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The highway had been closed over the pass in eastern Kern County from Towerline Road east of Bakersfield to exit 172 near the town of Mojave due to weather conditions and multiple traffic incidents.
San Jose: 0.00 [a] US 101 (Bayshore Freeway) – Los Angeles, San Francisco: Interchange; west end of SR 130; US 101 exit 386A; road continues as Santa Clara Street: 1.35 [a] I-680 (Sinclair Freeway) – Sacramento, San Jose: Interchange; I-680 exit 2A [a] West end of state maintenance at the San Jose city limit: Lick Observatory: 22.50
Originally, Vasco Road was a two-lane, very narrow road that began at U.S. Highway 50 (now Interstate 580) and wound over the Diablo Range and through the Kellogg Creek valley. In 1957, Alameda County linked three other streets inside Livermore to extend Vasco to Tesla Road. A ribbon-cutting ceremony opened the new Vasco Road on August 1, 1958. [2]
The Marsh Road intersection, in 2013, was the site where a car struck cyclist Sam Felder , a Facebook employee, after he ran a red light. He died 3 months later. [3] The SR 114 (Willow Road) intersection was the site of a car crash in which author David Halberstam was killed on April 23, 2007. [4] Dumbarton Bridge on SR 84 as seen from Skeggs ...
Vasco Road station (signed as Vasco) is an ACE station on Vasco Road in eastern Livermore, California.The station mainly serves the workers of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Sandia National Laboratory and the surrounding industrial and office parks in eastern Livermore in addition to commuters from Livermore headed to job centers in the Silicon Valley to the southwest.
It carries freight trains as well as the Altamont Corridor Express, which gives its occasional name (ACE) and operates between Stockton, Livermore, Pleasanton, Fremont, and San Jose. The other and older right-of-way was the line built in 1869 with a 1,200-foot-long (370 m) summit tunnel by the original Western Pacific Railroad (1862–1870) as ...
The state highway system of the U.S. state of California is a network of highways that are owned and maintained by the California Department of Transportation (Caltrans).. Each highway is assigned a Route (officially State Highway Route [1] [2]) number in the Streets and Highways Code (Sections 300–635).
The city of Livermore is located in the valley. The valley became known as "Livermore's Valley", and today as the "Livermore Valley" after Robert Livermore, an early settler and rancher in the region who received together with José Noriega a land grant composing most of modern Livermore. [2]