You couldtake the regular 40-minute train from one of the busiest airports in the world,Secretive Boarding House or how about a 12-minute high-speed trip?
The Boring Company, headed by Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk, has won a bid to build a high-speed train from Chicago’s O'Hare International Airport to downtown.
SEE ALSO: Elon Musk's Boring Company is 'a few months' from offering free rides beneath L.A.The new rail line, or Chicago Express Loop, will see 12-minute trips in electric vehicles called "skates," from the airport's new terminals to the Block 37 super-station downtown. This trip usually takes approximately 30-40 minutes, whether by train via Chicago's Blue Line, or by cab, Uber or Lyft.
Skates will leave each station as frequently as every 30 seconds, operating 20 hours per day, seven days a week.
According to The Boring Company, fares have not been finalized, but "will be less than half the typical price of taxi/ride-share services, though higher than the Blue Line."
Passengers will hop into an eight to 16-seat vehicle travelling up to 150 miles per hour through The Boring Company's 12-feet-wide tunnels, sitting 30 to 60 feet underground. Single passenger vehicles will also be available, but no other information has been provided on this.
Each battery-powered electric skate has been based on the Tesla Model X, and will be mechanically confined to a concrete track. Each skate features a climate controlled cabin, luggage storage space, and Wi-Fi.
How much will this all cost? According to the Chicago Sun Times, The Boring Company says it can install the whole thing, including the new airport station and Block 37 renovation, for under $1 billion. The Boring Company says the project will be 100 percent privately funded.
The bid win doesn't come as a huge surprise, as Musk tweeted plans to work with the city of Chicago on the airport rail project in November, and made the bid for The Boring Company in February.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
"Bringing Chicago’s economic engines closer together will keep the city on the cutting edge of progress, create thousands of good-paying jobs and strengthen our great city for future generations," Mayor Emanuel said in a statement provided to Mashable.
"This transformative project will help Chicago write the next chapter in our legacy of innovation and invention."
For the control of the high-volume airport line, The Boring Company beat out a rival bid from joint venture called O’Hare Xpress LLC, made up of Meridiam, Antarctica Capital, Mott MacDonald, First Transit, and JLC Infrastructure, a fund (amazingly) backed by basketball legend Earvin “Magic” Johnson, reports Bloomberg.
It's another win for The Boring Company, which is already rolling out its ambitious ultra-high-speed hyperloop project in Los Angeles — one that'll apparently cost passengers just $1 to ride within the city. The very first LA tunnel was officially completed in May, after digging permission was granted in August last year.
Musk will begin giving free rides through the LA tunnels within a few months.
View this post on Instagram
Musk also got permission from Maryland officials for his Boring Company to build a 10-mile tunnel in the state last year. It will mark the first part of Musk's envisioned hyperloop to transport people underground between New York and Washington, D.C. in just 29 minutes.
Guess Musk had better sell a fair few of those flamethrowers.
UPDATE: June 14, 2018, 3:03 p.m. AEST Updated with information provided by The City of Chicago.
Topics Elon Musk
Apple confirms the App Store is down for many usersNew plan would pay your deposit back if you return your drinks containersReddit Gold pulls bitcoin payment optionApple unveils updates to iWork's Pages at Chicago education eventMarch For Our Lives events got a big boost from an army of celebritiesSteven Soderbergh's 'Unsane' is a horror movie for the #MeToo eraArizona orders Uber to stop testing selfMarch For Our Lives, Tide Pods, and the new way we talk about teensMozilla releases antiFace Licker lollipop lets you print your face on a $57 piece of candyNASA has again delayed the launch of the James Webb Space TelescopeArizona orders Uber to stop testing selfThe NBA knows you only care about the fourth quarter. This proves it.FTC confirms it’s investigating Facebook — a huge threat to the social media giantSuperfan's 'Simpsons'China's TiangongHow 'microtargeted psychographic' ads affect realApple announces $329 9.7What if yoga pants, but with guns?This artwork is a vending machine that dispenses 'snacks' based on your mood Advice on Love from Nietzsche and Sartre Redux: Frank O’Hara, Joy Williams, Roberto Bolaño Absurdist Dialogues with Siri Gabriel García Márquez’s Road Trip Through Alabama by Caleb Johnson Celebrating Shithole Literature A 1984 Film’s Bleak, Brutal Depiction of Nuclear Winter Still Haunts Today The Age of Graffiti How French Libertines Are Reckoning With #MeToo Redux: Amos Oz, May Swenson, Gerard Kornelis van het Reve Two Thousand Pieces of Subway Ephemera The Poet Upstairs The Unchanging, Ever Here for the Ride: Andre D. Wagner’s Subway Photographs Mirtha Dermisache and the Limits of Language by Will Fenstermaker Napoleon’s Chamber Pot: Propaganda and Fake News Black Antipastoral and the End of the World Scenes from Gerald Murnane’s Golf Club The Night in My Hair: Henna and the Muslim Ban How Much for That Pepe? Scenes from the First Rare Digital Art Auction Different Forms of Illumination: An Interview with Hermione Hoby
1.0813s , 10138.203125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Secretive Boarding House】,Co-creation Information Network