July 24, 2007
Go Metro To A Dodgers Game
As Guest Day Editor, Fred Camino of MetroRiderLA, will be joining LAist with a few posts throughout today. Read his introductory interview here and check out his site.

Your mission: get to there, from anywhere, without a car.
I know LAist loves them some Dodgers. You know what, I loves me some Dodgers too. A Dodgers game is always a good time, and with my recent discovery of the footlong Dodger Dog corn dogs, you best believe I'll be returning soon.
"But," I hear you say "it's impossible to get to Dodger Stadium without a car. Good luck getting a Dodger Dog Mr. Car-free!"
Au contraire my skeptical car-culture friend, although Dodger Stadium, like so many places in our fair city, is designed for the automobile, it is entirely possible and quite enjoyable to get to that classic ballpark sans car.
So it goes without saying that Dodger Stadium is not a very transit or pedestrian friendly place. Hell, despite the sea of parking surrounding it, it's not a very friendly place for cars either. Sorry to report that unlike many other cities, LA's stadium doesn't have a subway or light-rail train that serves it (the closest is the Gold Line Chinatown Station, and it's not that close). Nor is there any gameday shuttle service from nearby transit hubs like Union Station. Hell, there isn't even a pedestrian walkway for people who may live in the neighborhood. So what's a MetroRider to do?
Take the bus!
That's right. The dirty, smelly, bumpy ol' bus. It's all right, you can handle it, just give it a try - it's not as bad as you think. Actually, it's excellent mindless fun, get a bunch of your friends on board and chat about the game as a friendly Metro bus driver takes you to Sunset/Innes, just a 10-minute walk from Dodger Stadium. You can even "pre-game" guilt-free before you leave 'cuz you're not driving.
There's exactly two buses that will take you within a 10-minute walk from Dodger Stadium: Metro Local 2 and Metro Local 4. These workhorses will drop you off at the corner of Sunset and Innes from where you will walk .1 miles to Elysian Park Ave. onto which you will turn and walk east for .4 miles past Stadium Way, up through the entrance (wave your day pass to the cars as they pay to enter), and to Dodger Stadium (dodging cars the entire time). You'll wish they had designed things a little better for the pedestrian, perhaps at the very least a sidewalk to separate the cars from the humans, but alas you made it nonetheless.
So let's take a look at some examples. On Saturday, August 5th at 7:10 PM the Dodgers play the Diamondbacks at Dodger Stadium. We want to arrive by 6:40 so we can get some treats and settle in for the first pitch. My route is quite easy, I live in the South Park district of Downtown, so I walk to Broadway/8th (chatting with friends along the way) and catch either the 2 or the 4 at around 5:55 PM (give or take 10 minutes, you gotta give buses some leeway). The bus snakes through Downtown for about 15 minutes as we talk and laugh and generally enjoy being driven around until we see that our stop is coming up. A simple bull of the yellow cable tells the bus driver to stop, and we disembark at Sunset/Innes and make the 10-minute walk to the game. Once the game is over we do just about the opposite, along the way discussing how poorly designed this stadium is for pedestrians and how nice it would be if there were some bars and restaurants along our walk to the bus.
Let's say you're coming from Long Beach. Well, you've got a journey ahead of you, but you already knew that. You just gotta get to that 2 or 4 bus, so hop on the Blue Line all the way to 7th Metro Center in Downtown Los Angeles, transfer to the Red Line (yeah it's a drag but deal with it), ride it one stop to Pershing Square and from there catch the 2 or 4 from Broadway/4th and your as good as there. It'll cost you about 1hr 17min, but that's what you get for living 23 miles away from something in a big city.
How about Glendale? Do people live in Glendale? Guess so. From the Glendale Galleria area you can catch a Metro 603 and take that to Alvarado/Sunset and transfer to a Metro 2 or 4 and repeat the process from above. It could take you as short as 32 minutes, as long as 1hr15min, plan your trip to hopefully avoid the longer route.
I've been getting these routes from the highly useful Metro Trip Planner. It's not flawless, and I recommend you double check the Metro timetables to confirm the best route, but it's a great place to start your Metro journey to Dodger Stadium. Don't forget to map out your return trip!
Try it once, invite your friends, if it all goes to hell at least you'll share a good laugh, but my bet is you'll find an effective car-free way to see your favorite team play.
Photo by tykejohnson via Flickr.



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Whatever. You are kinda fudging the facts there. We tried to go carless to the game a couple months back and you really can't. Sure you can take that bus you are talking about but that "10 minute walk" is up two steep hills.
They used to have a great Dodger shuttle from Union Station but apparently it was too popular so they discontinued it. Nice of them to do.
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I love the steep hills!
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I tried to ride my bike there on Sunday and they wouldn't actually let me ride on the premises! They actually made me get off of my bike and WALK it up the hill. Then when I asked the ticket people what the official policy of the Dodgers is when it comes to riding bikes to the stadium they lookeed at me like I had 6 heads!!!
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The Militant has walked those hills, they aren't that steep. Then again, the combat-trained physique of the Militant is somewhat superior to they typical lazy (non-militant) Angeleno. The Militant has even biked there and it's not such a big deal.
You say you like living in Los Angeles "because of the weather," yet you refuse to walk. All logic has been suspended.
The Dodger shuttle that ran in the 2004 season was designed to fail; it only ran on Friday night games.
