While waiting for the snow to melt, I've been looking at my new Chicagoland Bike Map from the Active Transportation Alliance.
What was the ATA thinking? They have published a map that is badly distorted, not drawn to scale. The purported scale is 1" on the map equals 1.5 miles on the ground. That scale holds true for the North-South dimension, but not for the East-West dimension.
Take any known mile and a half distance in a north-south direction, say Addison to Lawrence. That measures 1" on the map. Now pick a known mile and a half distance in an east-west direction. Say Kedzie to Damen. That measures almost 1-5/8" on the map.
And it's like that everywhere. Take a known mile square. Say from Lincoln-Belmont-Ashland to Lincoln-Fullerton-Halsted. Belmont to Fullerton is a mile, Ashland to Halsted is a mile. On any other map, Lincoln Ave. between these two points is a 45 degree angle. Not on this map. The Belmont-Ashland-Fullerton-Halsted square is a rectangle with a ratio of 8:5 instead of 1:1.
What bizarre kind of map projection is this? Did the ATA cartographers have to yield to the ATA graphic designers, who decided to junk the aspect ratio to fit the planned size of the map?
This should not have happened.
Tags:
Does seem weird...
I hope they got a good deal on the printing cost.
What's with all the measuring?
The grid is every 800 in numbers equals a mile and every destination has an address.
But if you give more than an inch do you get more than a mile taken?
Wow, can't wait to see it to confirm, but sounds truthy. Anyone got a PDF link for that? I didn't find one in a cursory look.
Actually, it's the map that's truthy. :-)
And doesn't the Chicagoland map include suburbs where the Chicago grid system disappears into the hell of the windy streets and lack of numbering so even if you did not want to use the map to plot a route you cannot look at it and accurately get distance outside the city. And what about angle streets in the city?
Right, Lisa, it's wrong outside the city and it's wrong inside the city. No angle streets are to scale. The further they are from straight north-south the more out of scale they are
Lisa Curcio 4.1 mi said:
And doesn't the Chicagoland map include suburbs where the Chicago grid system disappears into the hell of the windy streets and lack of numbering so even if you did not want to use the map to plot a route you cannot look at it and accurately get distance outside the city. And what about angle streets in the city?
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Mike Zumwalt said:
What's with all the measuring?
The grid is every 800 in numbers equals a mile and every destination has an address.
That's not true. Madison to 31st has some odd numberings, e.g. Roosevelt is a mile south of Madison but is 1200 S. But in general 800 to a mile is accurate and as far as I know, it's accurate in the east-west direction.
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