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Coronado (Spanish for "Crowned") is a resort city in San Diego County, California, United States, across San Diego Bay from downtown San Diego. [5] It was founded in the 1880s and incorporated in 1890. Its population was 20,192 in 2020, [6] down from 24,697 in 2010. [7] [8]
Coronado Sur (South Coronado or South Island) is located at , and covers 183 ha (450 acres It is 3.2 km (2.0 mi) long and 800 m (2,600 ft) wide. [ 1 ] It has the only bay of the islands, called Puerto Cueva Cove, located one quarter the way down on the east side.
I-5 – San Diego: Exit 5A on I-5: Coronado: 13.97: Coronado Cays Boulevard: Southbound interchange and northbound at-grade intersection: R19.70: SR 282 west (3rd Street / 4th Street) – North Island: East end of SR 282; travels one-way west on 3rd Street and east on 4th Street: San Diego Bay: R20.49: San Diego–Coronado Bridge: San Diego: R22.26
Map of San Diego Bay, featuring Rockwell Field, Coronado, National City, and the surrounding area. The field was originally called the Signal Corps Aviation School. It was the first U.S. Army school to provide flying training for military pilots, and North Island was the school's first permanent location.
Silver Strand, or simply The Strand, is a low, narrow, sandy isthmus or a human-constructed [1] tombolo 7 miles (11 km) long in San Diego County, California, partially within Silver Strand State Beach. [2] It connects Coronado with Imperial Beach. Together with the Point Loma peninsula it shelters and defines San Diego Bay.
The Hotel del Coronado, also known as The Del and Hotel Del, is a historic beachfront hotel in Coronado, California, just across San Diego Bay from San Diego.A rare surviving example of an American architectural genre—the wooden Victorian beach resort—it was designated a California Historical Landmark in 1970 [4] and a National Historic Landmark in 1977.
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Coronado began to commission the paving of much of its street system in the early 1910s. [7] In November 1911, the board of trustees in Coronado approved the paving of Third Street from Orange Avenue to what was K Avenue. [8] It soon became the goal of the city to have all streets paved before the 1915 San Diego World Exposition. The streets ...