26th St/Bergamot | |
Style: | Los Angeles Metro Rail |
Symbol Location: | losangeles |
Symbol: | E |
Address: | 2425 Olympic Boulevard |
Borough: | Santa Monica, California |
Coordinates: | 34.0279°N -118.4699°W |
Owned: | Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority |
Platform: | 2 side platforms |
Tracks: | 2 |
Connections: | Big Blue Bus |
Bicycle: | Racks and lockers[1] |
Accessible: | Yes |
Former: | Bergamot |
Other Services Collapsible: | yes |
Other Services Header: | Former services |
Mapframe: | yes |
Mapframe-Zoom: | 14 |
26th Street/Bergamot station is an at-grade light rail station in the Los Angeles Metro Rail system. It is located near the intersection of 26th Street and Olympic Boulevard in Santa Monica, California and near the Bergamot Station Arts Center. The station is served by the E Line.[2]
Westbound | ← toward |
Eastbound | toward → |
The City of Santa Monica refers to the station area as the "Bergamot Transit Village".[3] It is also within walking distance of several business offices and studios, including the Water Garden office complex, as well as several parks.
The station has entrances on both ends.[4]
, the following connections are available:[5] [6]
The station is within walking distance of the following notable places:
The name "Bergamot Station" dates back to 1890, and was a stop and car storage area on the steam powered Los Angeles and Independence Railroad from Santa Monica to downtown Los Angeles, as well as the subsequent Santa Monica Air Line on the Pacific Electric trolley system until 1953.[7] [8]
Expo Phase 2 included a maintenance facility for Expo light-rail vehicles. This facility performs shop-related activities, including servicing, cleaning, inspecting, and repairing LRT vehicles. It also includes a yard with a storage capacity of up to 45 LRT vehicles.
Several locations for this facility were proposed and evaluated, including the "Verizon site" (land just east of Bergamot Station, between Stewart Street and Centinela Avenue) and the Bergamot Station site. Many residents of the surrounding Stewart Park neighborhood opposed the use of the Verizon site, who feared the project would create noise and another environmental impact. The use of the Bergamot Station site was opposed by artists at Bergamot Station, who successfully argued that Bergamot had become an irreplaceable resource for the west coast art community.[9]
The City of Santa Monica and Expo built the facility on land which includes the Verizon site, as well as land that was a parking lot owned by Santa Monica College. They believe that with this "hybrid site", most environmental impacts from the facility were properly mitigated.[10] [11] [12]