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Los Angeles Nurses' Club

Apartment buildings in Los AngelesBuildings and structures completed in 1924Clubhouses in CaliforniaClubhouses on the National Register of Historic Places in Los AngelesClubs and societies in California
History of women in CaliforniaLos Angeles Historic-Cultural MonumentsNursing in the United StatesResidential buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in Los AngelesWestlake, Los AngelesWomen's club buildings in CaliforniaWomen's clubs in the United StatesWomen in Los Angeles
Los Angeles Nurses' Club
Los Angeles Nurses' Club

Los Angeles Nurses' Club is a clubhouse and apartment building for nurses located in the Westlake district of Central Los Angeles, California.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Los Angeles Nurses' Club (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Los Angeles Nurses' Club
Lucas Avenue, Los Angeles Westlake

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Los Angeles Nurses' ClubContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 34.059659 ° E -118.260757 °
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Address

Lucas Avenue 241
90026 Los Angeles, Westlake
California, United States
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Los Angeles Nurses' Club
Los Angeles Nurses' Club
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Hollywood Subway
Hollywood Subway

The Hollywood Subway, as it is most commonly known, officially the Belmont Tunnel, was a subway tunnel used by the interurban streetcars (the "Red Cars") of the Pacific Electric Railway. It ran from its northwest entrance in today's Westlake district to the Subway Terminal Building, in the Historic Core, the business and commercial center of the city from around the 1910s through the 1950s. The Subway Terminal was one of the Pacific Electric Railway’s two main hubs, the other being the Pacific Electric Building at 6th and Main. Numerous lines proceeded from the San Fernando Valley, Glendale, Santa Monica and Hollywood into the tunnel in Westlake and traveled southeast under Crown and Bunker Hill towards the Subway Terminal. The two-track tunnel, 1.045 miles (1.682 km) long, cut roughly eight miles (13 km) off rail travel through some of the most heavily congested areas in the United States. At its peak, this tunnel hosted 880 Red Cars per day, and served upwards of 20 million passengers a year. The tunnel's northwest entrance, the shed of what was formerly an electric substation, and the site of the former yard, are just downhill from 299 South Toluca Street, in Westlake. Together they form a Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument, the Belmont Tunnel / Toluca Substation and Yard. The monument site is bounded by 2nd Street and the Beverly Boulevard viaduct to the north, Lucas Avenue to the west, Emerald Street uphill to the south, and Toluca Street to the east. Currently, the Belmont Station Apartments stand in front of the tunnel entrance.