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State Route 246 (SR 246) is a state highway in the U.S. state of California that runs from Lompoc east to Solvang and Santa Ynez, cutting through the Santa Ynez Valley and the Santa Barbara Wine Country. Its western terminus is at the western city limits of Lompoc, and its eastern terminus is at State Route 154 near Santa Ynez. [2] [3]
Jalama Beach County Park is a seaside campground and park located at the mouth of Jalama Creek in Santa Barbara County, California, approximately 20 miles (32 km) southwest of Lompoc, California, off California State Route 1. [1]
Lompoc–Surf station is served by four Amtrak Pacific Surfliner trains (two in each direction). [6] In Fiscal Year 2023, 8,089 passengers boarded or detrained at Lompoc–Surf station. [3] The station opened for service on March 18, 2000. [2] Pre-Amtrak, a Southern Pacific Railroad station was located at Surf. Passenger service ended by 1971 ...
Location Code Image Line(s) Annual Ridership (FY 2023) [1] Station Owner(s) Amtrak Thruway / Rail connection(s) Notes Anaheim† Anaheim: ANA Pacific Surfliner: 129,231 City of Anaheim Metrolink: Orange County: Replaced the nearby Anaheim–Stadium station in 2014 Antioch–Pittsburg: Antioch: ACA San Joaquin: 27,985 City of Antioch
Lompoc (/ ˈ l ɒ m p oʊ k / LOM-poke; Chumashan Purisimeño: lumpo'o̥) is a city in Santa Barbara County, California, United States. Located on the Central Coast , its population was 43,834 as of July 2021.
The Anaheim Regional Transportation Intermodal Center (ARTIC) is a transit center in Anaheim, California, United States.The intermodal hub serves as a train station for Amtrak intercity rail and Metrolink commuter rail, as well as a bus station used by the Orange County Transportation Authority (OCTA), Anaheim Resort Transportation (ART), Greyhound, Megabus, Flixbus and Tres Estrellas de Oro.
City of Lompoc Transit, known as COLT, is primary provider of mass transportation in Lompoc, Mission Hills, and Vandenberg Village, California. Six local routes are provided, plus one interurban line to Solvang, California and a twice-weekly shuttle to Santa Barbara.
SR 55 southbound at I-405 interchange in Costa Mesa. SR 55 was built in 1931 and originally numbered Route 43. It was built from the southern terminus of SR 1 (the Pacific Coast Highway, or "PCH") and continued northbound on roughly the same route it follows today, [10] following Newport Road (today Newport Boulevard) northeast to Tustin, and then Tustin Avenue north to near its current ...