Los Angeles Times

Along the ghost route of the Red Car

- By Charles Fleming Fleming is the author of “Secret Stairs: A Walking Guide to the Historic Staircases of Los Angeles” and the just-published “Secret Walks: A Walking Guide to the Hidden Trails of Los Angeles.” charles.fleming@latimes.com

Mere blocks from the busy streets and freeways dividing Silver Lake from Echo Park and Atwater Village is a wide, bucolic green space: all that’s left of the Red Car electric trolley line that once ran from downtown Los Angeles through Edendale and to Glendale and beyond. The trolley’s tracks and trestles are gone, but a long undevelope­d corridor remains.

1 Start walking from Riverside Drive near the intersecti­on with Gleneden Street, in front of the decades’ worth of murals painted by students of Allesandro Elementary School. Head south on Riverside under a high freeway overpass, then turn right onto Allesandro Street.

2 Turn right onto Rosebud Avenue and duck under the Glendale Freeway, then turn immediatel­y left onto Corralitas Drive. At the end of the cul-de-sac, take a wide dirt path that swings wide into an open field.

3 This broad open space narrows into a canyon and shows some remnants of its electric trolley car past. Here and there are concrete footings that once supported platforms for passengers of the famed Red Car, which served the area from 1906 to 1955.

4 As the canyon narrows into deep shade, the path passes a makeshift memorial and goes through a chain-link gate. On the left is Rose Scharlin Cooperativ­e Nursery School, one of the city’s oldest preschools.

5 The path broadens into a wide dirt road — one of the area’s few unpaved city streets. Public staircases, designed for pedestrian access to the trolley line, enter from both sides. Walk on, past the intersecti­on with India Street on the right. Farther on are views of the roaring 5 Freeway and in the distance Forest Lawn Memorial Park.

6 As the trail ends at a bluff and begins to wind steeply downhill, stop to imagine a trestle — the Fletcher Viaduct, the trolley bridge, dismantled in 1959, that crossed Fletcher Avenue far below. Across the divide, you can see a staircase that helped pedestrian­s access the trolley stop. Just below are the colorful footings that held up the trestle, now the basis of an ongoing community art project.

7 Take the trail downhill, walking carefully, then turn right on Fletcher and right onto Riverside to return to your starting point.

8 If the weather is wet or the trail looks too steep or slippery, return to the intersecti­on with India Street. Turn left, walk a block, then turn quickly right onto Riverside Terrace and left onto Gleneden Street. When you hit Riverside Drive, you’re back at the beginning of the walk.

 ?? Photograph­s by Glenn Koenig
Los Angeles Times ?? GAVIN CARLTON and his son Gabriel walk home from Rose Scharlin Cooperativ­e Nursery School on a path that broadens into a wide dirt road, one of the area’s few unpaved city streets.
Photograph­s by Glenn Koenig Los Angeles Times GAVIN CARLTON and his son Gabriel walk home from Rose Scharlin Cooperativ­e Nursery School on a path that broadens into a wide dirt road, one of the area’s few unpaved city streets.
 ?? Lou Spirito
Los Angeles Times ??
Lou Spirito Los Angeles Times
 ??  ?? STAIRCASES designed for access to the trolley line are on both sides of the path.
STAIRCASES designed for access to the trolley line are on both sides of the path.
 ??  ?? CONCRETE FOOTINGS of Red Car passenger platforms.
CONCRETE FOOTINGS of Red Car passenger platforms.

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