Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Community leaders kick off planning for Bronzevill­e Trail

- BY KATIE ANTHONY For the Sun-Times

As the city’s trails and parks were flooded Saturday with Chicagoans eager to enjoy the warmest day of the year, community leaders in Bronzevill­e marked the start of what’s expected to be a yearslong project to bring a 606-like trail to the South Side neighborho­od.

The plan envisions the abandoned Kenwood “L” embankment transformi­ng into the Bronzevill­e Trail. John Adams, Bronzevill­e Trail Taskforce founder, ceremoniou­sly renamed the train tracks during a kick-off party in William-Davis Park on an unseasonab­ly summery afternoon.

“Given the health disparitie­s in Bronzevill­e, our goal is to encourage robust outdoor activities, and that’s why we want to see the Kenwood ‘L’ embankment turn into a linear park,” Adams said.

The envisioned trail is no small feat — members of the board described an accessible, twomile trail from 40th and Dearborn streets to 41st Street and Lake Park Avenue, with public art spanning the length of it.

“They got one on the North Side, but this is going to rival the one on the North Side,” Ald. Pat Dowell (3rd) said.

Leaders said they expect the trail to be complete in six to seven years. The 606 took close to a decade to complete, and other trails — like the El Paseo trail in Pilsen and Little Village and the Altenheim Line on the West Side — have been proposed but have yet to come to fruition.

Adams said the task force expects the Bronzevill­e Trail to cost about as much as the 606, which ended up requiring nearly $100 million. He also noted pre-developmen­t costs, including items like environmen­tal mitigation, that he expects to total around $15 million.

The group is already raising the capital, though. During the kickoff, Walter Freeman, Bronzevill­e Trail chairperso­n, announced they received a $75,000 grant from the Chicago Community Trust.

The trail also holds historical significan­ce. Before it went out of use about 60 years ago, it connected workers from the South Side to the Union Stockyards.

“The past, the present and the future will be documented in ways that we will see its presence on the trail,” said Sherry Williams, a South Side historian and trail board member.

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 ?? PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES ?? A task force is proposing to convert the abandoned Kenwood “L” line embankment in the Bronzevill­e neighborho­od into an elevated walking trail.
PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES A task force is proposing to convert the abandoned Kenwood “L” line embankment in the Bronzevill­e neighborho­od into an elevated walking trail.

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