Francais | English | Espanõl

Lake Shore Drive

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

(Redirected from Lake Shore Drive (Chicago))
Jump to: navigation, search
Image:US 41.svg
Lake Shore Drive
Length: 15.8 miles (25.4 km)<ref>Google Maps estimate</ref>
Formed: built 1937, named 1946
Direction: North-south
From: Marquette Drive (6600 South)
To: Hollywood Avenue (5700 North)
Major cities: Chicago, Illinois
System: United States Numbered Highways

Lake Shore Drive (colloquially referred to as LSD) is a mostly freeway-standard expressway running parallel with and next to Lake Michigan through Chicago, Illinois, USA. Except for the portion north of Foster Avenue (5200 North), Lake Shore Drive is designated as part of U.S. Highway 41.

The downtown part originally opened as Leif Erickson Drive in 1937 (and was also called Field Boulevard); it was renamed Lake Shore Drive in 1946.

Plans were made to extend Lake Shore Drive farther north through Rogers Park and into Evanston. Those plans were abandoned as a result of protests against cutting neighborhoods off from the lake. Specifically, Rogers Park voters rejected the extension in a referendum in November 2004. Massive white boulders along the lakefront at Loyola University Chicago still remain from the original expansion project.

Contents

[edit] History

In 1937, the double-decker Link Bridge over the Chicago River opened, along with viaducts over rail yards and other industrial areas connecting to both ends of it. The lower level was intended for a railroad connection, but it was never used until LSD was rebuilt in 1986. At the time the bridge was built, it was the longest and widest bascule bridge in the world.[1][2]

North of the river, LSD intersected Ohio Street at grade, and then passed over Grand Avenue and Illinois Street on its way to the bridge. South of the river, LSD came from the south on its current alignment, but continued straight at the curve north of Monroe Street, rising onto a viaduct. It intersected Randolph Street at grade and then continued north above the Illinois Central Railroad's yard. At the river, it made a sharp turn to the right, and another sharp turn to the left onto the bridge. These curves were known locally as the S-Curve.

Lake Shore Drive ended at Foster Avenue (5200n) until the 1950's when it was extended first briefly to Bryn Mawr (5600n) & then in 1957 to its present terminus at Hollywood Avenue (5700n). Portions of the drive between Irving Park Road & Foster Avenue still contain the original concrete from the 1930's, but this is scheduled for replacement in the near future.

Prior to the extension to Hollywood, traffic was funneled onto Foster & then north onto Sheridan Road, which still remains a wide 4-lane street to this day, though most traffic doesn't rejoin Sheridan until LSD ends at Hollywood Avenue now. Sheridan Road south of Foster narrows to 2 lanes of traffic with street parking on each side as well.

When Wacker Drive was extended east to LSD in the 1970s, its upper level ended at LSD at the west curve (the lower level dead-ended underneath). A new development at the northeast corner of the Randolph Street intersection resulted in an extension of Randolph across LSD.

Construction began in 1982 on a realignment of LSD south of the river (along with a reconstruction north of the river). A whole new alignment was built, greatly smoothing the S-curve. The northbound side opened in October 1985, and the southbound side opened in November 1986.[3] A new lower level was built, using the lower level of the bridge, and providing access to the new Wacker Drive and the roads on the north side of the river.

The old road south of Randolph became a Cancer Survivors Plaza; the east-west part was reconstructed as part of Wacker Drive (which was being rebuilt at the time). The rest, between Randolph and Wacker, was kept for several years as Field Boulevard, but was demolished, with only the southernmost part remaining in 1994, and even that is now gone. Current plans are for new upper level streets in the area as part of the Lakeshore East development.

