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The Bloomingdale Trail: From Chicago Railroad To A Corridor Of Green (PHOTOS)

Bloomingdale Trail

  First Posted: 08/13/11 12:48 PM ET Updated: 10/13/11 06:12 AM ET

The sun shone on Beth White and Ben Helphand on an August Sunday as they stood on a North Side viaduct, each with their feet planted in the middle of an abandoned railroad track. To the east, the antennas of the Willis Tower poked into the sky. To the west, an industrial smokestack rose, marking the city's still-operating factories. And below them, cars continued down Kimball, oblivious to the planned transformation above them called the Bloomingdale Trail.

For years, Helphand and White, along with dozens of visionaries, project planners, designers and thousands of volunteers, have envisioned the elevated piece of land they were standing on -- a three-mile long strip of century-old railroad track -- as a corridor of green parkway that would run from Logan Square and Humboldt Park to the Chicago River, not only making the space into a greenway but also connecting the communities along it.

"It's much more than just a trail," Helphand, the president of The Friends of the Bloomingdale Trail, a group of volunteers (and now a nonprofit) who came together in nearly a decade ago to promote the trail, said. "I see it as a thing with infinite capacity. It connects communities across the Northwest Side."

The trail has picked up momentum this past year because of a campaign pledge by Mayor Rahm Emanuel to see the project come to fruition during his first term, as well as the start last month of the trail's design and engineering study, which will clarify the costs involved and lay out a better timeline for the trail's completion. The overall plan calls for the trail to start on the western end near the McCormick Tribune YMCA, with Logan Square to the north and Humboldt Park to the south, and run east through Bucktown and Wicker Park before ending at the Chicago River.

White, the director for the Trust for Public Land's Chicago Office, said that the project offers the chance for communities to come together, even though they have been long-divided by a now-defunct railroad line.

"[The rainroad line] has served as physical barrier for so long between communities," White said. ". . . [the trail] is a way for the communities to work together and learn about each other. It's really breaking barriers down in a different way."

The idea is for the three-mile long Bloomingdale Trail to be open to bikes, strollers, runners, wheelchairs, walkers and all manner of pedestrians. The trail, which was originally proposed as a key piece of the Logan Square Open Space Plan in 2004, carries echoes of New York's High Line, an enormously popular elevated park on the West Side of Manhattan, but is more than twice is long and wider at many points. The trail would also be connected to several street-level parks that would serve as access points to the trail. Still, much of the Bloomingdale Trail's appeal lies in its elevated portion, which allows for bikers and pedestrians to get through much of the most congested areas of the city without dealing with cars or traffic lights.

"Can you imagine?" White said. "Being able to go with your children and not having to cross the street for 37 blocks!"

Alderman Roberto Maldonado, who happened to be driving along the trail with his family as Helphand and White walked along it with this reporter, told the Huffington Post that "I would like it done tomorrow if I could...I think it's wonderful and a different level of open space."

Maldonado, who lives within walking distance of the trail, which sits along his ward (the 26th), added that he planned to do his thrice-weekly, 3-mile runs on the trail when it opens.

The plan calls for the Chicago Park District to eventually own and maintain the trail and for the Friends to be its stewards. In the meantime, the Trust for Public Land, the nonprofit organization that was enlisted by the Friends to help on the project, is negotiating and acquiring key pieces of land, such as portions at street level near Albany Street and Whipple Avenue and Milwaukee Avenue and Leavitt Street. The Trust holds the land temporarily before turning it over to the Park District. The Trust for Public Land also helps with coordination between all entities involved, which, in addition to the Friends and the Park District includes the Chicago Department of Transportation and the city's Department of Housing and Economic Development.

The projected cost of the entire project is difficult to gauge, according to White and Joseph Bornstein, project manager for the Chicago Park District, because the engineering studies have not been completed and thus the condition (and subsequent work needed) of all 37 bridges along the trail has yet to be determined. White did say that about $10 million, with about $1 million coming from private donations and the rest a mixture of public funds and grants, has been invested so far. She says the pre-engineering estimate for the entire project hovers around $75 million but emphasizes the number could fluctuate depending on the outcome of the yearlong design and engineering study.

One thing that's clear is that residents along the trail are already benefitting from the work being done. After White and Helphand, who have permission to access the trail -- the railroad is still owned by Canadian Pacific, meaning that current use of the elevated portion would be considered trespassing -- descended from the viaduct over Kimball, they swung further east along the trail to Albany Whipple Park. Dedicated this June, the park, with its red spider web jungle gym and rubberized surface, has already been a boon for the kids who live nearby.

