Pulse 95th Street

This map shows the location of the project. For projects that do not have a specific location but affect a line/route or the entire system, either the affected lines/routes are shown, or an entire service area map is shown.

If you select the option to “toggle the benefit layer,” you will see an approximation of the area that will benefit from the project.

Each capital project is measured on 15 evaluation metrics to better understand its impact on the region. Learn more about the metrics and see a legend for all measures here.

Click the circled (i) information button to read a definition of each metric and hover over the image to see more about each measure.

The degree to which a project improves regional access to the region’s key destinations. Including jobs, retail, healthcare, recreation, and education.

The project improvements to existing assets to make them partially or fully accessible. Including station/stop and area improvements, vehicle accessibility, and accessible communications.

The project impact to ratings from the FTA Transit Economic Requirements Model (TERM).

The project’s minor or major benefits to riders and what proportion of the agency’s riders will benefit from it.

The project impact on overall capacity, reflecting current and planned levels of utilization.

The project impact on reductions or offsets to greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions generated from transit operations.

Project impacts on land use and development, construction, and long-term jobs.

The distribution of project benefits to location(s) identified under the USDOT Justice40 Program.

The project impact to maintenance or improvement of exposure to risk for riders/employees and the project impact to security enhancement.

The project impact on operating costs.

The project impact to maintenance or improvement of exposure to risk for riders/employees and the project impact to security enhancement.

Project impact on maintenance or improvement of service speed and reliability, considering both direct and indirect impacts.

If required, whether or not the project complies with federal, state, local, or other regulatory mandates.

The project impact to climate benefits, such as a reduction in emissions, generated from mode shift to transit and away from private auto-use.

The project impact to average vehicle ages, compared with Service board benchmarks to prioritize replacing vehicles that are beyond their useful life.

Evaluation Metric Measure
Access to Key Destinations i
Two green up arrows

Significantly improves Access to Key Destinations

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Accessibility Improvement(s) i
Two green up arrows

Makes assets fully accessible

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Asset Condition (FTA TERM Rating) i
Not applicable symbol

Project does not have an asset rating

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Benefit to Riders i
Two green up arrows

Significant benefit to riders

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Capacity Benefit and Need i
One green up arrow

Project increases capacity of transit operations not near capacity

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Climate Agency Operating Impacts i
Red line with arrows on each end

No reduction in emission

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Economic Impact i
Two green up arrows

Moderate impact on economic development

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Equity Based on Residential Geography i
Three green up arrows

Scores 6-8 in Justice40 metric 'Sum of Disadvantage Indicators'

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Impact on Customer and Employee Safety i
Two green up arrows

Project directly provides safety benefit/improvement

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Impact on Operating Cost i
One red up arrow

Increases operating cost

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Impact on System Security i
Two green up arrows

Project implements new security protection and/or prevention

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Impact to Service Speed/Reliability i
Two green up arrows

Significantly improves speed/reliability

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Regulatory Requirements i
Black x mark

No regulatory requirements met for this project

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Ridership/Mode Shift Impacts i
Two green up arrows

Significantly improves transit ridership

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Vehicle Useful Life i
Not applicable symbol

Asset is not a vehicle with a useful life

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Project Description

Design and construction of stations of the Pulse 95th Rapid Transit Line. The project corridor is approximately 12.4 miles in length and runs east-west between the CTA Red Line 95th/Dan Ryan Station in Chicago and Moraine Valley Community College in Palos Hills primarily routed along 95th Street, as well as several other roadways in Bridgeview, Chicago Ridge, Hickory Hills, and Palos Hills. The proposed line would include connections to other transit services including the CTA Red Line 95th/Dan Ryan Station and other CTA routes, other Pace bus routes, Metra Rock Island District Line Longwood Station, Metra Southwest Service, and Oak Lawn Patriot Station. As Pace’s third anticipated Pulse line, the 95th Street service will improve connectivity and increase transit service levels through higher frequencies, travel time savings, and station amenities. The Pulse 95th Street Line will connect to the Pulse Halsted Line, and eventually to the Pulse Harlem and Cicero Lines.