Waterfront Red Car
Port of LA Waterfront Red Car |
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Overview |
Type |
Heritage streetcar |
Locale |
San Pedro, California |
Termini |
Cruise Center
22nd Street |
Stations |
4 |
Operation |
Opened |
July 19, 2003 |
Owner |
Port of Los Angeles |
Technical |
Line length |
1.5 mi (2.4 km) |
Track gauge |
4 ft 8 1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) |
Electrification |
overhead lines |
Route map |
edit
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Wilmington Railway Museum |
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Harry Bridges and Figueroa |
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Gaffey and Westmont |
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Gaffey and Capitol |
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Pacific and Channel |
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World Cruise Center |
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1st Street |
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5th Street |
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Maritime Museum |
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Ports O'Call |
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Marina |
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22nd Street |
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22nd and Signal |
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Warehouse 1 |
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22nd and Miner |
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Outer Harbor |
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Outer Harbor |
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22nd Street Park |
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22nd and Via Cabrillo-Marina |
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Fort Macarthur |
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Cabrillo Beach |
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The Port of Los Angeles Waterfront Red Cars are a 1.5-mile heritage streetcar line in San Pedro, Los Angeles, home of the city's port. Their route runs south over a former Pacific Electric right-of-way from the World Cruise Center cruise ship terminal under the Vincent Thomas Bridge to the intersection of 22nd Street and Miner Street, with intermediate stops at downtown San Pedro, the Maritime Museum and the Ports O' Call shopping center. The service operates three days a week (Friday, Saturday and Sunday) with occasional service on other weekdays depending on passenger ship landings.[1] The line uses original and replica rolling stock from the Pacific Electric Railway,[2] which for over 60 years (until 1961) ran more than 1000 miles of tramways throughout Los Angeles and the surrounding cities and counties.[3]
Today the Waterfront Red Cars comprise three tram cars in the style of the originals. Two of the three Red Cars—the replica cars, numbers 500 and 501—were built from scratch by employees of the port of Los Angeles; the interiors are cooled using the same clerestory-style windows as the original 500-class Red Cars[4] (“The Fives”)[5]. The third car, No. #1058, is a vintage Pacific Electric 950-class car, having been assembled from two wrecked 950-class cars, restored and cleverly converted to be steered with the original throttle as a tiller, braked by the original brake handle, the original dead man pedal operated the gasoline engine throttle powering rubber tires for parades, movies, and the like by Richard J. Fellows. The port of Los Angeles bought the car and converted it back for rail operation.[2].
The Waterfront Red Cars are supplemented by two shuttle bus lines. The Blue line serves downtown San Pedro and Ports O' Call village, whereas the Green line serves the harbor and marina.[2]
Future extensions to Cabrillo Beach, Harbor Park, the new cruise ship terminal at Berth 46, Pacific Avenue, and Warehouse 1 are all under consideration.[1] In April 2010, a new feasibility report was released, with the first priority to switch much of the existing line to street-running track on Sampson Way.
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