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Sepulveda Pass

Mountain pass in Los Angeles County, California, United States


Summary

Mountain pass in Los Angeles County, California, United States

FieldValue
nameSepulveda Pass
other_namePaseo de Sépulveda
photoCA 23 I405 NARA 1963 1011.jpg
photo_captionI-405 over the Sepulveda Pass, 1963
elevation_ft1130
traversed
locationLos Angeles, California, United States
rangeSanta Monica Mountains
coordinates

Sepulveda Pass (elevation 1130 ft) is a low mountain pass through the Santa Monica Mountains in Los Angeles. It is named after the Sepúlveda family of California, a prominent Californio family that owned the land where the pass lies.

It connects the Los Angeles Basin to the San Fernando Valley via the San Diego Freeway (I-405) and Sepulveda Boulevard. The crossing experiences heavy traffic (over 330,000 cars a day) on a regular basis, commonly experiencing major traffic slowdowns lasting hours.

I-405 was widened by LA Metro, the county's transportation authority. The project took three years to complete and concluded in December 2016. Additionally, funding has been secured to construct an expansion to Los Angeles's public transportation system through the Sepulveda Pass in the form of a new subway line or monorail, but the plan has not yet been finalized.

The Sepulveda Pass on Interstate 405 begins just south of Ventura Boulevard in the San Fernando Valley, climbing to just south of Mulholland Drive, then descending to just north of Sunset Boulevard, where I-405 and Sepulveda Boulevard enter the Brentwood and Westwood areas of West Los Angeles. Northbound I-405 has five lanes and a carpool lane (plus a seventh as the Ventura exit is approached), while southbound I-405 has four lanes plus a carpool lane (although on the ascending portion there is a climbing lane).

Sepulveda Boulevard has two lanes in each direction and runs west of I-405 until the middle of the pass, where it crosses under and runs east of the freeway.

Bel Air Presbyterian Church, founded in 1956, opened its church on Mulholland Drive in 1960. Beginning with The Westland School in 1965, a number of other educational and cultural institutions have located in the vicinity of Sepulveda Pass, creating an "institutional corridor" as an exception to the Mulholland Scenic Parkway Specific Plan's general prohibition of such development along the crest of the mountains. The institutions along Mulholland Drive now also include Stephen S. Wise Temple, American Jewish University, the Skirball Cultural Center, Milken Community High School, The Mirman School, Berkeley Hall School, and The Curtis School. To the south is the large campus of the Getty Center. File:Sepulveda Boulevard Tunnel, Los Angeles.JPG|Sepulveda Boulevard Tunnel File:Metro Red Line, Sepulveda Pass, San Fernando Valley.JPG|Sepulveda Blvd., Sepulveda Pass File:View of the Valley from The 405.JPG|View of the Valley from The 405 File:American Jewish University, Bel Air, California.JPG|American Jewish University, Bel Air File:Milken Community High School.JPG|Milken Community High School File:Sepulveda_Pass_20071231.jpg|Eastern hillside of the Sepulveda Pass, east Skirball Center Drive overpass

References

References

  1. [http://www.house.gov/sherman/press_room/wida_oped_archive/060103ValleyTransportation.html Sherman (CA27) - Op-Eds - ADDRESSING THE VALLEY'S TRANSPORTATION NEEDS NOW]
  2. [http://www.smmirror.com/MainPages/DisplayArticleDetails.asp?eid=5129 Santa Monica Mirror]
  3. [http://www.metro.net/projects/i-405/ Sepulveda Transit Corridor Project]
  4. [https://www.nytimes.com/2016/12/20/us/los-angeles-drivers-on-the-405-ask-was-1-6-billion-worth-it.html "Drivers on the 405 Ask: Was $1.6 Billion Worth It?"], ''[[The New York Times]]'', December 20, 2016.
  5. [http://www.metro.net/projects/sfv-405/ Sepulveda Transit Corridor Project]
  6. [http://www.belairpres.org/default.aspx?page=500170 "History of Bel Air Presbyterian Church"] at [[Bel Air Presbyterian Church]] website (accessed March 22, 2010).
  7. Jon D. Markman, [https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1995-05-21-me-4455-story.html "Culture Shock Many Object to the Growing Sprawl of Institutions Atop Sepulveda Pass"], ''[[Los Angeles Times]]'', May 21, 1995.
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