Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Improve Lake Shore Drive, but not at the expense of its charm

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Lake Shore Drive, Chicago’s most scenic thoroughfa­re, is undergoing an identity crisis. The 16-mile roadway was envisioned by its original builders as a pleasant ribbon winding through the city’s lakefront parks. But after 40-plus years of straighten­ing, widening and other adjustment­s to accommodat­e traffic, the road often feels more like a highway than a parkway.

That’s why a careful design hand is crucial to make sure that two new planned improvemen­ts to the Drive — one aimed at overhaulin­g North Lake Shore Drive, the other tied to the Obama Presidenti­al Center — don’t further erode its character and the historic park space through which it runs.

‘Redefining’ Lake Shore Drive

There is no doubt that Lake Shore Drive, which handles 100,000 cars and buses each day, needs a makeover. For all its remarkable views of sky, water, architectu­re and — in warm weather months — green space, it is an aging and crumbling roadway, with unsightly concrete Jersey barriers protecting it from lakefront erosion, particular­ly on the northern end.

And there are other quirks. There is, most obviously, that traffic-halting Oak Street curve. And there’s that traffic signal at Chicago Avenue that stays red so long a backseat toddler could grow to adulthood and take the wheel by the time the light turns green again.

Many of Lake Shore Drive’s current limitation­s could be addressed as part of a $3 billion city, state and federal plan to improve and rebuild the road from Grand Avenue to Hollywood Avenue. Called “Redefine the Drive,” the not-yet-funded proposal would include straighten­ing that Oak Street curve, creating park space to protect the shoreline from erosion and improving bike lanes in the park.

Public hearings on the project have been going on since 2013, resulting in five design scenarios for improvemen­ts. The public input gathered has been used to help shape what might eventually get built. The planning process will continue this year.

Among the improvemen­t scenarios are proposals to create dedicated bus lanes where cars now run, putting a greater value on public transit without widening the Drive. That could be good, but only if those bus lanes are properly balanced with additional parkland and greenery — and only if accesses to the lanes doesn’t end up looking like interstate highway ramps.

The same goes for proposed solutions to the interminab­ly long traffic light at Chicago Avenue. One idea is to replace the entire intersecti­on with a vehicle overpass or underpass that would require a lot of concrete, space and structure. We urge caution here as well.

In a separate Lake Shore Drive project almost 8 miles further south, city officials want to add a third southbound lane between 57th Street and Hayes Drive. The nearly mile-long lane would be among $175 million in road improvemen­ts that traffic engineers claim would improve car access in and around the future Obama Presidenti­al Center.

We’re fans of the Obama Center, but we’re not fans of spending that much public road money in one place to benefit a single project. And we don’t want to see South Lake Shore Drive get any wider.

A special place

We’re not looking to trap Lake Shore Drive in amber or to treat it like an heirloom that can’t be touched. The Drive has always had to keep up with the times.

But Lake Shore Drive is a special street. Before all else, we must keep it that way.

 ?? CHICAGO DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTA­TION ?? A possible design scheme for Lake Shore Drive at Foster Avenue now being considered by the city and state.
CHICAGO DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTA­TION A possible design scheme for Lake Shore Drive at Foster Avenue now being considered by the city and state.

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