The City of Santa Monica last week authorized a petition of $250,000 to the state for the feasibility study of covering I-10 between 14th and 17th streets with a park. The intention of the move is to add more green space to the city, mitigate the presence of the freeway, and bridge some of the neighborhood rifts created by the introduction of the freeway in 1964. The section of freeway in question is bounded by Memorial Park, a small municipal park, to the north, and the Woodlawn Cemetery to the south.
New freeway construction was extremely controversial in the US in the middle half of the last century, as it replaced gigantic swaths of homes and sometimes entire neighborhoods. But the US Interstate system was relentless in its goal of linking the nation's cities. Support for the futuristic network of roads was often even enthusiastic, especially during wartime. But the City of Santa Monica has long resented the presence of the freeway in its city limits - it brings high-speed outsiders to the upscale beachside community.
Sooner or later the city has to realize that, despite its 90,000, it sits at the core of the nation's second biggest metro area. The freeway is an important connector of the city's business district and Pac Coast Hwy with central LA and the rest of Southern California. But anyway, hiding the freeway under a park isn't a bad idea. It will create a large contiguous greenspace with its approx. 7 added acres. It will create a "land bridge" that will be much more pleasant for pedestrians to cross than a typical overpass. And it will begin to break up the dominating repetitiveness of the "grayscape." But it might be expensive. The City of Los Angeles has determined the cost of a similar park over the 101 in Hollywood to be around $1 billion.
Saturday, March 28, 2009
Weary of the 10, Santa Monica Proposes to Bury Freeway Under Park
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1 comments:
Can they even do that? Isn't that an Indian burial ground? (And I do mean Indian as in from India - you racist)
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