Ad
related to: amtrak bakersfield to stockton airport
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The San Joaquins is a passenger train service operated by Amtrak in California's San Joaquin Valley.Seven daily round trips run between its southern terminus at Bakersfield and Stockton, with onward service to Sacramento (two round trips) and Oakland (five round trips).
Robert J. Cabral Station (called Stockton – Downtown station or Stockton ACE station by Amtrak), is a railway station in Stockton, California.In 2003, the station building was named in honor of the late Robert J. Cabral, a San Joaquin County supervisor instrumental in the creation of the Altamont Corridor Express (ACE), originally Altamont Commuter Express.
City of Bakersfield Amtrak Thruway: 1, 10, 19 Barstow^ ... Amtrak Coaster: Stockton–Downtown^† Stockton: ... Natomas/ Sacramento Airport† Sacramento: 2026
San Joaquin Street station, also known as Stockton – San Joaquin Street, is an Amtrak station in Stockton, California.Originally built for the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway (which acquired the San Francisco and San Joaquin Valley Railroad), it is a stop for trains on Amtrak's San Joaquin line between Oakland and Bakersfield.
Passengers boarding a YARTS bus at the Merced, California, station operating as Amtrak Thruway route 15A to Yosemite. Route 1: Bakersfield – Los Angeles – Santa Ana – San Diego [9] Route 1C: Bakersfield – Santa Clarita – Hollywood Burbank Airport – UCLA – Santa Monica [9] Route 3: Redding – Chico – Sacramento – Stockton [9]
The Bakersfield station of the California High-Speed Rail system was originally to be co-located with the existing station. However, an alternate alignment with a new station further north was adopted in 2014. Greyhound Lines moved into Bakersfield station in late 2021, after moving out of its 60-year-old bus depot in downtown Bakersfield.
Amtrak California San Joaquins service connects Bakersfield with Stockton via the former AT&SF route through the California Central Valley; from the Stockton Diamond, most trains turn west to Stockton (San Joaquin Street) station enroute to Oakland–Jack London Square station, while the others continue north to Sacramento station via Stockton ...
With the creation of Amtrak on May 1, 1971, the station became Amtrak-only. The station was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1975 as "Southern Pacific Railroad Company's Sacramento Depot". [4] For most of Amtrak's first two decades, the only trains calling at Sacramento were long-distance routes.