CTA’s Pink Line marks decade of service

Written by Jenifer Nunez, assistant editor
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CTA

After 10 years and 50 million rides, the Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) celebrated the 10th birthday of the Pink Line this week, which began service on June 25, 2006.

 

“Ten years ago we launched Pink Line service with the goal of providing more access to rail service to customers on the city’s West Side,” said CTA President Dorval Carter, Jr. “Since then, the Pink Line has provided 50 million rides and we are proud of the important role it has served in connecting people, jobs and communities.”

The CTA in 1993 adopted the color-coded system of all its routes. The Pink Line received its name following a “Name the Line” contest held by the Chicago Transit Board, which asked Chicago-area students to write an essay recommending a color for the CTA’s newest rail line and explain the importance of transit service to their community. More than 500 entries were submitted by students from kindergarten through eighth grade. The winning entry, written by then-7th grader Eleni Vrettos, was announced in March 2006.

Vrettos, who is now a 7th grade teacher in the Chicago area, joined the CTA for the Pink Line’s birthday celebration. Her contest-winning essay a decade ago remarked that Pink was a befitting color for CTA’s newest rail line because pink is a “bright and lively and makes people jolly.”

Pink Line ridership has grown by 35 percent on the 54th/Cermak branch since the enhanced service was established in 2006 and reached a high of approximately 5.6 million in 2015. The line serves 11 stations between 54th and Cermak streets in Cicero and the Polk station. Prior to becoming the Pink Line, the tracks were formerly the 54th/Cermak Blue Line and connected downtown to the Congress Blue Line at the Racine Blue Line station. When Pink Line service was established, CTA connected the former 54th/Cermak Blue Line to the Loop by restoring a then-unused section of track infrastructure known as the Paulina Connector.

In the decade that followed, the Pink Line got a new station: The CTA opened the Morgan Station, serving both Pink and Green line trains, in 2012. The station filled in a nearly 1.5-mile gap between the existing Clinton and Ashland stations and has since contributed to substantial residential and commercial development over the past several years.

The Pink Line has provided customers with increased and faster service and more connections to downtown. It also allowed CTA to increase frequency of service on the Forest Park branch of the Blue Line. Prior to the Pink Line, Blue Line trains traveling from O’Hare had to split service time via the two separate 54th/Cermak and Forest Park branches.

 

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