Goleta Depot
Goleta Depot | |
Location | 300 North Los Carneros Road, Goleta, CA |
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Coordinates | 34°26′32″N 119°51′10″W / 34.44222°N 119.85278°WCoordinates: 34°26′32″N 119°51′10″W / 34.44222°N 119.85278°W |
Built | 1901 |
Architect | Southern Pacific Railroad |
Architectural style | Stick/eastlake |
NRHP reference No. | 01001457 [1] |
Added to NRHP | January 18, 2002 |
Goleta Depot is a train station building in Goleta, California constructed by the Southern Pacific Railroad in 1901, as part of the completion of the Coast Route linking Los Angeles and San Francisco.[2] It is a Southern Pacific standard design Two Story Combination Depot No. 22.[3] The building is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and the California Register of Historical Resources and is the centerpiece of the South Coast Railroad Museum.
Southern Pacific closed its Goleta station in the 1970s. Eventually, Goleta Beautiful, a civic organization, obtained rights to the abandoned building which was moved on Nov. 18–19, 1981 to nearby Lake Los Carneros County Park. The park is the site of historic Stow House and Lake Los Carneros with walking trails and bird watching. The station was rehabilitated and restored, reopening in Oct. 1982. At first, the station also housed three local nonprofit organizations, the Goleta Valley Chamber of Commerce, Institute for American Research and Santa Barbara Audubon Society in addition to the museum, in a form of adaptive reuse. Later, the entire building became the home of the South Coast Railroad Museum.
A new train station with a concrete platform and open-air shelter opened nearby in 1998 for Amtrak trains.[4]
See also[]
- Registered Historic Places in Santa Barbara County
- Southern Pacific Railroad Passenger Station and Freight House in Springfield, Oregon, a similar two-story depot design
References[]
- ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. January 23, 2007.
- ^ Myrick, David F. (1987). “Santa Barbara County Railroads: A Centennial History,” Noticias 33: 22-71.
- ^ Bender, Henry E. Jr. (2013). Southern Pacific Lines Standard-Design Depots. Berkeley and Wilton, California: Signature Press. pp. 133, 138–140. ISBN 9781930013339.
- ^ "San Diegan Trains Now Stop in Goleta". Los Angeles Times. September 20, 1998. Retrieved 28 October 2018.
Further reading[]
- Bender, Henry E. Jr. (1998) “Southern Pacific Lines Standard Design Depots: Part 1,” SP Trainline 57: 11–26.
- Coombs, Gary B. (1982). Goleta Depot: The History of a Rural Railroad Station. Goleta Beautiful and Institute for American Research. Goleta, California.
- Lawler, Nan (1981). “Closing the Gap,” Railroad History, Bulletin 145: 87–105.
- Potter, Janet Greenstein (1996). Great American Railroad Stations. New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., pp. 466–467.
- Sullivan, Steve (1986). “Goleta Depot: A Tribute.” In Those Were the Days: Landmarks of Old Goleta, edited by Gary B. Coombs, 35–44. Goleta, Ca.: Institute for American Research.
- Tompkins, Walker A. (1966). Goleta: The Good Land. Goleta, Calif.: Goleta Amvets Post No. 55.
External links[]
Preceding station | Southern Pacific Railroad | Following station | ||
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toward San Francisco
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Coast Line | Santa Barbara toward Los Angeles
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- Railway stations in Santa Barbara County, California
- Goleta, California
- Railway stations in the United States opened in 1901
- National Register of Historic Places in Santa Barbara County, California
- Railway stations on the National Register of Historic Places in California
- Stick-Eastlake architecture in California
- Former Southern Pacific Railroad stations in California
- Southern California Registered Historic Place stubs
- Santa Barbara County, California geography stubs
- California railway station stubs