The Blue Line vehicle ploughed through the end of the platform towards the entrance of the terminals shortly before 3am.
Chicago Fire Commissioner Jose Santiago told a press conference at O’Hare the train operator 'was walking and talking as we were investigating,' according to the Chicago Tribune.
An anonymous Transportation Security Administration employee told NBC Chicago: 'I thought it was just a hard stop as the train didn't even slow down when it was coming in. It was chaos.'
Chicago Transit Authority spokeswoman Lambrini Lukidis said a bus rail replacement service has been set up for passengers as trains are suspended in the surrounding area.
Located in north-west Chicago, O'Hare International is the world's fifth busiest airport after Beijing, Heathrow, Atlanta, and Tokyo Haneda.
Around 66million passengers pass through a year flying to more than 60 foreign destinations.
The underground station for Blue Line subway trains opened in 1984.
It is open 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
The O'Hare branch, the longest section of the Blue Line, uses the firm's oldest vehicles, as well as some of the newest.
No comments:
Post a Comment