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Ardenwood Park & Ride

Buildings and structures in Fremont, CaliforniaBus station stubsBus stations in Alameda County, CaliforniaCalifornia transportation stubsFuture Amtrak stations in the United States
Pages with no open date in Infobox stationRailway stations scheduled to open in 2026

Ardenwood is a park and ride bus station in Fremont, California. It is located off California State Route 84, adjacent to the Ardenwood Historic Farm. It is served by AC Transit and Dumbarton Express transbay buses. An expanded lot and bus shelter opened in August 2009 at a cost of $8.3 million and was frequently filled within months of opening. A railway platform is planned to be constructed along the bordering Union Pacific Coast Line to serve the rerouted Capitol Corridor in 2026.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Ardenwood Park & Ride (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Ardenwood Park & Ride
Ardenwood Terrace, Fremont

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Latitude Longitude
N 37.551399 ° E -122.054841 °
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Ardenwood Terrace
94555 Fremont
California, United States
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Coyote Hills Regional Park
Coyote Hills Regional Park

Coyote Hills Regional Park is a regional park encompassing nearly 978 acres of land and administered by the East Bay Regional Park District. The park, which was dedicated to public use in 1967, is located in Fremont, California, USA, on the southeast shore of the San Francisco Bay. The Coyote Hills themselves are a small range of hills at the edge of the bay; though not reaching any great height, they afford tremendous views of the bay, three of the trans-bay bridges (Dumbarton Bridge, San Mateo Bridge, and the Bay Bridge), the cities of San Francisco and Oakland, the Peninsula Range of the Santa Cruz Mountains and Mount Tamalpais. In addition to the hills themselves, the park encloses a substantial area of wetlands. There are a number of archaeological sites within the park, preserving evidence of habitation by Native Americans of the Ohlone group of tribes, including shellmounds. Access to these sites is not allowed for casual visitors, but they can be visited by arrangement. There is a substantial network of hiking trails in the park, most of them also available to equestrians, and 3.5 miles (5.6 km) to cyclists. Most of the trails are wide fireroads that go around the hills and the marshes, and one fireroad that runs north-south through the hills ridge. There are few narrow trails which are off limits to bikers and equestrians. These trails connect to others in the east bay, and the San Francisco Bay Trail passes through the park. Cross country meets for local schools are held occasionally in the park. The waters to the south and west of the park form part of the San Francisco Bay National Wildlife Refuge, and a great deal of wildlife can be seen from the park trails.