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Van Ness–UDC station is a Washington Metro station serving the Forest Hills and North Cleveland Park neighborhoods of Washington, D.C., United States.The island platformed station was opened on December 5, 1981, and is operated by the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA).
Reincarnated into the Van Ness-Wesley Heights Line in the late 1990s to early 2000s. N8 Tenleytown–Glover Park Line: Glover Park (41st St & Davis Pl NW) ↔: Van Ness–UDC station: Massachusetts Avenue NW; Yuma Street NW; Discontinued September 25, 2011. [22] [21] Formerly known as the Van Ness-Wesley Heights Line which ran into Glover Park ...
Forest Hills is a residential neighborhood in the northwest quadrant of Washington, D.C., United States, bounded by Connecticut Avenue NW to the west, Rock Creek Park to the east, Chevy Chase to the north, and Tilden Street NW to the south.
The tunnel curves east at Tenleytown into Yuma Street to reach the Van Ness–UDC station, curving south there to travel under Connecticut Avenue through south of Farragut Square. A curve under Lafayette Park takes the tunnel east under G Street Northwest through the Metro Center and Gallery Place stations. [36]: 178
DC Streetcar (at Union Station) District of Columbia: 12,056 Mar 29, 1976: Van Dorn Street — Alexandria, Virginia: 1280 Jun 15, 1991: Van Ness–UDC — District of Columbia: 2872 Dec 5, 1981: Vienna† — Fairfax County, Virginia: 3136 Jun 7, 1986: Virginia Square–GMU — Arlington County, Virginia: 1952 Dec 11, 1979: Waterfront ...
Van Ness–UDC station, a subway station in Washington, D.C. Forest Hills (Washington, D.C.), frequently referred to as "Van Ness", served by the Van Ness–UDC metro station; Van Ness Avenue in San Francisco, California, named for James Van Ness Van Ness Bus Rapid Transit, a transit project on Van Ness Avenue
The L1 begins [Note 1] at the Potomac Park apartments at 18th and C Streets. It jogs to Constitution Avenue via 18th and 20th Streets, and turns right on 23rd Street.The route proceeds through Foggy Bottom and the campus of the George Washington University until Washington Circle, where it switches to New Hampshire Avenue for just a few blocks.
It is served by the Van Ness–UDC station on the Washington Metro's Red Line, and is therefore — like the adjacent Forest Hills neighborhood — frequently referred to as Van Ness. [ 1 ] [ 2 ]