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The Cabrillo ferry at the Coronado Ferry Landing. The Coronado Commuter Ferry takes morning and afternoon commuters across San Diego Bay from Broadway Pier and the Coronado Ferry Landing. San Diego Harbor Excursion operates ferry shuttles directly to and from the Broadway Pier, San Diego, the Coronado Ferry Landing and the Fifth Avenue Landing.
The Parade of Lights is a parade of more than 80 small boats with holiday decorations and lights on two Sundays in December. The parade has been held annually since 1972. The parade starts off Shelter Island and proceeds past Harbor Island and downtown, finishing at the Coronado ferry landing. [16]
Nevertheless, before the bridge opened, the designation was added in the 1968 legislative session, along with the portion of Orange Avenue from the Coronado Ferry landing to Fourth Street, which was to be removed once the Coronado Bay Bridge opened. [11] The designation came into effect on February 21, 1969. [12]
Naval Air Station North Island or NAS North Island (IATA: NZY, ICAO: KNZY, FAA LID: NZY), at the north end of the Coronado peninsula on San Diego Bay in San Diego, California, is part of the largest aerospace-industrial complex in the United States Navy – Naval Base Coronado (NBC), and the home port of several aircraft carriers of the United States Navy.
The Coronado Ferry Landing. Tourism is an essential component of Coronado's economy. [49] This city is home to three major resorts (Hotel del Coronado, Coronado Island Marriott, and Loews Coronado Bay Resort), as well as several other hotels and inns. [50]
In 1933, the highway from the San Diego–Coronado Ferry to Route 2 (now I-5) was added to the state highway system, [2] and was designated as Legislative Route 199 two years later. [19] By that same year, Sign Route 75 was posted from U.S. Route 101 (US 101) in Palm City to the ferry landing. [20]
The San Diego–Coronado Bridge, commonly referred to as the Coronado Bridge, is a prestressed concrete/steel girder fixed-link bridge crossing over San Diego Bay, linking San Diego with Coronado, California. [6] It is signed as part of State Route 75.
The club built a pier to Silver Gate, and installed facilities around it, moving on from the original clubhouse on D Street. In 1914, Silver Gate moved across the bay near the Coronado ferry dock. Silver Gate was sold in 1919 and the club was without a clubhouse for a few years until a new clubhouse was built on Coronado in 1923.