Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Loop Trolley is a 2.2-mile (3.5 km), 10-station heritage streetcar line in and near the Delmar Loop area of greater St. Louis, Missouri, United States.It opened for service in 2018, then shut down in 2019 after revenue fell far short of projections.
This is a route-map template for the Loop Trolley, a St. Louis heritage streetcar.. For a key to symbols, see {{railway line legend}}.; For information on using this template, see Template:Routemap.
U.S. Route 50 (US 50) is a transcontinental highway which stretches from Ocean City, Maryland to West Sacramento, California. In the U.S. state of Virginia, US 50 extends 86 miles (138 km) from the border with Washington, D.C. at a Potomac River crossing at Rosslyn in Arlington County to the West Virginia state line near Gore in Frederick County.
This section of the Loop Trolley line had opened for service only a little more than two weeks earlier, on November 23. (The line's easternmost portion, which is entirely outside University City, had opened one week earlier.) Car 001 is ex-Portland Vintage Trolley car 512, a replica of a 1903 Brill streetcar built in 1991 by the Gomaco Trolley ...
In 2018, a 2.2-mile (3.5 km), 10-station heritage streetcar line was completed in and near the Delmar Loop area. Since 2022, the Loop Trolley has been operated in summer and fall by the Metro Transit division of the Bi-State Development Agency.
The area gets its name from a streetcar turnaround, or "loop", formerly located in the area. [2]Delmar Boulevard was originally known as Morgan Street. According to Norbury L. Wayman in his circa 1980 series History of St. Louis Neighborhoods, [3] the name Delmar was coined when two early landowners living on opposite sides of the road, one from Delaware and one from Maryland, combined the ...
State Route 50 (Virginia 1928-1933), now mostly State Route 2; U.S. Route 50 (Virginia), 1926 - present; See also. 1933 Virginia state highway renumbering
At its west end, US 50 was extended south from Sacramento along U.S. Route 99 to Stockton and west to the San Francisco Bay Area, replacing U.S. Route 48, by the early 1930s. [20] US 50 was officially cut back to Sacramento in the 1964 renumbering , replaced by Interstate 580 , [ 21 ] but remained on maps and signs for several more years.