Beta Release: Incomplete/Experimental, see
notes
.
Spots/Properties
Click details button for details for a specific category.
Sorted by distance from exit.
Food
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Tita's Burger Den
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Uptons General Market
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Lee's Tavern
Food Spot Details
Entertainment/Tourist
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Fred Sandridge Sports Park
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Norman Smith Park
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Yarrow Ravine Rattlesnake Habitat Area
Fun Spots Details
Fire/Rescue
Fire/Rescue Spots Details
 
Weather
Census Data
County/Parish: San Bernardino
Population/Size
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Pop. Estimate: 2,180,085 (2019)
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Pop. Last Census: 2,035,210 (2010)
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Pop. Growth: 6.7%
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Pop/Sq Mile: 101.5 (2010)
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Area: 20,056.94 (2010) Sq. Miles
Economics/Housing
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Median House Value: $305,400
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Owner Occupied: 59.3%
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Median Rental Cost: $1,230
Travel/Congestion
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Avg. Commute To Work Time: 31.4
 
Wikipedia Nearby
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Yermo, California
Yermo is a town in the Mojave Desert in San Bernardino County, California. Its name is derived from one of the Spanish words for "wilderness". It is 13 miles east of Barstow on Interstate 15, just south of the Calico Mountains. Its population was an estimated 1,750 in 2009 (...)
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Fork of the Road
Fork of the Road was the locale along the Mojave River where the junction of the Mojave Trail / Mojave Road and the Old Spanish Trail / Mormon Road was located in San Bernardino County, California. The location of Fork of the Road was on the north side of the Mojave River, 18 (...)
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CACTUS
CACTUS (Converted Atmospheric Cherenkov Telescope Using Solar-2) was a ground-based, Air Cherenkov Telescope (ACT) located outside Daggett, California, near Barstow. It was originally a solar power plant called Solar Two, but was converted to an observatory starting in 2001 (...)
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The Solar Project
The SOLAR Project consists of the Solar One, Solar Two and Solar Tres solar thermal power plants based in the Mojave Desert, United States and Andalucía, Spain. The US Department of Energy (DOE) and a consortium of US utilities built this country's first two large-scale, demonstration solar power (...)
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Solar power in California
Solar power in California has been growing rapidly because of high insolation, community support, declining solar costs, and a Renewable Portfolio Standard which requires that 33% of California's electricity come from renewable resources by 2020, and 50% by 2030 (...)