On November 10, 1996, new northbound lanes opened next to the original southbound lanes at Soldier Field, getting rid of the original wide median from 1943.[4]

[edit] A political moniker

In the 20th century, the tony neighborhoods near Lake Shore Drive came to be occupied by exclusive high-rise apartment, condominiums and co-op buildings. To the political columnist Mike Royko, Lake Shore Drive was goo-goo territory, a land occupied by Chicago's wealthy "good-government" types. Royko sometimes used Lake Shore Drive as a political moniker. Though he often agreed with the reformers, he looked upon them with the same cynical eye as his fictional Chicago everyman, Slats Grobnik.

[edit] Inner/Outer Drive

Lake Shore Drive contains both an inner & outer drive.

The inner drive (or local) is used for slower local traffic & is connected to the street grid. The local drive runs from downtown in Streeterville to North Avenue (1600n), (becoming Canon Drive). Then the inner drive reappears at Belmont Avenue (3200n), continuing north to Irving Park Road (4000n). This portion of the drive was originally named Sheridan Road (which can still be seen carved in stone in at least one vintage high-rise).

The outer drive (or express) with limited-access runs from the south side of the city, north to the terminus at Hollywood Avenue (5700n) in the Edgewater neighborhood.

Lake Shore Drive is unique in that it runs both north/south and east/west, like several other major streets in Chicago. East Lake Shore Drive in the Gold Coast neighborhood is one of the most prestigious addresses in the city partly due to its roughly 1-block long length.

Other streets in Chicago that run both north/south & east/west include Wacker Drive, Sheridan Road, and Hyde Park Blvd.

[edit] Lake Shore Drive in popular culture

Several films based in Chicago feature scenes on Lake Shore Drive, including Ferris Bueller's Day Off, The Blues Brothers, Risky Business, and National Lampoon's Vacation. In When Harry Met Sally, the title characters are seen taking Lake Shore Drive in the opposite compass direction to that which their origin point and destination would require. Lake Shore Drive is also seen in AT&T's/"The New Cingular's" "Weight" ad with the ad's protagonist driving south along Lake Shore Drive towards the John Hancock Building.

The 1971 song "Lake Shore Drive" by Aliotta-Haynes-Jeremiah is a reference to the road and an allusion to its initials, LSD. Styx mentions the road in their 1990 song "Borrowed Time." The road is also mentioned in the 2005 Kanye West song "Drive Slow," and also in his verse in the Boost Mobile promotional single "Whole City Behind Us."

Because of the connection to drugs, it was believed that the US Post Office would not deliver mail to a Lake Shore Drive address if it were abbreviated LSD.[citation needed] The Post Office announced in the early 1990s that this practice would be halted, and LSD was an accepted abbreviation.

[edit] Locations of note

[edit] Neighborhoods

[edit] See also

Bike The Drive

[edit] External links

[edit] References

<references/>
Expressways in Chicagoland
Image:I-55.svg Stevenson Expressway Image:I-57.svg Interstate 57 Image:I-65.svg Interstate 65
Image:I-80.svgImage:I-94.svg
Image:US 6.svg
Kingery Expressway | Borman Expressway Image:I-80.svg
Image:I-94.svgImage:I-294.svg
Tri-State Tollway Image:I-88.svg Ronald Reagan Memorial Tollway
Image:I-90.svg Northwest Tollway | Chicago Skyway | Indiana Toll Road Image:I-90.svgImage:I-94.svg Dan Ryan Expressway Image:I-90.svgImage:I-94.svg
Image:I-190.svg
Kennedy Expressway
Image:I-94.svg Edens Spur | Edens Expressway | Bishop Ford Freeway Image:I-290.svg Eisenhower Expressway Image:I-355.svg North-South Tollway
Image:US 41.svg Lake Shore Drive | Skokie Highway Image:Illinois 53.svg Illinois Route 53 Image:Illinois 83.svg Kingery Highway
Image:Illinois 137.svg Amstutz Expressway Image:Illinois 394.svg Illinois Route 394 Elgin-O'Hare Expressway
Image:IN912.gif Cline Avenue
Personal tools