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Diamond Ranch High School

2001 establishments in CaliforniaBuildings and structures in Pomona, CaliforniaDeconstructivismDiamond Bar, CaliforniaEducation in Pomona, California
Educational institutions established in 2001Public high schools in Los Angeles County, CaliforniaSchool buildings completed in 2001Use mdy dates from September 2020
DiamondRanchHS CarolHighsmith 4
DiamondRanchHS CarolHighsmith 4

Diamond Ranch High School (or DRHS) is a high school that serves students from Diamond Bar and Phillips Ranch, California, United States, and is operated by the Pomona Unified School District (PUSD) in Pomona, California. Diamond Ranch's athletic teams compete in the Hacienda League of the CIF Southern Section.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Diamond Ranch High School (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Diamond Ranch High School
Diamond Ranch Road, Pomona

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Wikipedia: Diamond Ranch High SchoolContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 34.021826 ° E -117.779725 °
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Address

Diamond Ranch High School

Diamond Ranch Road 100
91766 Pomona
California, United States
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DiamondRanchHS CarolHighsmith 4
DiamondRanchHS CarolHighsmith 4
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Nearby Places

Pomona City Stables
Pomona City Stables

The Pomona City Stables, also known as the Pomona City Yards Brick Building, is a stables building completed in 1909 to house horses owned by the City of Pomona, California. Built at a cost of $6,000, the Pomona City Stables building was designed by Pomona architect Ferdinand Davis from the firm of Davis and Higgs. Davis also designed several other prominent buildings in Pomona, including the Currier House (1907), the Masonic Lodge, the Ebell Club, and Trinity Methodist Church. Located on White Avenue, just north of the Southern Pacific railroad tracks, the Pomona City Stables opened in April 1909 and were described by the Los Angeles Times as "models of convenience" that would provide "ample room for the city stock and implements for some time to come." Upon its opening, the building was occupied by twenty-two head of horses owned by the city and a caretaker. The building is reported to be one of the oldest municipal buildings extant in California. In 2003, the Pomona Historic Preservation Commission recommended recognition of the stables building as a historic landmark, and the building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in October 2004. However, the listing of the building has not led to any cessation of the building's deterioration. Located in the middle of a fenced-off yard used by the City of Pomona for storage of municipal vehicles, fuel, and other materials, the building has fallen into a serious state of disrepair and dilapidation. After the July 2008 Chino Hills earthquake, city officials posted a sign (pictured at left) on the entrance to the stables restricting access due to its dilapidated condition. After severe winter rains, the stable walls partially collapsed in 2017. The stables were fully demolished by the city of Pomona in Fall of 2022.