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Pittsburg Center station

2018 establishments in CaliforniaBay Area Rapid Transit stations in Contra Costa County, CaliforniaBus stations in Contra Costa County, CaliforniaPittsburg, CaliforniaRailway stations in the United States opened in 2018
San Francisco Bay Area railway station stubsSan Francisco metro stubsStations on the Yellow Line (BART)Use mdy dates from January 2023Wikipedia page with obscure subdivision
Pittsburg Center station with eBART train, May 2018
Pittsburg Center station with eBART train, May 2018

Pittsburg Center station is a Bay Area Rapid Transit station on the Yellow Line. It is located at the Railroad Avenue overpass of Highway 4 in Pittsburg, California and serves the downtown area of about one mile (1.6 km) away via connecting buses provided by Tri Delta Transit. There is no reserved parking available at this station.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Pittsburg Center station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Pittsburg Center station
Power Avenue,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Pittsburg Center stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 38.018227 ° E -121.890178 °
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Address

Vincent A Davi Library

Power Avenue 80
94565
California, United States
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Pittsburg Center station with eBART train, May 2018
Pittsburg Center station with eBART train, May 2018
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Nearby Places

Chipps Island
Chipps Island

Chipps Island is a small island in Suisun Bay, California. It is part of Solano County. It is also known as Knox Island, Its coordinates are 38°03′19″N 121°54′43″W by which name it appears on an 1850 survey map of the San Francisco Bay area made by Cadwalader Ringgold, as well as an 1854 map of the area by Henry Lange. In 1959, the state of California used Chipps Island in a legal definition of the western boundary of the Sacramento–San Joaquin River Delta.In 1960s, during efforts to devise large-scale hydrological engineering projects in San Francisco Bay and adjacent estuaries, Chipps Island was proposed as the site of a dam across the Carquinez Strait as a "more feasible" alternative to the very expensive Reber Plan. The Chipps Island dam was estimated to cost $194,400,000 in 1963 ($1.86 billion in 2022), and retain 1,380,000 acre⋅ft (1.70×109 m3) of fresh water (which would otherwise be emptied into the Pacific Ocean). However, the project faced barriers to implementation, including potential hazards to wildlife (as it was expected to cause the flow of the San Joaquin River to reverse during part of salmon's migration period, preventing them from swimming upstream). The Sacramento Bee quoted "state fish and wildlife experts" as saying that the "seriousness of this apparently insolvable problem" was significant enough to "postpone further investigation of the other effects of the Chipps Island plan". By 1964, new plans from the Inter-Agency Delta Committee had "discarded" the Chipps Island water barrier in plans for managing freshwater in the region.Chipps Island is located close to hydrocarbon deposits, and in 1967, bids were opened for oil and gas rights on parcels in the vicinity of the island.While a duck club had once operated on Chipps Island, it was in disuse by the mid-1970s; in 1974, police arrested a "bustling" ring of illicit amphetamine producers using the abandoned structures to store large amounts of the stimulant.In the 2010s, Chipps Island was part of a large purchase of Delta land attempted by the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California (along with nearby Bouldin and Bacon Islands, as well as much of the Holland and Webb Tracts). The district was subsequently sued by several northern California environmental groups, water agencies, and the counties of Contra Costa and San Joaquin.