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The initial line in the San Diego Trolley system, the Blue Line first opened between Centre City San Diego and San Ysidro on July 26, 1981, [4] [12] at a cost of $86 million (equivalent to $288 million in 2023), using the existing tracks of the San Diego and Arizona Eastern Railway, which the Metropolitan Transit Development Board had purchased from Southern Pacific on August 20, 1979, for $18 ...
Although the current Blue Line ends at San Ysidro Transit Center, just north of the Mexico–United States border, future plans for the Blue Line to continue into Tijuana are awaiting approval. If it is to be made, the Blue Line would be extended 1 mile [72] or 1.5 miles [73] on an elevated trackage [74] into a new Tijuana station. [75]
The current operating company of the San Diego Trolley system, San Diego Trolley Incorporated (SDTI), was not founded until 1980 [2] when the Metropolitan Transit Development Board (now operating as San Diego's MTS) began to plan a light-rail service along the Main Line of the former San Diego and Arizona Eastern Railway (SD&AE Railway), which the MTDB purchased from the Southern Pacific ...
Low-floor vehicles started operating on the Orange Line in 2013 and on the Blue Line in 2015. In 2011, MTS opened the Silver Line, which operates renovated PCC streetcars around downtown San Diego in partnership with the San Diego Historic Streetcar Society. MTS introduced its network of bus rapid transit routes in June 2014.
VA Medical Center station is a San Diego Trolley station in San Diego, California, elevated and adjacent to the Veterans Affairs hospital next to UC San Diego. [4] Service began on November 21, 2021 [3] after the completion of the Blue Line Mid-Coast Trolley extension project. [5] [6]
Old Town also operates as a bus transit center for San Diego Metropolitan Transit System's routes 8, 9, 10, 28, 30, 35, 44, 83, 88, and 105. [15] There is an underground pedestrian tunnel linking bus terminals on both sides of the station with the trolley/train areas.
San Diego County officials said riders may have been exposed on trolleys or buses.
Palm Avenue station is a station on the Blue Line of the San Diego Trolley located in the Palm City neighborhood of San Diego.The stop serves a variety of purposes, holding the function of commuter center with a park and ride lot and providing access to the nearby commercial and residential areas.