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Airport Tunnel, twin tunnels, Sepulveda Boulevard beneath Runways 7L/25R and 7R/25L at Los Angeles International Airport, Los Angeles; Angeles Crest Highway (State Route 2), two sets of tunnels in the San Gabriel Mountains National Monument northeast Los Angeles County between La Cañada Flintridge and Wrightwood
Pages in category "Tunnels in Los Angeles" ... Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; ... Code of Conduct;
The project's tunnels begin at the north end of 7th Street/Metro Center station, the previous terminal built in the early 1990s, and continue north under Flower Street. The line turns to run under 2nd Street and dives below the 2nd Street Tunnel and the B/D subway with clearances as low as 7 feet (2.1 m). [ 8 ]
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The terminus of the Angeles Tunnel at the Castaic Power Plant. The Angeles Tunnel is a 7.2-mile-long (11.6 km), 30-foot-diameter (9.1 m) [1] water tunnel located in the Sierra Pelona Mountains in Los Angeles County, California, about 50 miles (80 km) north of Los Angeles.
CA-265-G: Figueroa Street Tunnels: Extant 1931 1999 SR 110 (Arroyo Seco Parkway) northbound Elysian Park: Los Angeles: Los Angeles: CA-298-AG: Los Angeles Aqueduct, Tunnel Interior Extant 1913 2001 Los Angeles Aqueduct: Los Angeles: Los Angeles: CA-315-T
The Figueroa Street Tunnels are a set of four four-lane tunnels that carry northbound traffic on State Route 110 (the Arroyo Seco Parkway) through Elysian Park in Los Angeles, California, United States. From south to north, the four tunnels measure 755, 461, 130, and 405 feet (230, 141, 40, and 123 m) in length, 46.5 feet (14 m) in width, and ...
The Los Angeles Railway ran streetcars through the southern tunnel starting in July 1939. [9] Rail service through the tunnels was discontinued with the opening of the Hollywood Subway and the Hollywood Freeway. The tunnels and hill itself were leveled by 1955 and the Los Angeles Civic Center was built on the land. [1]