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Short trips added between Woodland Ave. and Parkside Loop (49th St. & Parkside Ave) on February 11, 2001. Due to the expansion of St. Joseph University campus the northern end of the route was rerouted via Overbrook Train station on June 15, 2003, then via Bala Cynwyd Shopping Center on City Ave. on January 23, 2005, after opposition of ...
Route 11 surfaces at the 40th Street Portal near 40th Street and Baltimore Avenue , and then runs southwest along Woodland Avenue, along with Route 36 trolleys, and then turns down 49th Street where the Route 10 diversion line ends. Route 11 continues its run along Woodland Avenue, and is the most consistent of the five subway–surface lines ...
49th Street (BMT Broadway Line), a New York City Subway station 49th Street station (SEPTA Regional Rail) , a SEPTA Regional Rail station in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 49th Street station (SEPTA Routes 11 and 36) , a SEPTA trolley stop on Woodland Avenue in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
A number of SEPTA Subway-Surface Trolley Lines traverse the area along Chester, Woodland, and Elmwood Avenues, providing easy access to Center City through the 40th Street Portal. These also extend to Darby and Yeadon. Southwest Philadelphia is served by four of the five Subway-Surface Lines (Trolleys) 11, 13, 34, and 36.
Elmwood Carhouse is a SEPTA Subway–Surface trolley carbarn [1] [2] that house the current Kawasaki LRVs that run on routes 11, 13, 34 & 36. From September 1992 to September 2005, Route 10 was housed here as well; however, with the restoration of the trolley service to Route 15 in 2005, the Route 10 trolleys are stored at Callowhill Carhouse.
The College of Physicians of Philadelphia Building. October 6, 2008 ... West Philadelphia 49th & Market Sts. ... West Philadelphia 4000 Woodland Ave.
49th Street station is a SEPTA Regional Rail station in Philadelphia. It is located at 1104 South 49th Street in the Kingsessing section of Southwest Philadelphia, and serves the Media/Wawa Line. In 2013, this station saw 62 boardings and 52 alightings on an average weekday. [2]
The company was founded by John George Brill in 1868 in Philadelphia, as a horsecar manufacturing firm. Its large factory complex was located in southwest Philadelphia at 62nd St and Woodland Avenue, adjacent to the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad tracks. At its peak of operation, it was one of Philadelphias's largest employers. [2]