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San Diego Stadium was a multi-purpose stadium in San Diego, California, United States. [3] Opened in 1967 as San Diego Stadium; it was renamed Jack Murphy Stadium for sportswriter Jack Murphy from 1981 to 1997. From 1997 to 2017, the stadium's naming rights were owned by Qualcomm; it was named Qualcomm Stadium.
Snapdragon Stadium is located in the northwest corner of SDSU Mission Valley, a 166-acre (67 ha) noncontiguous campus expansion. The stadium is accessible from the main campus via the San Diego Trolley at SDSU Transit Center. It was built adjacent to the former San Diego Stadium, the home of Aztecs football from 1967 to 2019. [8] [9]
Stadium station is a San Diego Trolley station on the Green Line. It is located on the campus of San Diego State University (SDSU) at SDSU Mission Valley, a noncontiguous campus expansion which contains Snapdragon Stadium. The station served the former San Diego Stadium until its closure in 2020.
The university immediately began building Snapdragon Stadium on the new campus. San Diego Stadium was not yet demolished when the construction began. The 35,000-seat stadium is currently home of the San Diego State Aztecs football program, since the 2022 season. The new facility was designed to be expandable to 55,000 seats if necessary, in the ...
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Kennedy and Moore (1971) describe a stratigraphy of up to three geologic formations: Stadium Conglomerate, Mission Valley Formation, and the later-named Pomerado Conglomerate. The basal unit is the Stadium Conglomerate. The Stadium Conglomerate is overlain by the Mission Valley Formation. [4]
Mission Valley is a wide river valley trending east–west in San Diego, California, United States, through which the San Diego River flows to the Pacific Ocean. For planning purposes the City of San Diego divides it into two neighborhoods: Mission Valley East and Mission Valley West .
The Sherman-Gilbert House, a Stick-Eastlake Victorian house saved from demolition and relocated to Heritage Park in Old Town San Diego [4]; Santa Fe Depot, a historic train depot saved from demolition