Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
San Diego Business Journal; San Diego City Beat; San Diego Jewish Journal; San Diego Magazine; San Diego Reader; San Diego Union-Tribune (acquired by Tribune Publishing) Times of San Diego; Retail. Le Travel Store (closed) Mor Furniture; Petco; PriceSmart; Sports. BikeBandit; BMC USA; Competitor Group, Inc. Ellsworth Handcrafted Bicycles ...
32nd & Commercial station is a station on the Orange Line of the San Diego Trolley located in the Stockton neighborhood of San Diego, California.The stop is located in an area where the light rail temporarily breaks from its street-level tracks and runs on a separate right-of-way around the Mt. Hope and Greenwood Cemeteries.
Pacific Fleet opened as part of the initial 15.9-mile (25.6 km) "South Line" of the San Diego Trolley system on July 26, 1981, operating from San Ysidro north to downtown San Diego using the main line tracks of the San Diego and Arizona Eastern Railway. [4] [1]
City of Santa Monica 2,059 2 Santa Monica – UCLA Medical Center: 1,965 3 Santa Monica College: 1,865 4 Snap Inc. 1,667 5 Universal Music Group: 1,400 6 Saint John's Health Center: 1,368 7 Santa Monica-Malibu Unified School District: 1,358 8 Hulu: 1,320 9 Oracle Corporation: 950 10 Activision: 919
The area has a variety of medium and high-density housing, and is also the site of the County Center, the location of many buildings for the government of San Diego County. County Center/Little Italy station opened on July 2, 1992 and served as the northern terminus for the North/South Line (later renamed the Blue Line) until the line was ...
The station, along with its accompanying 34-story high-rise building, opened on November 14, 1991, [5] [6] replacing Columbia Street station, which was one block to the east. Since it opened along a line segment already in service, America Plaza station is the second infill station in the San Diego Trolley system, following E Street station.
The first SD&A through passenger train "arrives" in San Diego on December 1, 1919 to officially open the line. John D. Spreckels' San Diego Electric Railway (SDERy) made regular stops at the station since its opening, and continued to do so until April 24, 1949, when San Diego adopted an all-bus transit system. [23]
Morena/Linda Vista station is an at-grade station on the Green Line of the San Diego Trolley system. It is located alongside Friars Road at its intersection with Napa Street. It is located just east of the junction of Morena Boulevard and Linda Vista Road, after which the station is named, in the Morena neighborhood of San Diego.