Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Sacramento is planned to be the northern terminus of Phase II of the California High-Speed Rail system. [citation needed] Greyhound Lines does not use Sacramento Valley Station for its competing intercity bus service; instead, its Sacramento terminal is located 1 mile (1.6 km) to the north, near the 7th & Richards / Township 9 RT Light Rail ...
Built in 1898, at the corner of 9th and J Street in Sacramento, California, the 20,000 square feet building was built by the behest of Frank F. Ruhstaller and housed The Ruhstaller Brewery offices. Ruhstaller also managed Buffalo Brewery and made the building its headquarters as well.
The Cal/EPA Building is a 25-floor, 372 ft commercial office skyscraper in Downtown Sacramento that serves as the headquarters for the California Environmental Protection Agency (Cal/EPA). It also known as the Joe Serna Jr. Building , named to honor the late mayor of Sacramento , Joe Serna Jr. Built in 2000, the building stands 372 feet tall ...
The Spanish Colonial Revival style commercial building was built in 1931, and was designed by the Starks and Flanders architecture firm. It is an L-shaped, two-story structure constructed of steel and concrete, finished in stucco, and capped by a low-pitched red tile roof, and has a 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story tower at the corner where the streets intersect.
It is located in Downtown Sacramento at the intersection of Capitol Mall and 7th Street (south platform) and 8th Street (north platform) and within walking distance of the California State Capitol, Tower Bridge, Golden 1 Center, and Raley Field. Also, it is the westernmost station served by all three lines where transfers can be made between ...
The Bee reached out to the city to find out the progress of a new bridge connecting West Sacramento the Railyards.
Looking NW at 10th and L streets from the Capitol, c.1900 Looking west down M Street towards the old bridge, 1911. Following California's cession by Mexico and entry into the union as a state in 1850, San Jose, Vallejo, and Benicia each briefly served as the state Capitol until the legislature decided Sacramento best suited their needs for the state in 1854.
The Big Four House was declared a National Historic Landmark on July 4, 1961. [1] [3] It is included within the Old Sacramento Historic District, which also is a National Historic Landmark and on the National Register of Historic Places since its establishment on October 15, 1966.