11 February 2010

Sacramento, CA


For the first time, I am moving a post from my old blog that has a picture. Yeah!

Of Interest: downtown Sacramento, old Sacramento
Lodging: yes
Tourist Office: yes, in old Sacramento
Safe at night: yes, but watch out for traffic

There are two hotels close to Sacramento Station, but the city makes it a little hard to walk their direction. The hotels are in front to the station to the right, but to cross the street in front of the station, you have to go left from the station. In fact, just to start going in the general direction of the hotels, you have to cross the street three times. You need to cross the street in the crosswalk because the street in front of the station is an entry way to the highway. The cars drive fast, so you need the lights and the crosswalk to keep from dying horribly.

The two hotels nearest the station are to the south of the west part of the station area. Old Sacramento is to the west on the other side of the highway. There is a pedestrian underpass to the south near the Holiday Inn. The historic buildings of Old Sacramento mostly contain restaurants and shops, but the California State Railroad Museum, the Sacramento History Museum, and the Schoolhouse Museum are also on these historic streets. Other museums are located in downtown Sacramento.

Downtown Sacramento's buildings are not as old as those in old Sacramento, but many have some history and are quite attractive. The Capitol is in this area as are multiple office buildings. There are several hotels in this area, the closest of which is about a half an hour's walk from the station.

Luckily, the hotels.com page is accurate for Sacramento. Just look for the Amtrak link under Landmarks.

One of Sacramento's light rail lines stops at the station. Unfortunately, not many people in the area seem to know where it goes.

Sacramento is the last stop for most of the Capitol Corridor trains. The city is three hours from San Jose (7/day) and a little less than two hours from Oakland (16/day). Once a day the train continues on to/comes back from Auburn, an hour away. There are regular thruway buses to Roseville, Rocklin, and Colfax as well as Auburn.

The California Zephyr (to Reno, Salt Lake City, Denver, and Chicago) and the Coast Starlight (Los Angeles to Portland and Seattle) stop here once going each direction daily. Both these trains cover the Capitol Corridor route, although neither stops in Auburn.

2 comments:

Allie Cat said...

The light rail (Gold Line) heads to Folsom via downtown and midtown Sacto, CSUS, East Sacramento (with connections to Arden/Arcade), and Rancho Cordova (with connections to Citrus Heights). Every other train ends in Rancho Cordova, and night trains end there. Connections are available downtown to the Blue Line, which serves North and South Sacramento, with connections to Elk Grove via e-Tran.

Helen Bushnell said...

Hopefully, your comment is helpful for people who are familiar with the area. Unfortunately, I think that people in California really overestimate how much people who don't live in California know about places within the state. Is there a grocery store in there somewhere? (That is what my fellow traveler was looking for.)

Your description of Riverside on your blog was really good. I got a sense of where things were in relation to each other.