| Interstate 210, State Route 210 Auxiliary route of the Interstate Highway System |
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| Foothill Freeway Defined by S&HC § 510, maintained by Caltrans |
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| Length: | 86 mi[1] (138 km) Length includes the unconstructed freeway section. |
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| History: | 1933 as a highway, 1964 as a number | ||||||||||||
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| Major junctions: |
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Interstate 210 (I-210) and State Route 210 (SR 210) together form contiguous highway, called the Foothill Freeway, in the Greater Los Angeles area of the U.S. state of California. The western portion of the route is an auxiliary Interstate Highway, while the eastern portion is a state highway. The entire route was upgraded to Interstate Highway standards by 2007, and the California Department of Transportation (Caltrans) has requested permission to re-sign the eastern portion as an Interstate Highway.
The name Foothill Freeway is a reference to Foothill Boulevard and the San Gabriel Mountains, both of which run parallel to the freeway for most of its length. The freeway connects Los Angeles with its northern suburbs following the foothills of these mountains. The freeway runs from San Fernando east to San Bernardino.
Currently all of the Foothill Freeway has a 210 designation. Historically, the Foothill Freeway spanned multiple numerical designations. Additionally, the I-210 designation has changed routings; previously including a portion of the Orange Freeway. East of Pasadena the Foothill Freeway parallels, and in some parts replaced, the route of former U.S. Route 66.
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Route description
I-210's western terminus is at its junction with the Golden State Freeway (I-5), near the Sylmar district of Los Angeles. From that point, the freeway's alignment is generally diagonal as it heads southeast through the northeastern San Fernando Valley and the Crescenta Valley before turning due south towards the junction with the Ventura Freeway (State Route 134) in Pasadena. At this interchange, the Foothill Freeway shifts its alignment and direction, becoming an east-west freeway. From the north, the primary through lanes of I-210 become the unsigned northern stub of unfinished I-710, while from the east, the through lanes of the Ventura Freeway become I-210 as the Ventura Freeway reaches its official eastern terminus. I-210 then continues east to the Orange Freeway (State Route 57) in Glendora. Heading east from the Orange Freeway interchange, until its eastern terminus at I-10 in Redlands, 210 is currently signed as a state route.
Portions of the Metro Gold Line of the LACMTA run in the median of the Foothill Freeway from Pasadena to Arcadia.
State Route 210 presently has two distinct segments:
The western freeway segment serves as the easternmost portion of the Foothill Freeway (Interstate 210). Consisting of newer freeway, beginning at the east end of I-210 near San Dimas, SR 210 extends eastward, eventually paralleling Highland Avenue, as it continues through Fontana. It intersects Interstate 15, an artery between Southern California and Nevada a few miles before it meets with Interstate 215 in San Bernardino.
The segment east of Interstate 215 is the former alignment of State Route 30. This segment extends eastward to junctions with Interstate 215, State Route 259, State Route 18 and State Route 330 in Highland. State Route 210 then curves southward and ends in a junction with Interstate 10 in Redlands.
This route is part of the California Freeway and Expressway System[2] and is eligible for the State Scenic Highway System.[3]
History
The construction began on the freeway in 1958. The first section was opened in 1966, then signed as State Route 118. In 1968, the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway depot at Santa Anita, a historic structure built in 1890, was moved to the Los Angeles County Arboretum and Botanic Garden to make way for a section of the freeway.[4][5] The section from State Route 134 to the Kellogg Interchange with Interstate 10 at Pomona, California was completed in 1976.[6] The section between the Kellogg interchange and Glendora is no longer part of I-210. In 2003, this piece was renumbered as part of State Route 57, and known as the Orange Freeway.
In the 1990s, Caltrans began constructing extensions to the freeway from Glendora east to the former Interstate 215/State Route 30 interchange in San Bernardino. In 2003, a 20-mile (32 km) segment east from Glendora to Fontana was completed, with the portion proceeding south from Glendora renumbered SR 57. The remaining section east of Interstate 15 between Fontana and Interstate 215 was opened on July 24, 2007.
Caltrans has petitioned AASHTO, the trade organization that oversees the designation and naming of the Interstate Highway system, to re-sign the entire Foothill Freeway, including the entire segments of State Routes 210 and 30, as I-210. Upon completion of the new freeway segment west of I-215, State Route 30 from I-215 to I-10 in Redlands was re-signed as State Route 210. The re-signing in 2003 of the former portion of I-210 now signed as State Route 57 truncated I-210 from its parent route, I-10. Presuming that authority is given at some point in the future to re-sign the entirety of 210 as interstate, then I-210 will once again connect to its parent route, but much further east in Redlands.
The western freeway segment, planned since the 1970s and completed in 2002, replaced a western surface street segment that began with Base Line Road (sometimes spelled Baseline Road) at its intersection with Foothill Boulevard in San Dimas and extends eastward into Upland. In Upland it became 16th Street, then turned northward onto Mountain Avenue, then turned eastward onto 19th Street. It left Upland and continued eastward into Rancho Cucamonga. It then seemed to turn northward onto Haven Avenue and end at the western freeway segment. This segment is probably still signed as SR 30 — at least in some places if not ubiquitously — but some recently published maps are reflecting a signage change.
State Route 30 is the former designation of State Route 210 and State Route 330. Route 30 ran from its interchange with I-210 in Glendora east to State Route 18 at Big Bear Lake. The easternmost portion of Route 30 was transferred to Route 330 in 1972. Thereafter, Route 30 was routed south to I-10 in Redlands. In 1999, the entirety of Route 30 from the Glendora Curve to Redlands was transferred to Route 210.
