East Los Angeles Interchange
Encyclopedia : E : EA : EAS : East Los Angeles Interchange
The East Los Angeles Interchange complex is the busiest freeway interchange in the world. At the time of its construction in the early 1960s it was considered a civil engineering marvel. Located about one mile east of downtown Los Angeles, California along the east 'bank' of the Los Angeles River at about 34° 02' 37"N, 118° 13' 09"W, the interchange is comprised of six freeway segments (i.e. there are six freeway 'paths' of travel into the complex). Note that the actual number of numbered highways intersecting at this interchange is four - these freeways are:
Santa Monica Freeway/San Bernardino Freeway (I-10)Santa Ana Freeway (U.S. Route 101) Santa Ana Freeway/Golden State Freeway (I-5) Pomona Freeway (CA 60) The primary reason why the complex is so 'complex' is that the intersecting freeways 'shift' alignments and directions:
- Interstate 5 enters the complex from the south as the Santa Ana Freeway, but exits to the north as the Golden State Freeway. The Santa Ana Freeway continues west as U.S. 101 to the Four Level Interchange in downtown Los Angeles.
- Interstate 10 is not contiguous through the interchange. Heading west into the complex on the San Bernardino Freeway (I-10), the primary road (or trunk) heads to U.S. 101. In order to follow the I-10 alignment, one must exit the trunk road and follow a connector, or transition road, that then connects to the Santa Monica Freeway (I-10); note also the change in the freeway's name.
- Heading west into the complex on the Pomona Freeway (CA/SR-60), the primary road (or trunk) heads into the Santa Monica Freeway (I-10).
Further complication is added by the varying designs of each intersecting freeway and their related transition roads. Some have four lanes and are relatively straight and wide, while others have one lane, are narrow, and/or have curves with tighter radii or cambers. Thus, traffic congestion is exacerbated as vehicles on the newer freeways moving at high rates of speed 'transition' to the older freeways and encounter slower moving vehicles, or vice versa.
External links
- [Maps and aerial photos]
- * WikiSatellite view at [WikiMapia]
- * Street map from [MapQuest] or [Google Local]
- * Topographic map from [TopoZone]
- * Aerial image or topographic map from [TerraServer-USA]
- * Satellite image from [Google Maps] or [Microsoft Virtual Earth]
- [Pictorial Guide to the Los Angeles Area Highways - East Los Angeles Interchange]
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