Chicago Sun-Times

UNSIGHTLY ‘ DOG HOUSE COVERS’ TO BE REMOVED FROM MAG MILE

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN City Hall Reporter Email: fspielman@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ fspielman

Inactive pedestrian tunnel entrances masked by ugly “dog house covers” will soon be removed from Chicago’s Magnificen­t Mile, downtown Ald. Brendan Reilly ( 42nd) disclosed Wednesday.

In an email to his constituen­ts, Reilly said he was “extremely pleased” to announce the aesthetic improvemen­t on the northwest and southeast corners of Michigan and Oak, paid for by an undisclose­d chunk of his aldermanic menu money.

The change will remove what has been a blight on Chicago’s marquee shopping district, the alderman said.

Reilly said he worked with the Chicago Department of Transporta­tion to “find an innovative and aesthetica­lly pleasing way to cover the inactive pedestrian tunnel entrances . . . in response to the numerous complaints received over the years about the dilapidate­d condition of the wooden ‘ dog house’ covers at the highly traveled intersecti­on.”

That solution will “remove the wooden ‘ dog house’ at the northwest corner of Michigan and Oak and replace it with a slab of concrete,” the alderman wrote. That will “increase the available sidewalk width for pedestrian­s and improve the aesthetics at this high visibility corner on the Magnificen­t Mile,” Reilly wrote.

Ald. Brian Hopkins ( 2nd) said he agreed to split the cost with Reilly to remove a cover that “takes up a lot of space on the sidewalk and doesn’t look very good.”

“Eventually, we hope to reconstruc­t that entire intersecti­on, build a new ramp to Lake Shore Drive and either rebuild or fill in and disconnect the tunnel,” Hopkins said.

Reilly told the Chicago Sun- Times, “Those ‘ dog houses’ cap a pedestrian underpass that runs beneath Michigan Avenue that has been closed for years. It was closed due to the fact it is not ADA compliant and had issues with its structural integrity. The cost to repair and make [ it] ADA compliant exceeded $ 1 million at the time, so it was closed permanentl­y.

“When it was closed, we were never happy with the solution: installing these ugly wooden caps on top,” Reilly added. “For the past two years, I’ve been pursuing a better, safer & more aesthetica­lly pleasing solution that removes that clutter from the sidewalk & makes it safer for the blind and for folks in wheelchair­s.”

CDOT spokeman Mike Claffey did not respond to requests for comment about the project.

The work is expected to take a few weeks, beginning with the cover in Hopkins’ ward.

The menu program is one of the City Council’s most cherished. That’s because it gives each of Chicago’s 50 aldermen $ 1.32 million to spend each year on projects of the local alderman’s choosing.

Earlier this year, Inspector General Joe Ferguson charged that the menu program was underfunde­d by $ 122.9 million a year, “bears no relationsh­ip to the actual infrastruc­ture needs” of each ward and includes significan­t “funding disparitie­s.”

He argued that decisionma­king authority should be stripped away from aldermen and handed to CDOT’s profession­al engineers.

Mayor Rahm Emanuel promptly quashed the idea, for fear of triggering a City Council revolt.

 ?? | SUPPLIED PHOTO ?? A “dog house” cover on Michigan Avenue will be replaced with a slab of concrete to improve aesthetics.
| SUPPLIED PHOTO A “dog house” cover on Michigan Avenue will be replaced with a slab of concrete to improve aesthetics.

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