Barbara DiamondPatience should be a passenger whenever...
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Barbara Diamond
Patience should be a passenger whenever a vehicle travels these days
on Laguna Canyon Road.
Drivers can expect delays, lane detours and some complete closures
for the next three years, but advocates of the project to realign,
widen and resurface the road say it will be worth the aggravation.
“The goal is to get the runoff into the marshlands and off the
road to prevent flooding and to make the road safer with divided
lanes,” former Mayor Wayne Peterson said.
Grading for the project is under way, which accounts for the
current traffic delays. There will be more. The project is scheduled
for completion in 2006, with an estimated cost of $28 million. It is
on schedule, said Sandra Friedman, Caltrans public information
officer.
When completed, the road will have been moved from between Orange
County’s only natural lakes, one of which is divided by road,
relocated to the west and widened to four lanes.
Native plants will be reintroduced. Retention basins will filter
pollution. Wetlands will retard flooding. Animals will have their own
crossings.
Lanes will be divided by medians, and in some places set at
different elevations. The separation is designed to reduce head-on
collisions.
“I think the proposed changes to the road that separate the north-
and southbound lanes would be a significant improvement,” Irvine
Police Department Lt. Dave Freedland said.
“There have been a number of fatalities over the years on the
road, and the worst ones are the head-ons,” Freedland said. “The only
road in Orange County considered more hazardous is the Ortega
Highway.”
So when drivers get mired in traffic or have to find another route
into town, they might want to keep in mind what the project will mean
down the road.
“The divided lanes will help protect the innocent from the people
who are driving too fast, too recklessly or under the influence [of
alcohol or drugs],” said Laguna Beach Sgt. Doris Weaver, traffic
supervisor. “You can’t protect people from themselves, but we can
sure try to protect them from others.”
The public can expect more from the project that a reduction in
the risk of head-on collisions, said Mary Fegraus, executive director
of the Laguna Canyon Foundation.
“The Laguna Canyon Road Design Oversight Committee’s 10-year
partnership with federal and state agencies, the Orange County
Transportation Authority and Caltrans produced an environmentally
friendly design that included wetland restoration of the Laguna
Lakes, four bridges with crossings for Laguna Coast Wilderness Park
visitors and wildlife, run-off filtering systems for improved
watershed quality and a new road material for noise reduction,”
Fegraus said.
Although the foundation is not a member of the oversight
committee, Fegraus attends the meetings to stay abreast of
developments.
Clearing and grubbing -- scraping the existing vegetation -- was
the first task in the project, said Wayne Ybarra, a member of the
oversight committee for eight years.
“Caltrans was under the gun to get it done before the gnatcatcher
nesting season,” Ybarra said.
The green spray used on the graded areas to keep the hills in
place during rain storms is a bonded fiber matrix impregnated with
seed, Fegraus said.
Two northbound lanes will be completed first and opened to two-way
traffic, at which time the existing road will be closed, Ybarra said.
Construction of the two southbound lanes will come last.
The realigned roadbed will be surfaced with a combination of
asphalt and recycled, shredded tires, called rubberized asphalt. It
is the same composition that significantly reduced traffic noise on
Glenneyre Street.
“The entire existing road will be ground up and used in the new
road,” Caltrans spokeswoman Friedman said.
The project will use 21,000 tons of asphalt and 13,000 tons of
rubberized topcoat. About 600,000 cubic meters of dirt will be
excavated.
Traffic delays are to be expected.
Former Mayor Peterson, one of the City Council’s first
representatives on the Laguna Canyon Road Design Oversight Committee,
has driven the road twice since construction began in January, once
outbound from town and once inbound.
“Outbound, I had to stop for the trucks, but it wasn’t for long,”
Peterson said. “And they timed it so three or four trucks were ready
to cross. When there was only one truck, it had to wait. It was clear
they were being considerate of motorists.
“I came back into town Monday after 3 p.m., and the road was wide
open. I don’t think the disruption is significant. They don’t want
contact with traffic any more than traffic wants contact with them.”
Crews start work at 6:30 a.m. and quit at 3:30 p.m. weekdays.
“There is some anticipated night and weekend work, but they will
not involve road closures,” Friedman said. “We are doing earthwork
and working on 30 of the 90 drainage systems, with 15 completed.”
Work began on the project at the toll road interchange and is
proceeding toward the Irvine city limits.
Trucks and earth-moving equipment cross the highway beyond the
line of eucalyptus trees that front the lake on the left-hand side of
the road, outbound.
Traffic is stopped to allow the equipment to cross, but it avoids
trucking the dirt on the highway and keeps debris to a minimum,
Friedman said.
“I have been caught there five or six times in the last month, but
I don’t remember having to wait for more than two or three minutes,”
Ybarra said.
An OCTA project to add bicycle lanes to the roadway from the toll
road to El Toro Road is scheduled to coincide with completion of the
realignment portion in 2005, Fegraus said. No other changes are
proposed for that section of the road. The project will take about
six months to complete.
Patience will help drivers get through the construction period,
Ybarra said.
“Sometimes that is easier said than done,” he said. “But
ultimately, we will have a safer road, a more scenic road and a
better and safer approach to the James and Rosemary Nix Nature Center
in the park.
“I believe that overall and on balance, the project is a good
thing, particularly compared to what we might have ended up with.”
Given his “druthers,” Ybarra would rather have left the road
alone.
“But that was not an option,” he said.
Actually, it was one of two alternatives reached by the Laguna
Canyon Road Consensus Committee, which advised then-Supervisor Thomas
Riley on proposals for the road design. The majority of the committee
opted to widen the road and move it out of the lakes. Former mayors
Lida Lenney and Bob Gentry supported lifting the roadbed above the
lake level to prevent flooding, based on their belief that the canyon
should remain as it was.
“The road project is a bonus for the park,” said Fegraus. “The
change in the road, the under-crossings for people and wildlife and
bringing the lakes back together will make the park experience even
better.
“With utility undergrounding throughout the park, no typical
8-foot cyclone fencing on the perimeters, more open space and a
meandering country feeling to the road, the project will be
aesthetically pleasing as it goes through the regional park system
and will demonstrate what can happen when citizens work together.”
Riley organized the consensus committee in 1992. It met for about
a year. The 3.9-mile project was to be funded in the county’s budget
in fiscal year 1994-95, but was sidetracked by the county bankruptcy.
The state stepped in to help finance it in 1996. A groundbreaking
ceremony was held in January.
For information on road closures, visit Caltrans Web site,
www.ca.gov/district12 and click on seven-day road closures.
Information is also available from a live person on the Caltrans
toll-free help line, (800) 724-0353 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday
through Friday or from a recorded message after hours. The city’s
traffic information line is 497-0747.
Changeable signs at either end of Laguna Canyon Road will also
post closures, Caltrans said.
* BARBARA DIAMOND is a reporter for the Laguna Beach Coastline
Pilot. She may be reached at 494-4321.
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