Metro’s Gold Line extension opens
Lino Cabriales does a last-minute paint touch-up as a Metro Gold Line train leaves the new Azusa station on a test run. The 11.5-mile Foothill Extension, taking the Gold Line deeper into the San Gabriel Valley, opens Saturday.
(Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)
Metro Gold Line trains have been making test runs on new tracks, which extend the route farther east into the San Gabriel Valley.
(Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)
Crews do a final touch-up on the new Azusa Metro Gold Line station. The $1-billion project’s path through quiet bedroom communities represents a new chapter, and new challenges, for the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, which has never brought a rail line so deep into suburbia.
(Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)
A Metro Gold Line train makes a test run on the new Foothill Extension from Pasadena to Azusa. It’s the first new stretch of passenger rail in Los Angeles County in nearly four years,
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The Metro Gold Line’s new Azusa station. The Gold Line is now the county’s longest light-rail route, stretching 31 miles through Pasadena, Highland Park, downtown Los Angeles and the cultural hubs of Chinatown and Boyle Heights.
(Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)
The Foothill Extension is the first to be built and opened with funding from Measure R, the half-cent sales tax increase for transportation projects that county voters approved in 2008.
(Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)
Miriam Pereira, a safety ambassador, left, talks to a train operator as a Metro Gold Line train makes a test run at the Azusa station. From the line’s new terminus here, the $1.75 one-way ride to Union Station will take 49 minutes.
(Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)
Larry Jarman does a test run on the Metro Gold Line’s Foothill Extension. Metro estimates the line will have about 66,000 boardings a day by 2035, with about 13,500 of them on the new extension. Supporters say the route will quickly exceed projections.
(Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)
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A colorfully decorated Metro Gold Line train makes a test run in Azusa. The route has brought some criticism from urbanists and planners who say the string of cities along the route don’t have the population density to support a passenger rail line.
(Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)
A crew does last-minute cleanup along the tracks at the new Metro Gold Line train station in Azusa. A decade ago, support for the Foothill Extension was tepid, in part because projected ridership figures were lower than for other projects, including the Wilshire Boulevard subway and a light-rail line to Santa Monica.
(Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)