University Club of Chicago Parking Information

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

University Club of Chicago Parking Information Parking Information Valet Parking $25 Per Vehicle – For Duration of Event $40 Overnight Guests with In and Out Privileges Prices Subject to Change without Notice. Millennium Garages Self-Parking 312-616-0600 East Monroe Garage Entrance is on Columbus Street, Just East of Michigan Avenue and Just South of East Randolph Street. Grant Park North Garage Entrance is on North Michigan Avenue between Monroe Street (from the South, heading North) and Washington Street (from the North, heading South) Grant Park South Garage Entrance is on North Michigan Avenue between Congress Parkway (from the South, heading North), and Adams Street (from the North, heading South). Driving to the Club From O’Hare Airport Follow Airport Exit Signs Take the I-90 East (Kennedy Expressway) ramp to Chicago Loop Follow signs for I-90 East for 17 Miles Take Monroe Street (Exit 51E). Left on Monroe Go Approximately One Mile University Club will be on your left, on the corner of Michigan and Monroe Streets There is a Green Awning over the revolving door with 76, the address, on it. From Midway Airport Go South on West Airport Drive towards Cicero Avenue Turn left on South Cicero Avenue for 2 miles Take I-55 North (Stevenson Expressway) for 5 miles Take Exit #292 towards Indiana (I-94 E)/ Dan Ryan Expressway (I-90) / Wisconsin (I-94W) Take the I-90/I-94 West / Dan Ryan Expressway exit left towards Wisconsin Merge onto I-90 West Take Monroe Street (Exit 51E), Turn Right onto Monroe Street and go 1 mile University Club will be on the Left at the corner of Michigan and Monroe There is a Green Awning over the revolving door with 76, the address, on it. University Club of Chicago All Prices are Subject to a 22% Service Charge and Applicable Sales Tax Prices Subject to Change without Notice. .
Recommended publications
  • A Case Study on Dan Ryan Reconstruction Project
    WORK ZONE SAFETY AND MOBILITY ISSUES: A CASE STUDY ON DAN RYAN RECONSTRUCTION PROJECT Submission date: August 1, 2007 No. of figures: 4 No. of Tables: 2 Word Count: 5,729 Corresponding Author: Jonathan Shi Professor Department of Civil and Architectural Engineering Illinois Institute of Technology 3201 South Dearborn Street, Chicago Illinois 60616. Phone: (312) 567-3630 Fax: (312) 567-3519 Email: [email protected] Contributing Author: Sean Washatka Project Engineer McShane Construction 9550 W Higgins Rd, Rosemont IL 60018 Phone: (847) 292-4300 Fax: (847) 292-4310 Email: [email protected] This manuscript is submitted for review for the 2008 TRB 87th Annual Conference. TRB 2008 Annual Meeting CD-ROM Original paper submittal - not revised by author. Shi & Washatka 2 ABSTRACT Due to the significance of the Dan Ryan reconstruction project with a total cost close to $1 billion and its proximity to downtown Chicago and the densely populated suburbs; IDOT has taken some extra measures to ensue safety and mobility during the construction of the project. The main objectives of this study are to review and document information pertaining to the reconstruction project; review work zone safety practices, safety programs, and implementation of transportation management plans; analyze the roles and responsibilities of various parties involved in the project; and assess the work zone impact on safety and mobility of the transportation network. Based on our interviews and collected information, the project has been very successful without any worker fatality; fewer crashes are recorded in the work zones; and its impact on the mobility of the transportation network in the Chicago area is minimal.
    [Show full text]
  • Risk Framework for Public Private Partnerships in Highway Construction
    RISK FRAMEWORK FOR PUBLIC PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS IN HIGHWAY CONSTRUCTION by Mamata Shrestha An independent research paper submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Masters of Science Construction Engineering and Management (Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering) at the University of Wisconsin-Madison 2011 RISK FRAMEWORK FOR PUBLIC PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS IN HIGHWAY CONSTRUCTION Mamata Shrestha1 ABSTRACT Recent Public Private Partnerships (P3) in the United States represents a significant advancement in the level of participation of the private sector in the provision of road and highway assets. A number of states and local governments consider P3 as a mechanism to streamline project delivery, transfer risk, reduce costs and raise additional transportation revenues. P3 broaden the private sector‟s participation beyond the design and construction phases to include the assumption of responsibility and risks for the financing, operations, and maintenance of project. In this paper, the author introduces a framework that identifies and organizes the broad range of risks associated with P3 arrangements for highway project delivery. The “PEST” framework organizes risks into four categories: Political, Economic, Socio-Cultural and Technical which could help P3 projects in devising risk management strategies. P3 projects could benefit by these categorization in identifying, allocating, managing and thus minimizing overall project risks. The framework was developed by considering the risks associated with major P3 highway projects in the United States. Project documentation, case studies, and literature related to P3 highway projects (completed/on-going) were used to validate the framework. The categorization of the risk factors can help practitioners identify the parties involved (public or private) that assume the most risk based on different phases of highway construction and the type of risk involved within it.
