Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
About this same time the Green Line was created and its route continued, along with the Blue Line, on to Salt Lake Central (Salt Lake City Intermodal Hub). However, with the rerouting of the Green Line to accommodate the Airport Extension, Arena became the temporary terminus of the Green Line from December 9, 2012, to April 13, 2013.
Parts of the CTA Blue Line are set to temporarily close, again, as construction to remove slow zones continues — but the end of the work is in sight. From 10 p.m. Friday to 4 a.m. Monday, the ...
TRAX became operational December 4, 1999, with an initial route of 17.3 miles (27.8 km)—the Blue Line, then simply dubbed the Sandy/Salt Lake Line—from Sandy to Downtown Salt Lake City. In celebration, UTA offered free rides on the new line all day, and local residents stood in long lines to be packed into the new light rail cars.
Blue Line UTA Route 701: 1999 (2008, 2013) 25 19.3 miles (31.1 km) [7] Downtown Salt Lake City – Draper (Salt Lake Central – Draper Town Center) Red Line UTA Route 703: 2001 (2003, 2011) 26 23.7 miles (38.1 km) [7] [failed verification] University of Utah (Salt Lake City) – Daybreak (South Jordan) (University Medical Center – Daybreak ...
Arena station is a light rail station in Downtown Salt Lake City, Utah, in the United States, served by the Blue Line and Green Line of the Utah Transit Authority's (UTA) TRAX system. The Blue Line has service from the Salt Lake Intermodal Hub in Downtown Salt Lake City to Draper.
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
701 TRAX Blue Line 704 TRAX Green Line: Salt Lake City: December 4, 1999 None [1] Trolley 703 TRAX Red Line: Salt Lake City: December 15, 2001 None [2] University Medical Center † 703 TRAX Red Line: Salt Lake City: September 29, 2003 Limited 21, 213, 473, 902 [22] University South Campus 703 TRAX Red Line: Salt Lake City: September 29, 2003 None
In 2012, City Center Station became part of the core of the City Creek Center, one of the largest mixed-use, transit-oriented developments in Salt Lake City. Spanning three blocks between South Temple and 100 South, it transformed 23 acres (9 ha) of downtown real estate into a mixed-use complex with 700 residential units and 750,000 sq ft (69,677 m 2) of retail.