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The University Line was a light rail line of Utah Transit Authority's (UTA) TRAX system in Salt Lake City. It was the second TRAX line opened by UTA, after the Sandy/Salt Lake Line opened in 1999. The original line ran from the Delta Center (now Arena) Station via University Boulevard to Stadium Station , serving Rice-Eccles Stadium on the ...
The Red Line is a light rail line on the TRAX system in the Salt Lake Valley of Utah operated by the Utah Transit Authority (UTA). It originally began operation in December 2001 as the peak-hour-only Sandy/University Line, running from the University of Utah south to Sandy Civic Center on the Blue Line.
An alternative route that would run down the middle of State Street was also studied by UTA. [33] Use of the UTA right of way for the line was challenged in court and later approved by the Utah Supreme Court on July 12, 2008. [34] UTA published a draft Environmental Impact Statement for the new line that names the UTA right of way as the ...
UTA president Jennifer Cowley says UTA West, a new 50-acre campus at the Parker County line, will be a key factor for companies looking to relocate to Fort Worth.
The first building of the new Texas A&M-Fort Worth campus is already beginning to take shape downtown. Construction, which began in June 2023, is expected to be done in December 2025 .
The campus would be UTA’s third in Fort Worth after the research center in east Fort Worth and its satellite campus downtown. UTA is one of the largest public university’s in the state with ...
As part of this project UTA will add 25.2 miles (40.6 km) of track to the existing 19.6 mi (31.5 km) light-rail network as defined in the Utah Transit Authority's 2030 Long-range Transportation Plan. All of the expansions were completed and opened for service by August 2013 (except the 14600 South and Highland Drive Stations). [23]
Eighty-five buildings were on the UTA campus in 1986, with a total value of $238 million; the campus had expanded to 348 acres (141 ha). [1] The Automation and Robotics Research Institute opened as a satellite campus at River Bend in Fort Worth the following year, in partnership with the Fort Worth Chamber Foundation.