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L.A.’s First Subway…

Posted by Allan Ellenberger on Mar 14th, 2009
2009
Mar 14

LOS ANGELES HISTORY

The colorful saga of Los Angeles’ first subway tunnel

 

 Belmont Tunnel 

Paul Morse / Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Conservancy conducts a tour of the subway tunnel once used by the Red Cars that ran between downtown and Glendale Boulevard near 1st Street.

 

After rail service ended, the mile-long route was used as a storage site for survival rations and impounded vehicles, as a movie set and then as a giant graffiti canvas.

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Steve Harvey
Only in L.A.
Los Angeles Times
 

What a strange ride it has been for L.A.’s first subway.

 

Shut down in 1955, the Belmont Tunnel went from being a commuter route for rail passengers between downtown and the Westlake district to a storage site for survival rations, a holding cell for impounded vehicles, a movie set and, unofficially, a giant graffiti canvas and field of study for urban explorers.

 

Along the way, the mile-long subterranean route acquired an aura of mystery.    (Click on ‘Continue Reading’ for more)

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