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5th Street station is an at-grade light rail station on the A Line of the Los Angeles Metro Rail system. The station is located in the median of Long Beach Boulevard at its intersection with 5th Street, after which the station is named, in Long Beach, California . [ 7 ]
KFBG (100.7 FM, "91X") is a commercial radio station that is licensed to San Diego, California and broadcasts a classic alternative format as a simulcast of XETRA-FM (91.1). The station is owned by Local Media San Diego (LMSD); a sale to Lotus Communications is awaiting Federal Communications Commission (FCC) approval.
Downtown Long Beach station (formerly Transit Mall station) is an at-grade light rail station on the A Line of the Los Angeles Metro Rail system. The station is located in the middle of 1st Street between Pine Avenue and Pacific Avenue in Downtown Long Beach, California, after which the station is named. [7] It is the southern terminus of the A ...
American Avenue in Long Beach, c. 1924 Model Cleaners, 25th & Long Beach Boulevard, Long Beach, 1977. In the 1970s, Long Beach Boulevard was lined with gay, lesbian, and transgender bars. Sailors from the local Long Beach Naval Shipyard and Naval Station would enjoy all the bar activity. Sailors had to be careful of military police "Witch Hunts ...
KFMB-TV (channel 8) is a television station in San Diego, California, United States, affiliated with CBS, The CW, and MyNetworkTV. Owned by Tegna Inc., it has studios on Engineer Road in the Kearny Mesa section of San Diego, and its transmitter is atop Mount Soledad in La Jolla.
Lynwood Depot at its original location on Long Beach Boulevard, April 1980. The first Lynwood station was established by the Los Angeles Inter-Urban Electric Railway in 1905 as part of the West Santa Ana Branch. It was little more than a simple shed adjacent to sugar beet fields at the intersection of Long Beach Boulevard.
San Diego metropolitan transit system received 71 brand new 5000 series Trolley cars, with 20 more on the way to be entered service 2024-2025 PCC streetcar: 529, 530 (2) August 2011 (529) [99] March 2015 (530) [100] Used on Silver Line Both are ex-San Francisco Muni cars, painted in San Diego Electric Railway (SDER) livery
The initial line in the San Diego Trolley system, the Blue Line first opened between Centre City San Diego and San Ysidro on July 26, 1981, [4] [12] at a cost of $86 million (equivalent to $297 million in 2024), using the existing tracks of the San Diego and Arizona Eastern Railway, which the Metropolitan Transit Development Board had purchased from Southern Pacific on August 20, 1979, for $18 ...