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Hollywood/Highland station is an underground rapid transit (known locally as a subway) station on the B Line of the Los Angeles Metro Rail system. It is located under Hollywood Boulevard at its intersection with Highland Avenue, after which the station is named. It is the westernmost Metro station in the Los Angeles neighborhood of Hollywood.
The final section of the Red Line opened on June 24, 2000, from Hollywood/Vine station to North Hollywood station, completing the Red Line as originally planned. [11] A fourth Metro Rail line, the light rail Gold Line, opened on July 27, 2003, between Union Station and Sierra Madre Villa station in Pasadena. [12]
Train at North Hollywood Metro B Line station. Construction of MOS-3, by comparison, proceeded with relatively few issues. Tunnelling from North Hollywood for the subway started in 1995. Workers dug under the Santa Monica Mountains using tunnelling machines. Work progressed an average of 50 to 200 ft (15 to 61 m) daily, performed by work crews ...
A train struck a pedestrian at the Hollywood/Highland Metro station Friday afternoon, according to the Los Angeles Fire Department. The pedestrian suffered serious lower body injuries.
The 637-room Loews Hollywood Hotel is also part of the site. The Metro B Line's Hollywood/Highland station is beneath the structure. [5] Also, Metro Local lines 212, 217, 222, 237, 656 and Metro Rapid 780 serve the complex.
Line 183 was canceled on June 27, 2021, as Metro continued restructuring its network for the 2nd phase of the NextGen Bus Plan. Service west of B Line (Red) North Hollywood Station to Sherman Oaks was replaced by an extension of Line 155. Newly rerouted Line 94 replaced Line 183 between North Hollywood Station and Downtown Burbank.
A Los Angeles police officer had part of a finger bitten off during a combative arrest with a homeless man at a Metro train station Thursday, department officials said.
Metro asks customers to tap their fare card on the way out. The pilot program at the North Hollywood station is the the agency's latest effort to stem crime and prevent loitering.