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Rancho Guajome Adobe is a historic 19th-century hacienda (and now a historic house museum) in Rancho Guajome Adobe County Park, on North Santa Fe Avenue in Vista in San Diego County, California. Built in 1852–53, it is a well-preserved but late example of Spanish-Mexican colonial architecture, and was designated a National Historic Landmark ...
Vista (/ ˈ v ɪ s t ə /; Spanish for "view") is a city in San Diego County, California. It is a medium-sized city within the San Diego-Carlsbad, CA metropolitan statistical area. As of the 2020 census, Vista had a population of 98,381. Current data estimates a 2023 population of 99,835. [8]
[29] [30] The chairman of the group which owns the San Diego Padres, Ron Fowler, noted that a new stadium at Tailgate Park would have forced San Diego to spend millions of tax dollars on new parking for the Padres. [31] It had been estimated that the additional parking for the Padres would have cost $75 million on top of the Chargers' proposal.
Lincoln Park is an urban community in the southeastern section of San Diego, California. It is bordered by Chollas View and the San Diego Trolley to the north, Mountain View and Interstate 805 to the west, Valencia Park and Euclid Avenue to the east, and National City, California, to the south. Major thoroughfares include Imperial Avenue, Ocean ...
Morena/Linda Vista station is an at-grade station on the Green Line of the San Diego Trolley system. It is located alongside Friars Road at its intersection with Napa Street. It is located just east of the junction of Morena Boulevard and Linda Vista Road, after which the station is named, in the Morena neighborhood of San Diego.
The center is now known as the La Jolla Recreation Center and is operated by the City of San Diego. [2] The building's appearance has not been substantially altered from the 1915 original. [ 7 ] In addition to hosting a variety of sports and recreation programs, it is the meeting place for many civic groups including the La Jolla Town Council ...
Aerial photo of Miramar College and Hourglass Field Community Park with the lost parts of the outline of Hourglass Field superimposed. Hourglass Field was the popular name for an auxiliary landing field operated by the United States Navy before and during World War II in the northern part of San Diego, California.
The industrial park was bulldozed and the site graded to build the amphitheatre. In the late 1990s, a development plan was created, and a water park and concert venue were planned for the area. White Water Canyon (now Sesame Place San Diego ) opened in 1997, while the amphitheatre, then Coors Amphitheatre , opened on July 21, 1998, the first ...