Structure Sox–35th station is located in the median of the
Dan Ryan Expressway. The main entrance to the station is on the 35th Street overpass; that entrance is accessible by an elevator. An auxiliary entrance is located on the 33rd Street overpass, and this entrance connects to the station via a pedestrian bridge. At both entrances, a fare turnstile is located at street level and passengers must take stairs, an escalator, or the elevator to the platform. The platform is an
island platform; northbound trains stop on the east side, and southbound trains stop on the west side.
Construction A rapid transit line in the median of the Dan Ryan Expressway was initially proposed in 1958, before the expressway was built. In 1966, Chicago voters passed a bond issue to provide $28 million in funding for new rail lines in the median of the Dan Ryan and
Kennedy Expressways, qualifying the routes for federal aid funds. The Chicago Plan commission approved plans for the new routes in January 1967, estimating the cost of the Dan Ryan line to be $38 million; Sox–35th, called White Sox–Illinois Tech at the time, was included in the plans. Sox–35th and the other Dan Ryan stations opened on September 28, 1969. The final cost of the line was $38 million; the
Chicago Tribune noted that it was constructed "in virtually record time". Three days before the line opened, the CTA ran free trains on the route between Sox–35th and
95th. The new route led to the
Loop in the north and continued west along the Lake Street Elevated; trains did not follow the current alignment of the Red Line north of Sox–35th until 1993.
1979 closure On January 29, 1979, the CTA closed 14 stations during rush-hour service, including Sox–35th, due to equipment shortages caused by the
Chicago Blizzard of 1979. After an outcry from riders and several African-American politicians, Sox–35th and three other stations reopened the following day. The remaining stations reopened later in the week after the
Urban Mass Transportation Administration warned the CTA that the closings may have been a civil rights violation. The
Chicago Tribune considered the closings to be a factor in Mayor
Michael Bilandic's loss to
Jane Byrne in the 1979 Democratic mayoral primary, noting Byrne's large margin of victory in predominantly black wards affected by the closings.
Rehabilitation project In 2002, the CTA announced that it would rehabilitate Sox–35th and seven other stations on the Dan Ryan branch. During the renovations, the escalators at Sox–35th were replaced, its lighting and flooring were upgraded, and a granite tile White Sox logo was added to the floor. In addition, workers improved the 35th Street bridge adjacent to the station, replacing its sidewalks and canopies. The renovations to Sox–35th cost over $13 million and concluded in time for the
2003 Major League Baseball All-Star Game at U.S. Cellular Field.
2013 closure The station closed on May 19, 2013 as part of the Red Line South Reconstruction project and reopened on October 20, 2013. ==Bus and rail connections==