Arroyo Seco Parkway
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
The Arroyo Seco Parkway, also known as the Pasadena Freeway, is one of the oldest freeways in the United States. It connects Los Angeles with Pasadena alongside the Arroyo Seco seasonal river. It mostly opened in 1940 and shows the difference between early parkways and later freeways. When it was built, it met modern standards, but today it seems narrow and outdated.
In 1953, the south end was extended to the Four Level Interchange in downtown Los Angeles, linking it to the rest of the freeway system. The road looks much like it did when it first opened, though plants in its median have been replaced with steel guard rails and concrete barriers. It is now State Route 110 instead of historic U.S. Route 66.
Between 1954 and 2010, it was called the Pasadena Freeway. In 2010, the California Department of Transportation restored its original name to improve its beauty and safety. All of its original bridges are still there, including four built before the 1930s. The road has more crashes than other freeways because it lacks acceleration and deceleration lanes.
The Arroyo Seco Parkway is a State Scenic Highway, a National Historic Civil Engineering Landmark, and a National Scenic Byway. It was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 2011.
Route description
The Arroyo Seco Parkway, also called the Pasadena Freeway, is one of the oldest freeways in the United States. It connects Los Angeles with Pasadena and runs next to the Arroyo Seco seasonal river. It has six lanes and is part of State Route 110. It starts at the Four Level Interchange, a special place where several big roads meet.
As the parkway goes on, it passes through tunnels and over bridges, linking many streets and roads. It goes near important places like Dodger Stadium and crosses the Los Angeles River. The road follows the Arroyo Seco and has many places to get on and off for different streets.
In the last part of the parkway, drivers see signs for the "City of South Pasadena." The road curves around hills and ends near Colorado Boulevard, continuing as a normal street up to Memorial Park.
Route usage
In 2016, many cars used the Arroyo Seco Parkway each day. At one spot called Orange Grove Blvd, about 78,000 cars went by. At Ave 64, it was about 100,000 cars, and at Ave 43, around 123,000 cars traveled on the parkway.
History
Planning
The Arroyo Seco is a dry creek that runs from the San Gabriel Mountains through Pasadena into the Los Angeles River near downtown Los Angeles. Long ago, it was a quicker way for wagons to travel between the two cities.
Plans for a road through the Arroyo Seco began in 1895. Over the years, ideas included a scenic parkway or a bike path. An early bike path was built but failed because bicycles were not popular and it did not make money.
By the 1930s, most plans focused on building a road for cars. There was debate about where it should go and whether it should wind through parks or be a straight highway. The final plans called for the road to connect Los Angeles and Pasadena, skipping some parts of downtown Pasadena.
Construction
To connect the new parkway to Los Angeles, the city improved North Figueroa Street with tunnels and bridges. Construction began in 1938. The first piece opened in December 1938, and the whole parkway was finished by early 1941. It was built cheaply because the land was easy to work with.
The parkway was one of the first freeways in California and the United States. It was designed with special lanes and curves to help cars travel safely. It became part of a major highway system that grew quickly in the following years.
Post-construction
The Arroyo Seco Parkway has stayed mostly the same since it opened, though some changes were made over time. It was named a historic parkway in 1993 and received several awards for its importance in highway history. Even today, it remains a key route between Los Angeles and Pasadena, though it has some design issues that make driving tricky for many people.
Exit list
Mileage is measured from Route 110 in San Pedro. The whole route is in Los Angeles County.
| Location | mi | km | Exit | Destinations | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Los Angeles | 23.76 | 38.24 | |||
| 24A | |||||
| 24.49 | 39.41 | 24B | Sunset Boulevard | ||
| 24.66 | 39.69 | 24C | Hill Street – Chinatown, Civic Center | ||
| 24D | Stadium Way – Dodger Stadium | ||||
| 24.90 | 40.07 | Figueroa Street Tunnel No. 1 (northbound) | |||
| 25.02 | 40.27 | 25 | Solano Avenue / Academy Road | ||
| 25.14– 25.37 | 40.46– 40.83 | Figueroa Street Tunnels No. 2-4 (northbound) | |||
| 25.68 | 41.33 | 26A | |||
| 25.71 | 41.38 | 26B | Figueroa Street | ||
| 25.84 | 41.59 | 26A | Avenue 26 | ||
| 26B | |||||
| 27.05 | 43.53 | 27 | Avenue 43 | ||
| 27.98 | 45.03 | 28A | Avenue 52 | ||
| 28.31 | 45.56 | 28B | Via Marisol | ||
| 28.69 | 46.17 | 29 | Avenue 60 | ||
| 29.43 | 47.36 | 30A | Marmion Way / Avenue 64 | ||
| 30 | York Boulevard | ||||
| 30.01 | 48.30 | 30B | Bridewell Street | ||
| South Pasadena | 30.52 | 49.12 | 31A | Orange Grove Avenue | |
| 31.10 | 50.05 | 31B | Fair Oaks Avenue | ||
| Pasadena | 31.84 | 51.24 | Northern end of freeway | ||
| 31.91 | 51.35 | Glenarm Street | |||
| 32.47 | 52.26 | California Boulevard | |||
| 33.05 | 53.19 | ||||
| 33.15 | 53.35 | Colorado Boulevard | |||
| 1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi Route transition | |||||
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