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The Foothill Extension (formerly the Gold Line Foothill Extension) is a construction project extending the light rail A Line, a part of the Los Angeles Metro Rail system. The project begins at the former terminus of the former Gold Line at Sierra Madre Villa station in Pasadena and continues east through the "Foothill Cities" of Los Angeles County.
Gold Line Eastside Extension November 15, 2009 Union Station – Atlantic: 8 6.0 $887 million Expo Line Phase 1 April 28, 2012 Flower/Washington – La Cienega/Jefferson [b] 8 7.6 $1.3 billion Expo Line To Culver City June 20, 2012 La Cienega/Jefferson – Culver City: 1 1.0 Farmdale station Farmdale: 1 [c] – Gold Line Foothill Extension ...
The Foothill Gold Line Construction Authority (Foothill Gold Line) is constructing an extension of the A Line (formerly the Gold Line) east from the former Gold Line terminus at Sierra Madre Villa station in Pasadena. The first phase of this extension to APU/Citrus College station in Azusa, Phase 2A, opened on March 5
The extension was constructed by the Foothill Gold Line Construction Authority and added six new stations to the Gold Line serving the cities of Arcadia, Monrovia, Duarte, Irwindale, and Azusa. A groundbreaking ceremony for Phase 2A was held on June 26, 2010; construction began the following summer and was completed in September 2015, with the ...
This station opened on March 5, 2016, as part of Phase 2A of the Gold Line Foothill Extension Project, and currently serves as the northern terminus of the A Line. Phase 2B of the Foothill Extension will open to Pomona in early 2025. [5] Due to heavy rain in March 2016, the previously delayed underpass construction on North Citrus Avenue was ...
The L Line and Gold Line [2] are former designations for a section of the current Los Angeles Metro Rail system. These names referred to a single light rail line of 31 miles (50 km) [1] providing service between Azusa and East Los Angeles via the northeastern corner of Downtown Los Angeles, serving several attractions, including Little Tokyo, Union Station, the Southwest Museum, Chinatown, and ...
An idea first floated more than 50 years ago to extend the Chicago Transit Authority's Red Line to the Far South Side is closer to becoming a reality with nearly $2B in federal funding now secured.
Line 188 was canceled in June 2003, following the advent of the former Metro L Line (Gold) now part of A Line; replaced by a rerouted Lines 260/361 (later 260/762, then 660) on Fair Oaks Av, an extension of Line 181 (later discontinued) on Colorado Bl, and rerouted Line 264 (later discontinued in 2021) on Duarte Rd; and Foothill Transit Line ...