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The municipality or Chicago neighborhood in which the station is located Fare zone Identifies which of the four fare zones the station is in. The zones are numbered, with Zone 1 consisting of downtown Chicago. [7] † A terminal station Fully-accessible station [8] Partially-accessible station [a] [8]
Ohio Street is a major east–west one-way street in downtown Chicago. From west to east, it runs from an interchange with Interstate 90 (I-90) and I-94 , also known as the Kennedy Expressway , to U.S. Route 41 (US 41), also known as Lake Shore Drive , just west of Lake Michigan .
Tracks, 10.30 miles, from Grand Central Station, Chicago, Ill., to C.G.W. connection, Forest Park, Ill., of which the tracks from Central Avenue, Chicago, to C.G.W. connection, Forest Park, Ill., 2.51 miles, are leased to the Baltimore and Ohio Chicago Terminal by the Wisconsin Central Railway Company for a term of 999 years, term 99 years from ...
The Blue Line (formerly known as the Moreland Line and the Van Aken Line, and internally as Route 67) is a light rail line of the RTA Rapid Transit system in Cleveland and Shaker Heights, Ohio, running from Tower City Center downtown, then east and southeast to Warrensville Center Blvd near Chagrin Blvd. 2.6 miles (4.2 km) of track, including two stations (Tri-C–Campus District and East 55th ...
The 13th annual showcase of Ohio's food-truck scene will take place Friday and Saturday in Franklinton and feature 47 trucks and carts from Columbus and other parts of the state.
103rd Street–Washington Heights station is a commuter railroad station on Metra's Rock Island District line in the Washington Heights neighborhood of Chicago, Illinois, 12.0 miles (19.3 km) from LaSalle Street Station, the northern terminus of the line. [2] In Metra's zone-based fare system, 103rd Street–Washington Heights is in zone 2.
Since 2019, nearly 26,000 crashes have occurred in Ohio construction zones, resulting in more than 9,000 people injured and 99 deaths. Construction worker Steve Cook was an only child, but you ...
A street sign acknowledges Coventry's recent history. In the second half of the 1960s, Coventry became the gathering place for Cleveland's counterculture , owing partly to the popularity of the C-Saw Café with bikers , and to the area's proximity to John Carroll University and the predecessor schools to Case Western Reserve University and ...