Photographer’s Note
Santa Fe Union Station
(From Wikipedia)
Union Station in San Diego, California, is a train station built by the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway to replace the existing Victorian-style structure erected in 1887 for the California Southern Railroad Company. The Santa Fe Depot (as it was originally designated) officially opened on March 8, 1915, to accommodate visitors to the Panama-California Exposition. The depot was completed during a particularly optimistic period in the City's development, and represents the battle waged by the City of San Diego to become the West Coast terminus of the Santa Fe Railway system’s transcontinental railroad, a fight that was ultimately lost to the City of Los Angeles.
The historic Santa Fe Depot is located in Centre City (downtown) San Diego and is still an active transportation center, providing services to Amtrak, the San Diego Coaster, the San Diego Trolley, and the San Diego Metropolitan Transit System bus system. It was the ninth-busiest station in the Amtrak system in FY 2007.
ktanska has marked this note useful
Critiques | Translate
ktanska
(16741) 2009-05-04 5:05
Hi Eleu,
Fun view of those two modern Amtrak locomotives. Yes, it indeed gives an impression of waiting at the red lights, in the spirit of many classic movies.
Kari
cfreire
(11677) 2009-05-09 18:33
Hi Eleu,
Your capture is like a movie. I've enjoyed it a lot. Well done. Regards, Consuelo
Photo Information
-
Copyright: Eleu Tabares (eldancer1)
(129) - Genre: Places
- Medium: Color
- Date Taken: 2009-04-12
- Categories: Transportation
- Camera: Nikon COOLPIXL100
- Exposure: f/3.5
- More Photo Info: view
- Photo Version: Original Version
- Date Submitted: 2009-05-02 9:15