    [Show full text]
  • Corporate Checkers Ground Lease  Next to CTA ‘L’ Station ∙ Signalized Hard Corner ∙ Strong Traffic Counts 6301 S
    CONFIDENTIAL OFFERING MEMORANDUM Corporate Checkers Ground Lease Next to CTA ‘L’ Station ∙ Signalized Hard Corner ∙ Strong Traffic Counts 6301 S. Ashland Avenue // Chicago, IL 60636 Actual Site EXCLUSIVELY OFFERED BY: BRAD TEITELBAUM BAUM REALTY GROUP, LLC Vice President / Broker 1030 W. Chicago Avenue, Suite 200 [email protected] Chicago, IL 60642 312.275.3116 www.baumrealty.com 6301 S. ASHLAND AVENUE // CHICAGO, IL // OFFERING SUmmARY Offering Summary Baum Realty Group has been exclusively retained by ownership to sell a ground leased Checkers asset located in Chicago, IL. The property is situated at the signalized hard corner of Ashland Avenue and 63rd Street featuring vehicular exposure of 47,780 cars per day. Checkers built a new drive-thru restaurant and has 9.75 years remaining with rent increases and extension options. The site is adjacent to the CTA ‘L’ Green Line Ashland station, which has annual ridership of 377,000 passengers, adding to the dense daytime population in the immediate area. PRICE: $1,307,700 CURRENT CAP RATE: 6.50% CAP RATE AS OF DECEMBER 2020 7.15% TERM REMAINING: 9.75 Years Current Annual Ground Rent: $85,000 December 2020 Ground Rent: $93,500 Escalations: 10% every 5 years Lease Type: Absolute NNN Ground Lease – No Landlord Maintenance Responsibilities Corporate Tenant: Checkers Drive-In Restaurants, Inc. Year Built: 2017 2 // CONFIDENTIAL OFFERING MEMORANDUM 6301 S. ASHLAND AVENUE // CHICAGO, IL // INVESTMENT HIGHLIGHTS Investment Highlights THREE CTA ‘L’ STATIONS WITHIN 1.5 MILES The site is next to the CTA ‘L’ Green Line Ashland station and 1 mile away from the Green Line Halsted station; the two Green Line stations have a combined annual ridership of 588,000 passengers.
    [Show full text]
  • Highways and Urban Decentralization Prepared for Illinois State Toll
    Highways and Urban Decentralization Final Rep ort Prepared for Illinois State Toll Highway Authority by Urban Transp ortation Center University of Illinois at Chicago Suite 340, M/C 357 412 South Peoria Street Chicago, IL 60607 http://www.uic.edu/cuppa/utc Phone: 312996-4820 Fax: 312413-0006 i Contents 1 Intro duction 1 2 Causes of Decentralization 2 2.0.1 Empirical Evidence . 2 2.0.2 Theoretical Background . 3 2.1 Relationship of Highways to Decentralization . 6 2.1.1 Decentralization and Highways in Chicago . 6 2.1.2 Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Century Decentralization . 9 2.1.3 Literature on Decentralization . 13 2.1.4 Decentralization and Travel Behavior in Chicago . 14 2.2 Relationship b etween County Growth and Increases in Highway Capacity . 22 2.3 Can Decentralization Occur Without Highways? . 23 3 E ects of Decentralization 24 3.1 Decentralization and the Cost of Housing . 25 3.2 Highways and Economic Development . 27 3.3 Highways and Firm Lo cation . 28 3.3.1 E ect of Highway Capacity on Business Costs and Firm Lo cation . 29 3.3.2 Survey of Companies in DuPage County, Illinois . 30 ii List of Figures 1 Percentchange in p opulation from 1940 to 1950. 10 2 Percentchange in p opulation from 1970 to 1980. 11 3 Ma jor contributors to the p ercentage increase in VMT in the Chicago area from 1973 to 1993. 17 4 Hyp othetical trip chains . 20 5 Hyp othetical trip chain patterns for di erent households . 20 6 Lane miles p er p opulation in McHenry County: 1983-1995.
