montreal, Denmark, Sweden, Netherlands, Germany, Sydney, UK, Japan.
Page 7
= Man-made
underwater and
underground
access island
Returns to above-ground, existing
Lake Shore Drive at Montrose Avenue
Returns to above-ground, existing
Lake Shore Drive at Grand Avenue
Access points feed into existing roadways via
“merge/yield” instead of stop lights
Page 8
Segments
produced at
Port of
Chicago
Segments
floated into
place
Segments placed
into trench,
roadway installed
and connected to
access points
1a. Segment Production
5. Roadway Installation 4. Tunnel Preparation
3. Segment Submersion 2. Segment Transportation
1b. Trench Preparation
Images: Creative Commons and Ramboll Group
Page 9
Segment Investment Income A Montrose Avenue - Fullerton Avenue
Montrose Access Ramp (1640 ft) 10,838,443 One-way Toll $1.00 Immersed Tunnel 1,065,340,909 Tolls / Day 130,000 Fullerton Access Ramp (1640 ft) 10,838,443 Days / Year 365
Contingency Reserve 27,175,445 Toll Income / Year $47,450,000
Segment Cost $ 1,114,193,240 Payback Period 23.5 years
B Fullerton Avenue - North Avenue Fullerton Access Ramp (1640 ft) 10,838,443 One-way Toll $0.75 Immersed Tunnel 349,431,818 Tolls / Day 145,000 North Avenue Access Ramp (1640 ft) 10,838,443 Days / Year 365
Contingency Reserve 9,277,718 Toll Income / Year $39,693,750 Segment Cost $ 380,386,422 Payback Period 9.6 years
C North Avenue - Oak Street
North Avenue Access Ramp (1640 ft) 10,838,443 One-way Toll $0.75 Immersed Tunnel 242,897,727 Tolls / Day 125,000 Oak Street Access Ramp (1640 ft) 10,838,443 Days / Year 365
Contingency Reserve 6,614,365 Toll Income / Year $34,218,750 Segment Cost $ 271,188,979 Payback Period 7.9 years
D Oak Street - Grand Avenue Oak Street Access Ramp (1640 ft) 10,838,443 One-way Toll $0.75
Immersed Tunnel 370,738,636 Tolls / Day 105,000 Grand Avenue Access Ramp (1640 ft) 10,838,443 Days / Year 365
Contingency Reserve 9,810,388 Toll Income / Year $28,743,750 Segment Cost $ 402,225,910 Payback Period 14.0 years
E Project Design and Management Initial Feasibility Study 175,000 New Parkland 80 acres
Project Preparation and Management 73,083,589 Time to Construct 2 years Cost $ 73,258,589
Total Project Budget $ 2,241,253,139 Project Payback Period 13.7 years
Page 10
World-Class Partners
Global leader in tunnel analysis, design, engineering, advisory and project mgmt; designed and
currently leading implementation of 11 mile immersed tunnel (Fehmarn Belt Tunnel); large-scale project experience in Chicago
Largest Chicago-based general contracting, construction mgmt, and design-build firm with relevant experience in civil and transportation
Premier Chicago-based regional
development think-tank with expertise in transportation, environmental management and innovative infrastructure finance
Timelines NLSD project management:
– 2014: Identify and evaluate alternatives – 2015: Alternatives carried forward – 2016: Select Preferred Alternative
– 2017: Obtain environmental and design approvals TAG Holding’s Immersed Tunnel (I.T.) Team:
– 2014: Provide IDOT with I.T. proposal – 2015: Provide IDOT with additional I.T. Information and
Ramboll offer to perform feasibility analysis for $175,000 – 2016: If I.T. is selected, then develop detailed design
and engineering plans; work closely with DOTs to redesign and prepare access points
– 2017: Obtain environmental and design approvals, prepare Port of Chicago I.T. segment production
– 2018+19: Manufacture segments, prepare lakebed trench, complete tunnel installation, begin roadway
fitting and connect to access points – 2020: Complete roadway, open new I.T. Outer Drive
NSDL project management and DOTs: – 2020+21: close and remove former Outer Drive
roadway, enhance Lakefront Trail and Inner Drive, recover 80 acres parkland
Page 11
TAG Holding’s proposed solution for evolving North Lake Shore Drive through the use
of a two-level, stacked offshore immersed tunnel meets and exceeds the defined
NLSD Project Needs for safety, mobility, addressing deficiencies, and improving
access, circulation and model connections and opportunities.
TAG’s solution resolves the myriad micro-problems with NLSD’s current design in one
fell swoop and strategically elevates Chicago by:
1. Eliminating a highway from its visible downtown Lakefront
2. Creating the space for profound Inner Drive and Lakefront Trail improvements
3. Increasing Lincoln Park’s area 7% with 80 new acres.
By making use of existing tunnel technology in an innovative manner, TAG’s solution
elevates Chicago to a level of global leadership in multi-modal transportation
infrastructure. Leveraging innovative infrastructure finance for the $2.2 billion PPP
budget provides the capital needed to invest in job creation and preparing Chicago
and the metro region for a more sustainable future. And the pay-per-use toll model
via I-Pass enables a sub-14 year project payback period.
If we are to follow Daniel Burnham and “make no little plans”, then TAG’s immersed
tunnel solution should be selected as the preferred alternative and implemented
over two years by 2020. Thank you for your time and consideration.
TAG Holding LLC’s Proposal for:
12
Prepared by and Property of:
James Price Chuck
T: 312 507 9792
A: 5000 N. Marine Dr., Chicago IL 60640
Disclaimer: Some statements made or
information contained in this presentation are
forward-looking in nature. As such, they are
subject to certain risks and uncertainties,
many of which are beyond the control of TAG
Holding Alpha LLC. This could cause the
actual results to differ from those referenced,
projected or contemplated herein.