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Officials Suggest Transit to Rose Bowl

Game fans are urged to take trains and shuttles as rain forces closure of 14,000-car parking lot.

Los Angeles

December 31, 2004|Jesus Sanchez, Times Staff Writer

Fans headed to Saturday's Rose Bowl game were being advised to take two items: a bus and a raincoat.

Most of the Brookside Golf Course, which is turned into a giant 14,000-car parking lot on game day, will be off-limits to cars because the ground will be too soggy from this week's rains, Rose Bowl officials said Thursday.


For The Record
Los Angeles Times Saturday January 01, 2005 Home Edition Main News Part A Page 2 News Desk 0 inches; 32 words Type of Material: Correction
Rain date -- Articles in Thursday's and Friday's California section incorrectly reported that it last rained on the Rose Parade in 1954. It last happened 50 years ago, on Jan. 1, 1955.


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An estimated 8 inches of rain fell on the golf course grounds, which are adjacent to the stadium, earlier this week, and more rain was expected today.

"Some areas of the golf course are still underwater," Darryl Dunn, general manager of Rose Bowl Operating Co., which oversees the stadium and golf course, said Thursday afternoon. "We don't want people to get stuck. We don't want people walking through water, and we don't want to do severe damage to our course."

Fans who cannot find parking will be directed to nearby streets to find space. But faced with a near sellout for the 90,000-seat stadium, Rose Bowl officials pleaded with fans to consider alternatives to driving to the game, when up to 20,000 vehicles normally are expected to descend on the Arroyo Seco.

Rose Bowl officials encouraged fans to carpool, walk and take public transportation, especially the Metro Gold Line. A park-and-ride shuttle system from Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles will be set up to transport 2,500 people.

"The need for people to take alternate modes of transportation is very important," Dunn said.

The grounds around the Rose Bowl will only grow more saturated, as forecasters expected another storm to drop up to 2 inches of rain on the Los Angeles area today. On New Year's Eve, the thousands of people who camp out on Colorado Boulevard in advance of the Rose Parade will probably face cold and soggy conditions, with the National Weather Service forecasting showers and temperatures dropping into the low 40s.

There should be a break between storms on New Year's Day, in time for the Rose Parade and Rose Bowl game between the University of Michigan and the University of Texas. But the weather service said showers were possible on game day.

This week's stormy weather has already disrupted Rose Parade activities. A Rose Parade festival at the Rose Bowl was canceled for two days, and pre-parade marching band performances were moved indoors at Pasadena City College on Thursday. It has not rained on the Rose Parade since 1954. But the parade will roll down Colorado Boulevard rain or shine, officials said.

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