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Downtown San Diego is the hub of a regional transportation network. Commuters, residents and visitors find their way to the center city by using multiple modes of transportation, including rail, light-rail trolley, bus and car. Downtown is also a pedestrian-friendly environment, which encourages people to walk to work, shops and restaurants.

Downtown Parking Program

Room for Parking Downtown

Getting Around Fast Facts:

  • 4 Interstate highways
  • 55,000 parking spaces
  • 43 miles of Coaster commuter rail
  • 50 miles of trolley lines
  • 29 bus routes
  • Daily Amtrak service

Highways

Four major interstate freeways (I-5, I-8, I-15 and I-805) and six state highways serve San Diego in a well-developed highway system that is relatively congestion-free. The city's average daily round-trip commute ranks fifth best compared to the 20 largest metropolitan areas in the nation. During the past two decades, more than 1,000 miles of streets and highways have been added to the San Diego region.

Public Transit

The San Diego Metropolitan Transit System offers a full menu of mass transit options to and from Downtown San Diego.

Light-rail Coaster Commuter trains link San Diego's North County to Downtown, with regular stops at the center-city Santa Fe Depot.

Twenty-nine bus routes cover more than 600 miles. Express bus lines link points North, East and South to Downtown.

Nearly 50 miles of the San Diego Trolley's light-rail lines travel through Downtown San Diego and connect the area with East County, Old Town, South Bay, Mission Valley, Qualcomm Stadium and the international border with Mexico. Two new trolley line extensions are planned.

The San Diego Downtown Partnership offers a discounted transit pass program offering savings of 20-30% on monthly bus and trolley passes. A company purchasing 50 passes for its employees can save up to $10,000 per year on transit alone.

Parking

Downtown San Diego has approximately 55,000 parking spaces, with 5,000 more due by 2008. The centrally located Horton Plaza parking lot offers affordable parking for shoppers, theatergoers or visitors to the Gaslamp Quarter. The new 6th & K Parkade will add 1,000 spaces by August 2004, while a new 500-space parking garage at 6th and Market opened in 2001 and plans for a new 980-space parking garage at 7th and Market are in the works. These sites offer convenient and inexpensive parking for people visiting the Gaslamp Quarter, as well as for those heading to PETCO Park.

Parking Meters / Parking Cards
In 1998, the City of San Diego installed 5,262 new parking meters throughout the City. These new parking meters accept nickels, dimes, quarters, and prepaid electronic debit cards. A City of San Diego prepaid parking meter debit card is available in two increments; $10 (10 hours) or $45 (45 hours).

Here are the Downtown locations that sell parking meter debit cards:

City of San Diego Parking Mgmt. - 1255 Fifth Avenue, (619) 236-7145
City Stores City Administration Building - 202 C Street (Lobby)
Central Service Center - 2500 Commercial Street, (619) 446-1000
Golden Hill Service Center - 2469 Broadway, (619) 235-5202

For more information about the 21st Century Parking Meters click on the following link: www.sandiego.gov/parkingmanagement/enforcement/cards.shtml


Downtown Parking Companies

Ace Parking
645 Ash Street
(619) 233-6624

Allright Parking
555 West Beech Street
(619) 235-5690

Five Star Parking
110 West C Street, Suite 1903
(619) 235-0231

Sunset Parking Management
625 Broadway
(619) 238-8064

Rail Service

Amtrak makes a convenient stop Downtown at the Santa Fe Depot located at the corner of Broadway and Kettner. The train offers daily service to Los Angeles. Burlington Northern Santa Fe provides daily freight rail service, with direct connections to many major cities in the U.S.

Air Travel

Conveniently located just minutes from Downtown, the San Diego International Airport is where Charles Lindbergh began his legendary transatlantic flight in 1927. Today, the airport is the nation's busiest single runway commercial airport, serving nearly 15 million passengers annually. A total of 19 airlines offer daily flights to 158 cities and serve an average 36,500 passengers day. Seven airfreight companies handle more than 70,000 tons of air cargo annually.

Port of San Diego

San Diego Bay is located 96 nautical miles southeast of Los Angeles and just north of the United States-Mexico border. The port's close proximity to the open ocean, lack of shipping congestion and year-round mild climate make it an excellent location for cargo shipping.

The port's two marine cargo facilities are the Tenth Avenue Marine Terminal and National City Marine Terminal. Both terminals have on-dock rail facilities for rapid transfer of cargo to rail and are minutes from Interstates 5, 8 and 15. Terminal gates operate around-the-clock, seven days a week.

The port also has a growing cruise ship operation, with more than 180 cruise ships calling on San Diego's B Street Cruise Ship Terminal each year. Seasonally, Holland America Line and Celebrity Cruises make San Diego their homeport. Other cruise lines that regularly visit San Diego include Princess, Carnival, Norwegian, Royal Caribbean, Radisson Seven Seas and Crystal Cruises.

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