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Arcadia station

Arcadia  Gold Line 
Arcadia Station 1.jpg
Location 200 N First Avenue, Arcadia
Coordinates 34°08′33″N 118°01′44″W / 34.1425°N 118.0288°W / 34.1425; -118.0288Coordinates: 34°08′33″N 118°01′44″W / 34.1425°N 118.0288°W / 34.1425; -118.0288
Owned by Metro
Platforms 1
Tracks 2
Construction
Parking 300 spaces (270 parking garage, 30 parking lot)
3 charging stations in garage
Bicycle facilities 20 bike rack spaces
24 bike lockers
Disabled access Yes
Other information
Status in service
History
Opened c. 1911
Rebuilt March 5, 2016
Services
Preceding station   LAMetroLogo.svg Metro Rail   Following station
toward Atlantic
Gold Line
  Former services  
Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe
toward Los Angeles
Main Line

Arcadia is an at-grade light rail station in the Los Angeles County Metro Rail system located at the intersection of 1st Avenue and Santa Clara Street in Arcadia, California. This station is served by the Metro Gold Line.

This station was built as part of the Gold Line Foothill Extension project Phase 2A. It opened on March 5, 2016. An overpass bridge was constructed over Santa Anita Ave near the station.

In Arcadia, in the past, there was a steel railroad bridge that transitioned the old Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway in between the I-210 to street grade. This bridge, located between Baldwin and Santa Anita, was removed by Caltrans, which deemed the structure unsafe following the 1994 Northridge earthquake. The Phase 2A project constructed a new, fully functioning light rail bridge, known as the "Iconic Freeway Structure or Gold Line Bridge" (IFS), as the bridge's replacement. The bridge, designed by Minnesota artist Andrew Leicester, was unveiled in December 2012. Leicester's design was chosen from 17 others in a competitive process. The artist worked with L.A. design consultant AECOM as well as the bridge's builder, Skanska USA, on the final design and construction. The woven-basket look of the bridge's support columns emulate the famed woven baskets of the native Chumash people of the San Gabriel Valley while the underbelly of the bridge is supposed to evoke a Western diamondback rattlesnake.

Arcadia train station was added a two years after the original the Los Angeles and San Gabriel Valley Railroad opened in 1885. The 1887 station was a Queen Anne-style passenger depot on 1st Street. The passenger station was decommissioned in 1951 and relocated in 1970 to the Fairplex, RailGiants Train Museum that is located inside the Los Angeles County Fairgrounds in Pomona, California.


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Wikipedia

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