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Indiana station (Los Angeles Metro)

2009 establishments in CaliforniaCalifornia railway station stubsEastside Los AngelesL Line (Los Angeles Metro) stationsLos Angeles County, California geography stubs
Los Angeles Metro stubsRailway stations in the United States opened in 2009
Indiana Station LACMTA crop
Indiana Station LACMTA crop

Indiana station is an at-grade light rail station on the L Line of the Los Angeles Metro Rail system. It is located alongside South Indiana Street (the station's namesake) as the line transitions between 1st Street and 3rd Street on the eastern edge of the Boyle Heights neighborhood of Los Angeles. This station opened in 2009 as part of the Gold Line Eastside Extension. This station and all the other Eastside Extension stations will be part of the E Line upon completion of the Regional Connector project in 2023.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Indiana station (Los Angeles Metro) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Indiana station (Los Angeles Metro)
South Indiana Street, Los Angeles

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address External links Nearby Places
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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 34.0343 ° E -118.1922 °
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Address

Indiana

South Indiana Street
90023 Los Angeles
California, United States
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linkWikiData (Q9008332)
linkOpenStreetMap (5362705395)

Indiana Station LACMTA crop
Indiana Station LACMTA crop
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Malabar Branch Library
Malabar Branch Library

Malabar Branch Library is a branch library of the Los Angeles Public Library located in the Boyle Heights section of Los Angeles, California. The Malabar Branch began in 1914 as a book depository in a Sunday school room at the Brooklyn Heights Methodist Church on the corner of Evergreen Avenue and Malabar Street. The original collection consisted of approximately 900 books that were checked out on the honor system. In 1925, a bond issue was passed by Los Angeles voters providing funds for the construction of 14 new branch libraries, including the current Malabar Branch. Construction on the new Mediterranean Revival-Spanish Colonial Revival building started in 1926, and the new library was opened in May 1927. The building was designed by architect William Lee Woollett. The Malabar Branch was damaged in the 1987 Whittier Narrows earthquake and was closed. The branch was extensively renovated and reopened in 1992 with separate reading rooms for adults and children, a multipurpose room and a patron services room. In 1987, the Malabar Branch and several other branch libraries in Los Angeles were added to the National Register of Historic Places as part of a thematic group submission. The application noted that the branch libraries had been constructed in a variety of period revival styles to house the initial branch library system of the City of Los Angeles. With respect to the Malabar Branch, the application described the building as a one-story, brick structure designed in a revival style reminiscent of rural Latin America.The Malabar Branch is a Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument.