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Santa Monica looks to cap Interstate 10 in new downtown plan
The Architects Newspaper ^ | January 10, 2018 | Antonio Pacheco

Posted on 01/10/2018 7:15:13 PM PST by Tolerance Sucks Rocks

Local planning politics on Los Angeles’s Westside is in a sad state of affairs. There, a municipally-led push to complete city streets by adding bicycle infrastructure and other pedestrian improvements has been met with fierce opposition from local drivers. Recent efforts in L.A’s Mar Vista neighborhood, for example, grew so toxic that community members launched a now-stalled recall bid to remove Mike Bonin—the local council person who champions the so-called “road diets” as well as the city’s Vision Zero plan those diets support—from office.

The embarrassing spectacle has thrown into question the commitment L.A. residents have not only toward prioritizing the City’s plan for eliminating all traffic deaths by 2025, but also their reluctance to take personal responsibility for reducing transportation-related carbon emissions across the region.

Nevertheless, there might be hope yet. That hope comes in the form of a new downtown plan taking root just a few blocks from Mar Vista, in the City of Santa Monica.

The beachside municipality recently approved its new Downtown Community Plan (DCP), a document that looks to convert downtown Santa Monica into a “complete community” offering dense urban housing, multi-modal transportation options, and a healthy sprinkling of public open and green spaces. The city’s planning agency has taken a variety of steps to promote this vision by increasing maximum Floor-Area-Ratios for sites that include housing development in certain zones, eliminating parking minimums for some types of new construction, and pushing to reconfigure downtown streets in the image of universal transport.

Through this new plan, the municipality is working to expand the functionality of its sidewalks and streets by increasing their capacity to support bicycle infrastructure, demarcating specific loading zones for buses and ride sharing services, and recognizing key “signature sidewalk” areas that will strategically enhance street life. The plan indicates that Santa Monica city officials are keenly aware that the future of the L.A. region will depend just as much on what happens in the spaces between buildings as it will on the buildings themselves.

Critically, the plan also calls for capping the western terminus of Interstate 10 with a new park, a move that would fully transform the southern edge of the city into a civic and commercial node while also providing the city with an opportunity to rework surface streets to better accommodate the new focus on multi-modal transport.

The section of I-10 in question sits in a 20-feet-below-grade channel spanning roughly 7,000 feet across what was once the city’s civic core; the stretch of highway is bounded on one side by Santa Monica City Hall and Ken Genser Square and on the other by the James Corner Field Operations–designed Tongva Park. Santa Monica Lookout reports that the DCP’s Gateway Master Plan element—the document spelling out just how the highway-adjacent areas are to be redesigned—will go up for consideration by the city’s Department of Planning and Community Development sometime this spring. The department recently issued a report that includes support for the freeway cap as part of several long-term changes for the city. The report describes the freeway park’s ability to offer a “unique opportunity for strengthening connections” within the city as a principal reason for its construction.

Aside from proposing a specific, multi-modal plan for reconnecting the city’s street grid, the Gateway Master Plan will envision a method for reworking and connecting several key sites surrounding the future park, including an adjacent Sears department store complex, the Santa Monica Civic Center, and nearby Expo Line and Big Blue Bus stations.

Although calls for the freeway cap park in Santa Monica date back to the 1980s, recent years have seen a bevy of proposals for similar installations across the Los Angeles region, including over Interstate 110 in Downtown Los Angeles and over U.S. Route 101 in Hollywood. Another proposal is still in the works to cap another portion of U.S. Route 101 with an overpass that would allow local mountain lions and other fauna to traverse the highway safely.

Though Santa Monica’s freeway cap is still in the early stages of approval, the municipality expects to implement the initial phases of the Gateway Master Plan by 2021. An official timeline for the freeway cap park has not been released.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Chit/Chat; Conspiracy; Local News; Miscellaneous; Outdoors; Society; Travel
KEYWORDS: california; completestreets; construction; cycling; emissions; environments; housingdensity; i10; infrastructure; multimodal; openspace; parks; planners; roaddiets; santamonica; transit; transportation
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To: Inyo-Mono

cover a below grade freeway with a park


21 posted on 01/10/2018 8:04:07 PM PST by vooch (America First Drain the Swamp as)
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To: SoCal Pubbie
Used to be you took I 10 west 'til it hit the ocean, then you were literally on the west coast.

