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Santee station (also known as Santee Town Center station [a]) is a station on the Copper Line of the San Diego Trolley, in the San Diego suburb of Santee, California. The station currently serves as the Copper Line's northern terminus and serves as a major park and ride station. It is located inside a shopping center on the northeast corner of ...
The tracks between El Cajon and Santee originally opened on July 26, 1995, as part of the fourth extension of the Orange Line (known as the "East Line" until 1997). [5] [6] Between Gillespie Field station and Santee Town Center, the line is single tracked and street running in the median strip of Cuyamaca Street.
"Map of faults in southern California," By Natural Hazards Mission Area Photographer, Kate Scharer, USGS Sources/Usage, Public Domain Accessed 10-20-2024 You cannot overwrite this file. File usage
Fewer cars traveled on the western part of Mission Gorge Road, leading to a decrease in revenue for businesses located along that road. [87] On Mast Boulevard and Mission Gorge Road in Santee, much more traffic was present, leading to residents complaining to the city. [88] In 1998, the city began to widen Mission Gorge Road between Carlton ...
A revised Mission Gorge Road eastbound exit opened in 1979, merging with traffic from I-15. [65] Traffic reached 212,000 vehicles a day by February 1981, and Caltrans declared I-8 east of I-805 the busiest highway in the region. [ 66 ]
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It is located in the Grantville neighborhood near Mission San Diego de Alcalá and National University's San Diego campus. From the station's opening in late 1997, this station was the former terminus for the Blue Line trolleys until the July 2005 introduction of the Green Line service, in conjunction with the opening of the Mission Valley East ...
Old Mission Dam is a historic water impoundment structure in Mission Trails Regional Park in San Diego, California. It was built in 1803 to impound the San Diego River to provide water for irrigation of the fields associated with Mission San Diego de Alcalá , the first Spanish mission in what is now the US state of California.