    [Show full text]
  • Planned Protests in Chicago Area Expressways
    Planned protests on Chicago Area Expressways Matt Daeda Jim McKay IDOT District 1 IDOT District 1 Expressway Traffic Emergency Traffic Operations Engineer Patrol Manager 3 events in 2018 • 7/7/18 - I-90/94 Dan Ryan Protest • 8/2/18 – Lake Shore Drive Protest (no IDOT involvement) • 9/3/18 – I-90/94 Kennedy/O’Hare Airport Protest July 7th, 2018 Dan Ryan Protest • Community Activist Father Pfleger from Saint Sabina Catholic Church announced a planned protest on the Dan Ryan Expressway to bring attention violence, crime, joblessness, and poverty plaguing certain neighborhoods in Chicago. • Protest planned to enter the northbound expressway at the 79th St. entrance ramp and march to the 67th St. exit ramp. July 7th, 2018 Dan Ryan Protest • Illinois State Police reached out to IDOT on June 29th requesting IDOT resources to assist with closing ramps and the mainline expressway should the protestors gain assess to the expressway. • Plan at this time was to keep all people off the expressway. • Plan included resources from Illinois Department of Transportation, Illinois State Police District Chicago and District 15, Chicago Police Department, and others. July 7th, 2018 Dan Ryan Protest • Internal IDOT meeting on 7/3/18 to discuss IDOT’s response to this event • IDOT prepared to close both directions of the expressway, northbound lanes at the I-57 and I-94 merge, and southbound lanes at 63rd St. • 8 Maintenance trucks to close the southbound lanes • 7 Maintenance trucks to close the northbound lanes • Other vehicles as needed to close various entrance ramps Protest Location Northbound Closure Southbound Closure July 7th, 2018 Dan Ryan Protest • Plan changed • Anticipated 2,000 protestors with 600 law enforcement officers to keep protestors off the highway.
    [Show full text]
  • Directions to Mccormick Place – North Building and Marshalling Yard
    ______________________________________________________________ Directions to McCormick Place – North Building and Marshalling Yard The McCormick Place Complex is located south of downtown Chicago at 23rd Street and South Lake Shore Drive. The phone number to the Standard Parking office located in the Marshalling Yard is 312-791-6200. Parking lots are located at the following locations (see McCormick Place Area Map): Lot A - McCormick Place/Martin Luther King Lot (Cottage Grove Ave. access) $16.00/day** – Phone: 312.567.8360 Lot C - McCormick Pace East - Underground Garage (Ft. Dearborn Dr. access) $16.00/day** – Phone: 312.567.8152 Exhibitor Reserved Parking – For $20.00/day**, exhibitors are allowed in-and-out privileges. You must request this by Thursday, December 20 th , 2007. To obtain this parking pass, a form can be found under the OTHER SERVICE PROVIDER FORMS TAB in this kit. For further questions, please call 312-595-5201. ** Parking prices subject to change. TRAVELING TO MCCORMICK PLACE (LOT A) BY CAR: (For parking at the South, North and West Buildings) FROM O'HARE INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT, NORTHWEST OR THE NORTH: Follow I-190 East to I-90 East. This turns into I-90/94 East (Dan Ryan Expressway). Keeping to the right, follow to I-55 North (Stevenson Expressway). Exit at Martin L. King Drive (Exit #293D) and follow signs to Lot A entrance ramp located immediately to your left. FROM THE WEST: Take I-290 East (Eisenhower Expressway) to I-94 East (Dan Ryan Expressway). Keeping to the right, follow to I-55 North (Stevenson Expressway). Exit at Martin L. King Drive (Exit #293D) and follow signs to Lot A entrance ramp located immediately to your left.
