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The station is located at 280 North Center Street in downtown Reno. The tracks are owned by the Union Pacific Railroad, while the station and platform are owned by the city of Reno. The station does not have a parking lot. The tracks are placed below ground level as they pass through the heart of downtown Reno.
The Nevada–California–Oregon Railroad built classic brick depots in Reno and Lakeview. A smaller stone masonry station was constructed in Alturas. [2] All three passenger depots still exist, and are listed on the United States National Register of Historic Places along with the locomotive house and machine shop in Reno. [10]
Reno got its second radio station [3] when KATO signed on for the first time on July 9, 1946. [1] Owned by the Sierra Broadcasting Company, KATO was a Don Lee/Mutual affiliate and broadcast with 250 watts from a transmitter at Sixth and Cassinella streets on the eastern edge of town. [3]
The station continued to use the callsign KOH until March 10, 1994 (March 18, 1994, according to FCC records). In 1994, as part of a complex realignment of stations in the Reno area, the KOH intellectual unit moved to 780 AM under the callsign KKOH, while 630 AM changed its call sign to KRCV. The 780 station couldn't use KOH's three-letter call ...
KQLO (1590 AM) was a radio station broadcasting a Spanish-language news/talk format. Formerly licensed to Sun Valley, Nevada, United States, it served the Reno, Nevada area. . The station, which broadcast from 1984 to 2011, was last owned by Jireh Media, In
The station began broadcasting on October 13, 1971; 53 years ago (). [4] The original call sign was KCRL, owned by businessman E. L. Cord. [5] [6] It was a sister station to Reno's NBC television affiliate, KCRL-TV (now KRNV-DT). The 'CRL' in the station's call letters stood for "Circle L"—a ranch that Cord owned in the Nevada desert.
The railroad was organized in Reno in June 1880 as the Nevada and Oregon Railroad. It was decided that the best plan was to build north to the Columbia River to service cattle ranches and farms in northeastern California and eastern Oregon. The company decided to lay narrow-gauge track because it was cheaper than standard gauge construction. It ...
Pages in category "History of Reno, Nevada" The following 20 pages are in this category, out of 20 total. ... Reno Main Post Office; Reno station; Jesse L. Reno; S ...