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Guest #1-
Are you kidding me?? Those hills aren't steep at all. If you are not disabled or have trouble walking for reasons other than laziness (it's certainly not a good trip for the physically handicapped), then it is absolutely a 10-minute walk. I just did it last Friday and timed it and everything. 10-minutes at a slow-to-moderate pace.
Guest #3-
That's strange, I had a friend bike up there last month with no problem, but it doesn't surprise me. Like I said, that place is designed for cars and nothing else.
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I was just wondering the other day where I can catch the dodger shuttle. What? they don't have one... i can't believe that.
i'll probably give this route a try though..thanks.
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def worth busing and walking. i've even got my brother and friends, avid drivers and sports fans, to take the bus to the games. and its true that it adds a good deal of camaraderie to a pre-game feel; walking and talking baseball or the upcoming football season. all while someone drives you. then the walk, which is by no means tough, guest 3, is great. like militant said and metroriders preach, LA has great weather 99.9 percent of the time yet people refuse to get out of their cars. suck it up and walk up the hill, it's really not that big of a deal.
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I have gone to a game without a car, from Hollywood. We took a train and bus, it was fun. Walked up those "steep" (hahaha) hills just fine.
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If you're not willing to walk up the hill, then you don't deserve to call yourself a true Dodger fan. A true Dodger fan wouldn't let anything hinder them from worship at the sacred Ravine.
Besides, after the game (and I mean after the game since there is no need to leave early), the walk is an easy downhill stroll!
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3: Next time that happens, then kindly get off your bike and walk up the hill. Then, when they're not looking, get back on your bike and pedal that sucker!
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My advice, is, if you really want a shuttle, call the hell out of LADOT and ask why they don't have one.
I'm just saying, since they handle the parking ad Dodger Stadium, and don't have the infrastructure at LADOT hq to deal with multiple complaint calls...
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11: The Militant has some inside connections on the Dodger organization. Talks with LADOT have been in the works since 2005, including re-routing certain existing DASH lines to feed into Elysian Park (the park itself is public (city) property and serve the stadium, but again, it's just...talk.
There is considerable resistance on behalf of the McCourts to have working transit access to the Stadium. The 2004 Friday night shuttle was considered by many a token offering by McCourt which was designed to fail.
Remember that before owning a Los Angeles baseball franchise, McCourt made millions in Boston by running a parking lot company.
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Gee, you don't bother to indicate what the cost is for going carless. More? Less? The same?
And you seriously neglect the convenience of being able to leave in the top of the 5th if you have an emergency.
Lastly, you neglected to mention the most convenient, and least impactful method - car pooling.
But, whatever.
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even better, make it a fifteen minute walk and pregame at the shortstop or little joy. if you're drunk enough you won't feel the burn of the steep hills.
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guest 13- you sure are making quite a lot of judgments for no reason.
does it cost more or less? well, that probably depends on where you're coming from. you going 2 miles to the game, or 60? that would make a difference. do you drive a hummer, or a civic? do you already have a year long metro pass, or do you need to pay a couple dollars for a day pass? All questions that metro rider can't really answer for every person reading it. In general though, it's my understanding that riding public transportation is much more cost effective than driving a car.
and you say "lastly" he forgot to mention car pooling. do you even understand what's going on? he's a guest editor who blogs on METRO RIDER. He's trying to be most helpful in the ways of the metro.
get a clue.
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So, how 'bout them Dodgers...
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My blue and white mini zips my friends and I right in. There needs to be a metro line under the parking lot there before I'd take it. The gold line came so close through chinatown too.
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Guest #13-
"Gee, you don't bother to indicate what the cost is for going carless. More? Less? The same?
And you seriously neglect the convenience of being able to leave in the top of the 5th if you have an emergency.
Lastly, you neglected to mention the most convenient, and least impactful method - car pooling."
You seem to miss the point. This article is about how to get to Dodger Stadium without a car. It's not a cost comparison, it's not even a car vs. transit rant... it's simply, how to do it without a car. Whether it works for you is up to you. I don't have a car, my close friends don't have cars, so car-pooling is not an option, plus the bus is easier and funner for me. May not be the same for you, but now you know how to go about it if you wish to.
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And you get to wave at all of the suckers stuck in line paying the $15, some of whom drive themselves to the game. I'd rather take a soda and a Dodger Dog with the $15, thanks. Or, walk by at 7:30 and get a ticket for below face value.
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I try not pay for Dodger Stadium parking, otherwise I'd go broke. But take Metro? You've got to be joking.
Taking Metro to the stadium is okay. I can live with that one. But no way in hell would I take it home.
Being a 100lb small female who carries around cameras and attends games alone, I do not under any circumstances feel safe walking a mile from Dodger Stadium at 10:30 at night. I've already had my car broken into when I parked on the street just outside of the parking gate. I've seen at least 10 cars broken into and vandalized. I've been harassed and had groups of 6 or more drunk large guys try to follow me. There are drunk fans chugging and pissing in the bushes in all directions for about a 1 mile radius around the stadium, which is incredibly poorly lit. There are people living in the vacant and abandoned homes on Stadium Way who have no problem robbing you. As much as I hate Dodger Stadium parking, I value my life more.
Not to mention going home. An hour and 15 minutes when the game lets out around 10 and then you have to walk down the hill (20 minutes) and wait for a bus (20 minutes) gets you home after midnight, which sucks when you're waking up at 6am to go to work.