"I really like being at this park because there's more fun things to do," Lucy Hoyne, 9, who was playing at the park with her sister and a friend, said. "It's great for the kids in the neighborhood to meet each other and make new friends."

Hoyne, who lives in a Logan Square home near the trail, added that she most looks forward to the proposed trail giving her and her friends a long stretch where they can ride their bikes "because we don't have anywhere to bike except going around the block."

Bornstein, the Chicago Park District project manager, called the trail an "unbelievable opportunity" to have a transport system for bikers and pedestrians that runs east-west instead of north-south, as most of the city's major recreational trails do.

As momentum builds for the project, one of the main challenges, Helphand said, is deciding what to do with the influx of volunteers, who thus far have helped paint a mural, as well as help create public art that currently dots the street level portion of the trail. The Friends currently have about 2,300 people on its mailing list and add more whenever they give a tour or have an exhibit, such as the recent "Reframing Ruin: A Prelude to the Bloomingdale Trail" photography exhibit at the Milwaukee Avenue Arts Festival.

White, too, has seen growing support over these past several years for the trail, which she refers to as "a green ribbon" that would be a three-mile long linear park connecting disparate playgrounds, schools and communities across Chicago.

"What's so exciting is the recognition of how important parks are to community health -- economically, physically and spiritually," she said. "It's really fascinating to see how much people care about their parks. From an architectural and design perspective, being able to reuse a part of our industrial heritage and being able to turn it into this cool new park is very exciting. It's like the ultimate recycling."

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Beth White, Director of the Trust for Public Land's Chicago office, and Ben Helphand, the President of the Friends of the Bloomingdale Trail, on the Bloomingdale Trail.
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The sun shone on Beth White and Ben Helphand on an August Sunday as they stood on a North Side viaduct, each with their feet planted in the middle of an abandoned railroad track. To the east, the ante...
The sun shone on Beth White and Ben Helphand on an August Sunday as they stood on a North Side viaduct, each with their feet planted in the middle of an abandoned railroad track. To the east, the ante...
 
 
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11:25 PM on 08/14/2011
This line - according to the Illinois Gazetteer, an occasionally inaccurate compendium - goes all the way to the Mississippi. Part of the old grade goes by a monument to the Blackhawk War.
(Kent Twp, Stephenson County) Instead of the Bloomingdale Trail what about 'The Blackhawk Trail'? It would be nice that a state that does not have one acre reserved for First Peoples dedicate something new to honor those who showed the Europeans the points of portage.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jannielee
making my world bigger
05:03 PM on 08/14/2011
I've seen this railroad from the Blue Line a zillion times. I think it will be wonderful if it can be turned into a recreation area. I wouldn't mind if there were discrete little markers saying that this 1/4 mile was sponsored by _____________. It could be people, foundations or corporations. Oh, I forgot, now corporations ARE people. Anyway, I think this is a great idea.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jacques Steen
Stop Warfare Against Working Stiffs !
01:25 PM on 08/14/2011
It's a mere three miles long IN THE CITY and goes NO WHERE NEAR Bloomingdale.

So why did someone pick this silly name ?
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BlindChance
Have another cherry...
02:22 PM on 08/14/2011
The Bloomingdale Trail runs, partly, along W. Bloomingdale Ave. in Logan Square.
11:43 PM on 08/14/2011
Well they surely need a better name.
This one stinks.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jannielee
making my world bigger
05:04 PM on 08/14/2011
I'ts always been called that because of the street Bloomindale, not the fancy store.
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Totto
Not "noises", One-Round, *music*!
12:12 PM on 08/15/2011
Marshall Field's was "fancier" and much better. www.fieldsfanschicago.org
12:37 PM on 08/14/2011
As the price of oil continues to rise we may all be dusting off our old bicycles and using them more and more for daily transportation. We need more safe paths to travel to work, school or play. We also need safe places to lock up bicycles at work, school or businesses.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
KIVPossum
Moldova Marsupial
09:23 AM on 08/14/2011
Excellent. Every rails to trails project I've seen has been an asset to the community
09:35 AM on 08/14/2011
Areas that are bankrupt can't fund projects.Besides,once complteted,it would be another way for the Smart People to leave the state
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jannielee
making my world bigger
05:05 PM on 08/14/2011
Huh?
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Sunwyn Ravenwood
Farewell my friends, time to go...
02:38 AM on 08/14/2011
This is a great idea. As the price of oil and gas keep rising people won't be able to afford the "suburban lifestyle" any more. No one will want to use up $10 worth of gas to get to work, or make one trip to the grocery store. As the suburbs empty (and get bulldozed flat) the people coming back to the cities will be attracted to places like this and the land values will skyrocket.

