ParanoidAndroid
OBS Chief
Prior to 1994, the Southwest Chief, along with the Super Chief when it was run by Santa Fe, stopped at Pasadena and Pomona, on what is now the Metro Gold Line (light rail). I understand that the railbed is mostly the same, and they just changed the rails to accommodate the light rail.
However, just north of LAX, is the "Chinatown" station on the current Gold Line Route, and it is an elevated track. It's quite hard to believe that the SWC ran on that elevated track the whole time.
To see what route it took out of LAX, I looked at the historical images of the LA area on Google Earth for May 1994, and found 2 possible routes:
1. Where the current Gold Line crosses the LA river, it was not elevated prior to 1994. This could mean that the rail broke off from the current Surfliner/Antelope Valley track to go east, and the SWC followed the current Surfliner rails to that point, then went east thru Pasadena and Pomona.
2. I'm seeing rails, like, a BIG railyard just north of the current Chinatown light rail station. The tracks go south a little bit, then it kinda fades away into Alameda Street. I'm a bit confused by this, so I'm not very sure of this alignment.
Does anyone have any answers? I know this is silly, but this is one of the things I'm interested in about trains!
Thanks in advance!
However, just north of LAX, is the "Chinatown" station on the current Gold Line Route, and it is an elevated track. It's quite hard to believe that the SWC ran on that elevated track the whole time.
To see what route it took out of LAX, I looked at the historical images of the LA area on Google Earth for May 1994, and found 2 possible routes:
1. Where the current Gold Line crosses the LA river, it was not elevated prior to 1994. This could mean that the rail broke off from the current Surfliner/Antelope Valley track to go east, and the SWC followed the current Surfliner rails to that point, then went east thru Pasadena and Pomona.
2. I'm seeing rails, like, a BIG railyard just north of the current Chinatown light rail station. The tracks go south a little bit, then it kinda fades away into Alameda Street. I'm a bit confused by this, so I'm not very sure of this alignment.
Does anyone have any answers? I know this is silly, but this is one of the things I'm interested in about trains!
Thanks in advance!