Getting to the Queen Mary
1126 Queens Highway
Long Beach, California
90802 United States
From Long Beach Airport
Follow the airport exit signs to Lakewood Blvd. Take Lakewood Blvd. south towards I-405. Take the I-405 North to the I-710 South. Follow the signs for THE QUEEN MARY.
From Los Angeles International Airport
Follow the airport exit signs to West Century Blvd. Turn right on South La Cienega Blvd., then turn left to merge onto I-405 South. Take the I-405 South, then the I-710 South. Follow the signs for THE QUEEN MARY.
From John Wayne Orange County Airport
Follow the airport exit signs to get onto the I-405 North then take the I-710 South. Follow the signs for THE QUEEN MARY.
Public Transportation
- Take the Long Beach Transit system Broadway/Lakewood from the Long Beach Airport to the Long Beach Transit Mall, then take the free Long Beach Transit Passport bus to the Queen Mary.
- Take Super Shuttle or Prime Time Shuttle.
- Take a taxi from Long Beach Airport.
- From any terminal at LAX, go downstairs to the LAX Shuttle stop and take Line G (free shuttle) to the Aviation Station of the Green Line of the Metro Rail Service to the Willowbrook station where you need to transfer to the Blue Line of the Metro Rail Service. Take the Blue Line to the Long Beach Transit Mall, then take the free Long Beach Transit Passport bus to the Queen Mary. For Los Angeles Metro Rail Service time tables Click here
- Take Super Shuttle or Prime Time Shuttle.
- Take a taxi from Los Angeles International Airport.
- The Passport C route, serving Pine Avenue, Shoreline Drive, the Aquarium of the Pacific and the iconic Queen Mary, is a completely free service that connects you to downtown Long Beach's finest attractions and destinations. Or you can go via the water with the AquaBus or AquaLink.
- Please see the AquaLink site for Service Schedule. The 68-foot catamaran comfortably ferries passengers to the most popular attractions in Long Beach Harbor and on down to Alamitos Bay Landing.
- Please see the AquaBus site for Service Schedule. The forty-foot boat comfortably ferries passengers to the most popular attractions on the Long Beach Harbor waterfront.