Let’s fix Western Avenue and make Chicago stronger

by Admin
Let's fix Western Avenue and make Chicago stronger

The Western Avenue Corridor Study is potentially the most exciting thing to happen to Chicago city planning in decades. It’s bold, it’s big, and it’s exactly the type of ambitious city planning Chicago needs to face our current challenges.

Reimagining Western has two major components: rezoning and transit.

Starting with rezoning, the study calls for converting about 4.5 miles of Western to mostly B3-3 zoning, which allows for denser mixed use-development. Chicago notoriously has no land use plan. Usually, rezoning is done on a lot-by-lot basis, which can result in 20-plus different zoning classifications within just a couple of square blocks. This patchwork zoning system is often a barrier to building more housing, as navigating the zoning code is burdensome and restrictive to developers.

Rezoning Western is innovative in that it proactively rezones more than just a single lot. Indeed, an entire 4.5 miles of Western encompassing the West Ridge, Lincoln Square and North Center neighborhoods stand to benefit. If it’s approved, developers would be able to build more housing than the code currently allows. Under the new rules, about 6,800 more housing units would be allowed in this area (and that’s likely a conservative estimate). At a time when residents are leaving Chicago due to unaffordable rents, it’s urgent that we streamline our ability to build more abundant housing to drive rent prices down.  

In addition to providing denser housing, the rezoning would also lead to the creation of new businesses and institutions such as schools, libraries, retail shops and bars. Strong, walkable neighborhood centers would emerge, with Western no longer dominated solely by car dealerships and drive-thrus that pedestrians are scared to cross. In its current state, it’s easy to neglect Western as we zoom along it too fast in our cars. But when we walk through our neighborhoods, we’re forced to take pause and consider how we can make the places we live better for everyone. The rezoning encourages this walkability.

The second component of reimagining Western is improving bus transit by dedicating an entire lane of traffic to buses only. We can reduce traffic congestion significantly if we get less people in cars and more onto buses. After all, 50 people on a bus takes up less space than 50 cars. This reduced traffic, in turn, helps us hit our city’s climate goals.

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