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Del Mar Avenue, Fair Drive: 4.74: 7.63: 5A: SR 73 south (Corona del Mar Freeway) – San Diego via toll road: SR 73 north exits 17A-B: 5B: SR 73 north (Corona del Mar Freeway) to I-405 north (San Diego Freeway) – Long Beach: Northbound exit and southbound entrance; SR 73 south exit 17A: 5C: Baker Street: Signed as exit 5B southbound: 5.99: 9. ...
American River College, Mira Loma High School, Arcade Square Shopping Center, Country Club Plaza/Country Club Centre, Kaiser Sacramento, Loehmann's Plaza, Pavilions, CSU Sacramento University/65th Street 5 am – 11:15 pm 6 am – 10:45 pm 7:15 am – 10 pm Created to cover half of line 81 on September 3, 2000.
Corona del Mar (Spanish for "Crown of the Sea") [1] is a seaside neighborhood in the city of Newport Beach, California.It generally consists of all the land on the seaward face of the San Joaquin Hills south of Avocado Avenue to the city limits, as well as the development of Irvine Terrace, just north of Avocado.
City boundaries extend from Hellman Avenue to the west (the San Bernardino County line), State Route 60 to the north (also the San Bernardino County line), the Santa Ana River and Norco to the south, and Interstate 15 to the east. [10] It is surrounded by the cities of Chino, Ontario, Jurupa Valley, Norco, and Corona.
State Route 73 (SR 73) is an approximately 17.76-mile (28.58 km) [1] state highway in Orange County, California. The southernmost 12 miles (19.31 km) of the highway is a toll road operated by the San Joaquin Hills Transportation Corridor Agency named the San Joaquin Hills Transportation Corridor , which opened in November 1996.
The system operates 97 bus routes in San Diego and the rest of the southern half of the county. [1] [2] There are 85 "MTS Bus" fixed-route services, 9 "Rapid" bus rapid transit routes, and the "MTS Access" paratransit service. Routes are operated by private contractors and by the San Diego Transit Corporation (SDTC), a subsidiary of MTS.
sbX is a bus rapid transit (BRT) service in San Bernardino and Loma Linda, California, United States. It is operated by Omnitrans, a public transportation agency in southwestern San Bernardino County. The route is internally named by Omnitrans as the Green Line. [1]
Mira Loma (Spanish for "Look Hill"), now officially a neighborhood of Jurupa Valley, was a former census-designated place (CDP) in Riverside County, California, United States. Its population was 21,930 in the 2010 census, up from 17,617 in the 2000 census.