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Dorothy Peyton Gray Transportation Library



The Dorothy Peyton Gray Transportation Library and Archive is one of the most comprehensive transit operator-owned library resources in the United States.  As the only multimodal transportation library in Southern California, we serve employees, the public, governments and research institutions.

Our origins date back to the days of the Los Angeles Railway in 1890, but we were reintroduced to the public by the Southern California Rapid Transit District in 1971.  The Metro Library began with a collection of materials owned by Planning Department staff of our predecessor agency, the former SCRTD.  In 1978 a professional Librarian was hired to develop the specialized transportation collection, archive historically significant items, and provide reference services to employees and the public. 

The Library was renamed "The Dorothy Peyton Gray Transportation Library" by the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority Board of Directors in October, 2001.  Our name commemorates the distinguished 13-year career that built our transportation library into one of the nation's finest.  We are recognized for providing the research, resources, history, and archives that give context to transportation issues and history in Los Angeles and Southern California, as well as leadership within the transportation research community.

We maintain strong ties with the UC Berkeley Harmer E. Davis Transportation Library, the CalTrans Library, and the Metropolitan Transportation Commission Library, along with similar institutions throughout the United States, Canada, Europe, and Australia for mutual support and research needs.

We partner with a number of local, national, and international entities in cooperative ventures and information sharing.  We also work with the National Transportation Library and the Transportation Research Board to improve the availability of transportation-related information needed by federal, state and local decision-makers.  We provide timely access to information supporting transportation policy, research, operations, and technology transfer. 

The library is a member of OCLC, the largest international library services network and research organization, dedicated to the public purposes of furthering access to the world’s information, reducing information costs, and assisting in the location, acquisition, cataloging, lending, and preservation of library materials. 

Library staff have MLIS degrees and are members of several professional organizations, including the Special Library Association’s Transportation Division and the Transportation Research Board’s Information Services and Library and Information Science in Transportation committees.

 In addition to the Library and Archive, we maintain many web-hosted sites providing publicly-accessible resources which offer opportunities for our fans, friends, and subscribers to communicate with us and interact with our collections. 

Our Transportation Headlines blog has kept readers and subscribers abreast of aggregated news content since 2006, while our Twitter feed makes timely announcements of notable Library and transportation-related events. 

Our Facebook and MySpace profiles, as well as our Second Life presence, provide critical exposure to our social networking communities.

We have deployed several resource-sharing sites as well.  Our Flickr photostream contains thousands of unique historic images organized into collections and photosets to assist you with comprehensive research, searching by keyword tags or with a map depicting where photographs were taken.

Our YouTube channel brings together not only our own historic (and often humorous) video collection, but content provided by others to present a comprehensive look at Los Angeles transit and transportation via the moving image.

 Our document collection on Scribd provides easy access to many of our most heavily-requested publications and other resources.

We also support Google Custom Search Engines for meta-search across all major transit agencies and transit-related organization websites for fares, routes, data, reports, research, press releases, budgets, policies, programs, and other transit industry information.

 

Library and Archive:

One Gateway Plaza, 15th Floor
Los Angeles, CA  90012
Mail Stop 99-15-1


Telephone:
213.922.4859

Email: library@metro.net


Employee Hours:
(Metro Employees, Consultants, Full-time Students with ID)
Monday - Friday: 8:00 am-4:30 pm


General Public Hours:
Mondays & Thursdays, 8:00am - 4:30 pm
Materials may be check out by Metro employees, student interns, Board members, and consultants only.


Closed:
Saturdays, Sundays, and the following holidays:  New Year's Day, Martin Luther King Jr.'s Birthday, Presidents Day, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Veterans Day, Thanksgiving Day, Day after Thanksgiving, and Christmas Day.

Records Management Center:

One Gateway Plaza, 15th Floor
Los Angeles, CA 90012
Mail Stop 99-15-2


Telephone:
213.922.2389

Email: rmc@metro.net


Hours of Operation:

Monday - Friday: 8:00 am - 4:30 pm

Transportation Headlines for Friday March 12, 2010


8 Of the World's Most Popular High-Speed Trains
Huffington Post

Big Blue Facility Goes Solar In Santa Monica
Get Solar

Bike Racing Is The New Football: High School Teams Ride Wave Of Momentum
Bike Portland

Il Ciclista Dolce: Michael Musto (video : Village Voice legend Michael Musto has been riding a bike in New York for over 25 years. He shares entertaining insights on not possessing a driver's license, the benefits of biking everywhere, other notable New York cyclists, and how to ride successfully in a large city in all weather conditions)
StreetFilms

Death On The Tracks: Can Trains Be Safer For Non-Passengers?
Infrastructurist

The Decade's Top Hits (additional context for the biggest transit projects of the past decade, including sortable table columns to compare various aspects of over 70 projects)
Transport Politic

Developers In The Driver's Seat On Transportation: Unfocused Transport Policy Leaves Real Estate Industry Eager To Give Congress Directions
Center For Public Integrity

Editorial: Going Green Vs. Going Broke
Los Angeles Times

FHWA Recovery Act Map Tells A Great Story With Few Words
U.S. DOT Fast Lane Blog

Google Bike Maps: A Cynical Cyclist Speaks Out
PC World

Google Engineer Scott Shawcroft Explains Google's Bike Map
StreetsBlog SF

How Cars Are Killing Us Around The World (infographic)
Infrastructurist

It's On! Neighbors For Smart Rail File Suit Against Expo Construction Authority
StreetsBlog LA
Legal Petition To Have Certification Of FEIR Overturned (26p. PDF)

Metrolink Proposing Cutbacks
Los Angeles Daily News

Monday: Talk Transit At "Transportation 2020"
Blog Downtown

Moving Through The Recession, Part 4: Can We Sustain The Biking Boom?
The City Fix

OCTA Outlines New Bus Service Cuts
Orange County Register

Pennsylvania Ave. To Have Dedicated Bike Lanes (the center of the street from the White House to the Capitol soon may be reserved for just two things: Presidential inaugurations and people riding bicycles)
Washington Post

RTC To Las Vegas Monorail: You're On Your Own
Las Vegas Sun

Time To Re-Invent The LADOT?
CityWatch

Transit Oriented Development (TOD)
SoapBoxLA

United Against Freeway Tunnel: City Officials Are Banding Together With Others To Oppose Proposed 710 Extension
Glendale News Press

U.S. DOT Cagey On Funding New Trnasport Bill As Senators Seek Solutions (Los Angeles Mayor Villaraigosa at Senate environment committee's hearing)
StreetsBlog DC

Willingness To Pay For Transit Improvements
Human Transit

We have redesigned our entire website.  In addition to the Library's new webpages, Metro's site provides more customer-friendly content, easier navigation, and many new useful tools and resources.  We hope you make us your 24/7 resource on mobility in Southern California.


Also On Our Site

View the library's site categories

Our historic legacy of photographs, manuscripts, and other items document the important and unique role of transportation in Southern California history and culture

Click here to view Archives

Our extensive collection of books, reports, and studies as well as dynamic, innovative services support staff, academia, other research institutions and the public

Click here to view Library Research

We capture, organize, store, maintain, secure, retrieve and provide documents, correspondence, and other records

Click here to view Records Services

Our web-hosted resources, social networking and news extend our reach to our community and other organizations

Click here to view Social Media / Web 2.0