Texas compadres were introduced, they liked the Legendary California Foxes.

22 posted on 01/10/2018 8:11:31 PM PST by going hot (happiness is a momma deuce)
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks

ask Seattle how they like I-5 capped. They limited themselves to two lanes each direction when they capped it in the middle of the city center.

This created a park (now full of bums, perverts and needles) as well as a space for an under sized state convention center that sits vacant much of the year.

AS a result, 4 lanes squish into 2 for about 3 or 4 miles. Some of the worst congestion in the country.


23 posted on 01/10/2018 8:20:45 PM PST by llevrok (Danger lies when you fear your government more then they fear you.)
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks
Highway capping is an idea that goes all the way back to the 1920’s in the US. Early urban architects were very conscious of the need for human open space between what they expected would be rows of tall skyscrapers. The airspace over main thoroughfares was an attractive resource to be developed. The Great Depression pretty much put the kibosh to futuristic urban planning at the time.
24 posted on 01/10/2018 8:22:07 PM PST by hinckley buzzard
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To: Inyo-Mono

A cap is a concrete cover put over a sunken section of freeway to connect areas separated by the freeway. Typically, a park is put on top of the cap.


25 posted on 01/10/2018 8:34:06 PM PST by Tolerance Sucks Rocks (Happy New Year! Screeeeewwwww 2017!)
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks

Not only that, but the morons are in the process of shutting down and eliminating Santa Monica Airport.


26 posted on 01/10/2018 8:43:16 PM PST by AlaskaErik (I served and protected my country for 31 years. Progressives spent that time trying to destroy it.)
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To: llevrok

https://www.thestranger.com/seattle/Content?oid=11685

Topography of Terror (article about Freeway Park in Seattle and how its design and location over a noisy freeway led to crime)


27 posted on 01/10/2018 8:51:34 PM PST by BookmanTheJanitor
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To: going hot
its been 10 years since I lived in that area but if I remember correctly, Mar Vista is an urban blight , filled with illegal aliens and loaded with gang scum housed in Urban development "projects" surrounded on one side by industrial area and separated from the high dollar upper class area of Marina Del Rey ONLY by the 10 freeway

If the social justice warriors "cap" the 10 freeway there, the gates of hell will spill over, giving the zombies from hell easy access to shuffle into the American Dream to assimilate like a flu virus

28 posted on 01/10/2018 8:52:36 PM PST by KTM rider
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks

all this bullshit about “transforming” transportation into “multi-modal mode” is nothing more than a euphemism for turning existing street lanes into bike lanes, bus-only lanes and sidewalks. The result will be total traffic gridlock in leftist paradise because NO ONE IS GOING TO GET OUT OF THEIR CARS NO MATTER WHAT!


29 posted on 01/10/2018 9:16:40 PM PST by catnipman ( Cat Nipman: Vote Republican in 2012 and only be called racist one more time!)
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks
question the commitment L.A. residents have not only toward prioritizing the City’s plan for eliminating all traffic deaths by 2025, but also their reluctance to take personal responsibility for reducing transportation-related carbon emissions across the region.

Ah, only in L.A. where unicorns prance and life is wonderful.

Still so very glad I got out of that state 12 years ago.

30 posted on 01/10/2018 9:39:43 PM PST by doorgunner69 (Give me the liberty to take care of my own security..........)
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To: Steven Scharf

Lastly, might this be a moot point given the destruction of 101 in the mudslides.

The mudslides were up by Santa Barbara.....quite a ways away. About 75 miles.
The 101 was not destroyed. They expect it to be open again on Monday.


31 posted on 01/10/2018 10:13:46 PM PST by sheana
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To: vooch

“all interstates should be privatized and federal gas tax eliminated
sell the land and improvements with zero regulatory oversight
let the free market do its magic”

You’re sounding so silly here, repeating the same talking points over and over, that there’s no reason to even debate you anymore.


32 posted on 01/11/2018 5:43:17 AM PST by BobL (I used to own a truck - but I couldn't handle the lifestyle)
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To: shanover

we get their money AND keep the assets right here. Sounds like a win all around.

We did this to the Japs in the 80s. Who got the last laugh ? We did


33 posted on 01/11/2018 2:24:57 PM PST by vooch (America First Drain the Swamp as)
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