    [Show full text]
  • Chicago, Illinois Investment Highlights Subject Offering
    SOUTHWEST CORNER 87TH STREET & DAN RYAN EXPRESSWAY (I-94) CHICAGO, ILLINOIS INVESTMENT HIGHLIGHTS SUBJECT OFFERING id-America Real Estate Corporation has been retained by the Mowner to sell the 100% fee simple interest in 87th Street Center. The shopping center caters to a dense, infill urban population in the Chatham neighborhood of Chicago, and provides a unique redevelopment opportunity for potential investors. Location: Southwest Corner of 87th Street & Dan Ryan Expressway (Interstate 94) Chicago, Illinois GLA: 132,427 SF Occupancy Rate: 34% upon Burlington’s impending vacancy Tenants: Burlington (vacating June 2020), Chipotle, Rainbow, GNC, Sprint, Wendy’s (Ground Lease) Shadow Anchor: Jewel-Osco Traffic Counts: Dan Ryan Expressway (Interstate 94) – 233,900 VPD 87th Street – 25,000 VPD Year Built: 1974 (inline shopping center) and 2017 (outlots) (Shadow Anchor / Not A Part of Subject Offering) KEY FEATURES INFILL DEMOGRAPHIC PROFILE – The area surrounding 87th Street Center features extremely dense residential demographics. Within a three-mile radius of the center there are 256,000 residents with average household incomes of $53,400. Additionally, the area boasts strong daytime demographics with 213,500 employees within the same three-mile radius. UNIQUE URBAN REDEVELOPMENT OPPORTUNITY – 87th Street Center offers the substantial opportunity to improve an existing shopping center located in a dense, infill urban neighborhood where there are significant barriers to entry and limited opportunities for new construction. Burlington recently advised ownership of its intention to exit the center upon expiration of its lease (June 28, 2020). This provides a purchaser the opportunity to capture national credit tenants looking to gain entry within this dense market, along with other potential nontraditional users in order to reposition the inline portion of the shopping center.
    [Show full text]
  • Traffic-Handling Procedures During Maintenance and Reconstruction to Promote Safety and Minimize Delays
    100 Traffic-Handling Procedures During Maintenance and Reconstruction to Promote Safety and Minimize Delays Charles McLean Illinois Department of Transportation In urban expressway maintenance projects, planning traffic con- trol procedures requires as much time as making repairs. There- fore, these techniques must be constantly improved to minimize traffic delays and to accomplish the necessary improvements safely. This paper presents the Illinois Department of Trans- portation's urban Interstate maintenance project experience and uses the 1971 Kennedy-Dan Ryan Expressway rehabilitation project as a case study. Procedures for the planning of this project were based on experience gained from the 1966 Edens Expressway re- surfacing project and involved a series of steps. Some essential components of this procedure include the formation of a task force to prepare the project contracts and the arrangement of meetings with various highway agencies and interested public and private transportation organizations. Proper timing of the elements of the planning effort ensures success of full news dissemination con- cerning the project. These efforts are designed to avoid conges- tion at the project's inception and to ensure that the motorist makes advance plans about alternate routes or modes of travel. The pub- lic information program is closely correlated with the success of the planned control measures. The Illinois Department of Transportation has operational responsibility for the 135- mile (217-km) Chicago Metropolitan Expressway System, which carries more than 15 million vehicle-miles of travel daily and 25 percent of all of the vehicle-miles traveled within Chicago. Approximately 20 miles (32 km) of this system accommodates two-way daily traffic demands in excess of 200,000 vehicles (Fig.
    [Show full text]
  • Life Services Network - 2008 Annual Convention & Exhibition April 2-4, 2008 - Navy Pier, Chicago
    Life Services Network - 2008 Annual Convention & Exhibition April 2-4, 2008 - Navy Pier, Chicago REGISTRATION INFORMATION: Please bring your confirmation with you to the conference. Registration will occur at Navy Pier inside Festival Hall A, Level 2 . QUESTIONS: Questions regarding your registration should be directed to 508.660.5024. Questions regarding the LSN Annual Convention should be directed to LSN Meeting Services at 630.325.6170 or [email protected]! SHUTTLE SERVICE Shuttle buses will run between the Embassy Suites Lakefront Hotel and Chicago City Centre Hotel and Navy Pier each day of the convention. Signs will be posted at each location identifying the pick-up/drop off areas. Pick up and drop off locations are as follows: Embassy Suites Lakefront Hotel – Street Level on Columbus Drive Chicago City Centre - SE corner of Ohio and Fairbanks Navy Pier - Entrance 2, Lower Level (taxi/bus turn around and drop off area) Shuttle service to Metra stations: On Wednesday, April 2, one shuttle will run continuously shuttle from Navy Pier to Union Station and Ogilvie Transportation Center starting at 6:00pm. A shuttle will also run to those stations on Thursday, April 3 beginning at 5:30pm and on Friday, April 4 one shuttle will run from Navy Pier to those stations at 12:00pm and will make an additional run if needed. Shuttle service for LSN’s Opening Night Reception: Shuttle service will be available for those attending the Opening Night Reception at Navy Pier and returning to the hotels. The last bus will depart Navy Pier for the hotels at 8:00pm.
