A little less jam
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Alicia Robinson
Drivers new to the area may not notice improvements to the junction
of the San Diego and Corona del Mar freeways, but public officials
today will celebrate the completion of $54 million in widened lanes,
realigned on- and off-ramps and other work that took years to plan
and build.
A few last bits of work remain, such as improvements to the Harbor
Boulevard and Fairview Road on- and off-ramps and completion of some
sound walls along the San Diego Freeway, but the majority of the
project is complete. Planning for the project began in 1997, and
construction commenced in 2001, said Ted Nguyen, a spokesman for the
Orange County Transportation Authority, which oversaw the project.
“It’s just been a phenomenal process from start to finish. It’s
taken over 20 years to get to this point,” Costa Mesa Mayor Gary
Monahan said. “This is one of the major freeway projects in Orange
County.”
The 2.5-mile construction project was made up of many smaller
improvements that were reopened to traffic as they were finished. It
included new ramps at Hyland Avenue onto the San Diego Freeway and
Fairview Road onto the Corona del Mar Freeway, and a
“triple-connector” off-ramp from the northbound San Diego Freeway to
South Coast Drive, Fairview Road and Harbor Boulevard.
“I think it’ll be a major factor in helping ease the congestion,”
said Orange County Supervisor Jim Silva, who pushed for the project
from the beginning.
Before the current project was done, the junction of the Corona
del Mar Freeway -- which turns into the San Joaquin Hills toll road
as it rises into Newport Coast -- and the San Diego Freeway used to
back up from early in the morning until 11 a.m. and then again from 3
to 7 p.m., he said.
Now, he said, “it clears out a lot sooner, and once we get the 405
built out, then it will be a free flow.”
People said the project would never get done because of the cost
and the required coordination between agencies, Monahan said. He
praised the cooperation between Orange County Transportation
Authority, state transportation officials, the toll roads’ governing
agency and the city of Costa Mesa.
Although officials plan to celebrate today, they realize more work
needs to be done to keep up with Orange County’s growth. A study is
underway on how to improve the entire San Diego Freeway from Costa
Mesa north to the 605 Freeway at the Los Angeles County line, which
is one of the state’s worst traffic bottlenecks, Nguyen said.
That could take some time to solve, in part because funding for
major transportation projects comes in phases, Silva said.
“We have to build for the year 2020, but we have to plan for the
year 2050,” he said.
The Orange County Transportation Authority will declare the San
Diego and Corona del Mar freeway area a construction-free “no-cone
zone,” and officials including Monahan and Silva will speak at the
event, scheduled for 10:30 a.m. today on the Susan Street side of the
IKEA parking lot, 1475 South Coast Drive.
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