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Subway Terminal Building

The historic Subway Terminal, now Metro 417, opened in 1925 at 417 South Hill Street near Pershing Square, in the core of Los Angeles as the second, main train station of the Pacific Electric Railway; it served passengers boarding trains for the west and north of Southern California through a mile-long shortcut under Bunker Hill popularly called the "Hollywood Subway," but officially known as the Belmont Tunnel. The station served alongside the Pacific Electric Building at 6th & Main, which opened in 1905 to serve lines to the south and east. The Subway Terminal was designed by Schultze and Weaver in an Italian Renaissance Revival style, and the station itself lay underground below offices of the upper floors, since repurposed into the Metro 417 luxury apartments. When the underground Red Line was built, the new Pershing Square station was cut north under Hill Street alongside the Terminal building, divided from the Subway's east end by just a retaining wall. At its peak in the 20th century, the Subway Terminal served upwards of 20 million passengers a year.

Subway Terminal Building

417, 415, 425 S. Hill St.,
416, 420 424 S. Olive St
Los Angeles, California

5 (subway)

December 1, 1925 (December 1, 1925)

June 19, 1955 (June 19, 1955)

177

August 2, 2006

July 27, 1977

Belmont Tunnel / Toluca Substation and Yard

Pacific Electric Building

Pacific Electric Railway

Crump, Spencer (1977). Ride the big red cars: How trolleys helped build southern California. Trans-Anglo Books.  0-87046-047-1. OCLC 3414090.

ISBN

(November 17, 2008). "Subway Terminal Update". Visiting...With Huell Howser. Season 16. Episode 17. KCET. A 2008 public television documentary about the history of the Subway Terminal Building and the Belmont Tunnel.

Howser, Huell

The Metro417 building

A Tour of the Subway Terminal Area

Demotion Comes to the Pacific Electric Railway Company’s historic trolley shed