    [Show full text]
  • National Archives at Chicago General Information Leaflet 48
    National Archives at Chicago Visit Us! NATIONAL ARCHIVES at CHICAGO 7358 South Pulaski Road Chicago, IL 60629-5898 FEDERAL RECORDS OF THE GREAT LAKES REGION FROM Illinois • Indiana • Michigan • Minnesota Ohio • Wisconsin www.archives.gov/chicago Directions On West 75th Street, one block west of South Pulaski Road. 15 miles southwest of downtown Chicago, 30 miles southeast of O’Hare International Airport, and 2 miles southeast of Midway Airport. 5 miles south of the Pulaski Road exit on the Stevenson Expressway (I-55), 5 miles west of the 79th Street exit on the Dan Ryan Expressway (I-94), and 7 miles north of the Cicero Avenue exit on the Tri-State Tollway (I-294). Near the South Pulaski Road and West 75th Street bus stop of the Chicago Transit Authority bus 53A (the South Pulaski Road route). Passengers can transfer from the 53A to other buses, subways, and commuter trains serving the Chicago area. Contact Us! Research hours: Monday–Friday, 8 a.m.–4:15 p.m. Hours subject to change due to special programs and weather. Please check our web site for current hours. We are closed on all Federal holidays. Telephone: 773-948-9001 E-mail: [email protected] Web site: www.archives.gov/chicago General Information Leaflet 48, Revised 2018 v We sponsor programs that educate the public about There is no digital substitute for the archives, history, genealogy, and related subjects. v We partner with colleges and universities, historical and experience of holding an authentic genealogical societies, veterans organizations, museums, historical record, for being on-site and other archives.
    [Show full text]
  • The Neglected Political Economy of Eminent Domain
    Michigan Law Review Volume 105 Issue 1 2006 The Neglected Political Economy of Eminent Domain Nicole Stelle Garnett Notre Dame Law School Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.law.umich.edu/mlr Part of the Constitutional Law Commons, Law and Economics Commons, Legal Writing and Research Commons, and the Property Law and Real Estate Commons Recommended Citation Nicole S. Garnett, The Neglected Political Economy of Eminent Domain, 105 MICH. L. REV. 101 (2006). Available at: https://repository.law.umich.edu/mlr/vol105/iss1/2 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Michigan Law Review at University of Michigan Law School Scholarship Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Michigan Law Review by an authorized editor of University of Michigan Law School Scholarship Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. THE NEGLECTED POLITICAL ECONOMY OF EMINENT DOMAIN Nicole Stelle Garnett* This Article challenges a foundational assumption about eminent do- main-namely, that owners are systematically undercompensatedbecause they receive only fair market value for their property. In fact, scholars may have overstated the undercompensation problem because they have fo- cused on the compensation required by the Constitution, rather than on the actual mechanics of the eminent domain process. The Article examines three ways that "Takers" (i.e., nonjudicial actors in the eminent domain process) minimize undercompensation. First, Takers may avoid taking high subjective value properties. (By way of illustration,Professor Garnett dis- cusses evidence that Chicago's freeways were rerouted in the 1950s to avoid urban Catholic churches.) Second, in addition to paying compensa- tion for the condemned property, Takers frequently must pay additional compensation to property owners in the form of "relocation assistance." Third, Takers and property owners may voluntarily settle on above-market compensation during precondemnationnegotiations.
    [Show full text]
  • Randolph Street Ramp Closure, Inbound Ryan Lane Changes at Jane Byrne
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT July 29, 2021 Maria Castaneda 312.447.1919 Guy Tridgell 312.343.1731 Randolph Street ramp closure, inbound Ryan lane changes at Jane Byrne CHICAGO – The Illinois Department of Transportation announced today that as part of the ongoing Jane Byrne Interchange reconstruction, a stage change on the inbound Dan Ryan Expressway (Interstate 90/94) will begin, weather permitting, Monday, Aug. 2. To prepare for the next stage of the project, starting at 11 p.m. Monday, Aug. 2, lanes closures will begin on the inbound Dan Ryan, just north of 31st Street, to facilitate a new lane split. At 1 a.m., full closures for no longer than 15 minutes at a time will take place on the inbound Ryan. By 5 a.m. Tuesday, the new lane pattern will be in place. In the new configuration: • The four inbound Ryan lanes will split near 14th Street, just before Roosevelt Road. • Drivers will be directed by signs and message boards to stay to the right two lanes at the split to access the outbound Eisenhower Expressway (Interstate 290), inbound Ida B. Wells Drive and exit ramps to Madison and Lake streets. • The left two lanes will continue as through lanes and motorists will not be able to exit until Ohio Street. • All lanes merge back at Van Buren Street. The new configuration will allow the northbound center lanes to be built from just south of Roosevelt Road to Ida B. Wells as part of construction on the mainline lanes of the expressway and will remain in place through September.
    [Show full text]