Good luck Chicago!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DR Dedo
:{b
12:31 AM on 08/14/2011
Old news. Greenies have been doing this for decades. Why not reuse these lines for high speed rail? LOL.
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Sunwyn Ravenwood
Farewell my friends, time to go...
02:44 AM on 08/14/2011
High speed rail has very different requirements. The bed must be very level, turns must be very gradual curves with careful banking, and the substrate of the bed must be very carefully prepared. There must be no grade crossings, all crossings must go above or below the line. The only places in the USA that are really good candidates for high speed rail are some of the interstate highways, especially Interstate 10. When all the cheap oil is gone we can convert the interstate highway system to a great rail system.
09:37 AM on 08/14/2011
1. NO money.
2.Declining industrial base.
3.Not self funding
4.It's too easy to leave Illinois now!
Union Taxpayer
Fear has a conservative bias
12:11 PM on 08/14/2011
Bye Bye!
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valkygrrl
Hail Eris
09:20 PM on 08/14/2011
Don't let the door hit ya.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Gottlieb
hated by left since 1973 and right since 1982
10:42 PM on 08/13/2011
This is a such a great idea and a good reuse of old railroads. Oregon has several rail to trail success stories and a continuing effort to convert more rails to trails..

http://www.railstotrails.org/news/recurringfeatures/trailmonth/archives/0611.html

http://www.oregonstateparks.org/park_230.php

Checking the Chicago region, I would say The Friends of the Bloomingdale Trail need to network more and get their trail listed at the site listed below.

http://www.railserve.com/Rails-to-Trails/Central/

This is how we rebuild America, one small project at a time. These projects take abandoned railroad right of ways and put them back into productive economic use.

Way to go Chicago. Convert more rails to trails.
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rchsod
10:41 PM on 08/13/2011
excellent idea. we have a 3-4 mile bike/walking trail on an old single track railline. a double track rail line would offer bike,walking,running lanes that would`t interfer with each other.
06:32 PM on 08/13/2011
The price of oil keeps going up. Transportation keeps getting more expensive.

Safe, clean, pathways for walking and biking are a great transportation alternative.

We need more opportunities to walk and bike to work, school or play.
05:56 PM on 08/13/2011
A fantastic corridor for invasive species to spread?
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01:20 PM on 08/15/2011
huh?
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05:12 PM on 08/13/2011
We need more of these round the country,
great idea, great movement.
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bryanzth
Honest to Goodness USA Patriot!
04:24 PM on 08/13/2011
All well and good.

Where are the high speed rail corridors gonna go? Hah, Nowheresville.

In another generation, tourists from China are going to come here to see the crude tribes with horse-pulled cars around the wrecks of deteriorated expressway bridges. They will give out their spare Renminbin to the poor suburban white natives living in shells of former McMansions.

BZ.
07:15 PM on 08/13/2011
LOL, I think I'd rather take my chances on the interstate than on the death machine the Chinese call a high-speed rail system.
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bryanzth
Honest to Goodness USA Patriot!
08:47 PM on 08/13/2011
Well, sweetie, that's not the point, now is it?

Where are the US High Speed Rail manufacturers, construction workers, employees, customers, neighbors, small businesses and all that HSR would bring the US?

The REASON I write that Chinese tourists would be over here would be because they're slumming in a beat up, run down, and laughable country.

Your Interstates are death traps if you care to look under the bridges and count the layers of patch on patch on patch and most important the lack of speed and weave controls, namely police and other surveillance measures.

Rather I would be on the Japanese HSR more than the Chinese version, but that's because the Japanese had done it well already in 1960, only 15 years after their own infrastructure was flattened in Tokyo and elsewhere.

Chinese are gonna be rich because of all the money and wealth skimmed off of people like you. Go to Tarzhay, Walmarsh, Searsh, Mazy and any other store: Made in China, Made in China.... Do YOU like to see that stuff?

Meh. Flagged for not seeing the point.

BZ.
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deneufeldt
For the 99%
04:24 PM on 08/13/2011
Wonderful!
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naschkatze
A free man creates himself.
03:45 PM on 08/13/2011
I am happy the abandoned road is being used for this purpose, but it is not something new in the area. The Illinois Prairie Path which goes through the counties west of Chicago is at least partially made up of abandoned track.