Route 210 from Route 5 to Route 10 in Redlands is known as the Foothill Freeway, as named by Senate Concurrent Resolution 29, Chapter 128 in 1991.[7]
Use as movie location
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The westernmost portion of the freeway appears in the 1971 film The Omega Man.
In 1974, Universal Studios used condemned houses ready to be bulldozed for a section of the freeway in Pasadena for the disaster film Earthquake.[citation needed]
From 1975 to 1981, the uncompleted section of Interstate 210 in La Crescenta (and the intersecting SR 2 Glendale Freeway) was often used often as a filming location. Some films and television shows filmed on this section include the theatrical films Death Race 2000, Corvette Summer and The Gumball Rally as well as the made for television films Smash Up on Interstate 5 and The Great American Traffic Jam.[citation needed]
Perhaps most famously, the American television series CHiPs made extensive use of the Interstate 210–CA SR 118 interchange, often conducting major action sequences on the closed freeway. This section was finally opened in 1981 once the Tujunga Wash bridge was completed.[citation needed]
Later, as the freeway extended further east, so did its use as a filming location. In 2005 and 2006, for example, several television shows, commercials, and feature films shot on the unopened section of the freeway between Alder Avenue and Linden Avenue in the city of Rialto. A character in the fifth season of the fictional television show 24, which is set in Southern California sometime around 2009 or 2010, gives her location to be the intersection of I-210 and I-10, presumably referring to a future reconnection of I-210 to its parent.[citation needed]
In late August 2006, one of the shoots on the freeway was a portion of a major action sequence in the feature film Transformers. The 2007 series Drive, which uses highways settings for many of its action scenes, also shoots on I-210.[8] In the first episode, the Alder Avenue exit sign is clearly legible.[citation needed]
On November 21st and 22nd between Sierra and Ayala Ave scenes for Jamie Foxx and Robert Downey Jr.'s movie Due Date was filmed. [9]
The section of the 210 between Sierra and Alder was used in the movie "The Hangover"
Future
| This section requires expansion. |
With the completion of a central freeway segment in July 2007, Caltrans is expected to ask the AASHTO to designate the entire route as part of Interstate 210. Once approved, the SR 210 green State Route signs will be replaced with Interstate 210 ones.[citation needed]
Exit list
- Note: Except where prefixed with a letter, postmiles were measured in 1964, based on the alignment as it existed at that time, and do not necessarily reflect current mileage. The numbers reset at county lines; the start and end postmiles in each county are given in the county column.
| County | Location | Postmile [1][10][11] |
#[12] | Destinations | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Los Angeles LA R0.00-R52.15 |
Los Angeles | R0.00 | 1 | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance; signed as exits 1A (north) and 1B (south) | |
| R0.84 | 1C | Yarnell Street | Signed as exit 1 eastbound | ||
| R1.92 | 2 | Roxford Street – Sylmar | |||
| R3.28 | 3 | Polk Street | |||
| R4.11 | 4 | Hubbard Street | |||
| R4.94 | 5 | Maclay Street – San Fernando | |||
| R5.91 | 6A | Signed as exit 6B westbound | |||
| R6.01 | 6B | Paxton Street | Signed as exit 6A westbound | ||
| R7.82 | 8 | Osborne Street – Lake View Terrace | |||
| R9.44 | 9 | Wheatland Avenue – Lake View Terrace | |||
| R11.08 | 11 | Sunland Boulevard – Sunland, Tujunga | |||
| R14.17 | 14 | La Tuna Canyon Road | |||
| Glendale | R15.62 | 16 | Lowell Avenue – Tujunga | ||
| R16.77 | 17A | Pennsylvania Avenue – La Crescenta | Signed as exit 17 eastbound | ||
| R17.38 | 17B | La Crescenta Avenue – La Crescenta | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | ||
| R18.22 | 18 | Ocean View Boulevard – Montrose | |||
| Glendale | R18.87 | 19 | West end of SR 2 overlap | ||
| La Cañada Flintridge | R19.88 | 20 | East end of SR 2 overlap | ||
| R20.60 | 21 | Gould Avenue | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | ||
| R20.85 | 21 | Foothill Boulevard | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | ||
| Pasadena | R21.53 | 22A | Berkshire Avenue, Oak Grove Drive | ||
| R22.49 | 22B | Arroyo Boulevard, Windsor Avenue | |||
| R23.19 | 23 | Lincoln Avenue, Washington Boulevard | |||
| R24.06 | 24 | Seco Street, Mountain Street | |||
| R24.86 | 25A | Colorado Boulevard – Pasadena | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance | ||
| R24.96 | 25A | Signed as exit 26A westbound | |||
| R24.96 | 25B | Signed as exit 26A westbound | |||
| R25.29 | 25 | Fair Oaks Avenue, Marengo Avenue | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance; signed as exits 25A (south) and 25B (north) | ||
| R26.33 | 26 | Lake Avenue | |||
| R26.94 | 27A | Hill Avenue | Signed as exit 27 eastbound | ||
| R27.41 | 27B | Allen Avenue | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance | ||
| R28.25 | 28 | Altadena Drive, Sierra Madre Boulevard | Westbound exit is via exit 29A | ||
| R28.68 | 29A | San Gabriel Boulevard – San Marino | |||
| R29.29 | 29B | Madre Street | |||
| R29.49 | 30 | Signed as exits 30A (south) and 30B (north) eastbound | |||
| Arcadia | R30.82 | 31 | Baldwin Avenue – Sierra Madre | ||
| R31.88 | 32 | Santa Anita Avenue – Arcadia | |||
| R32.89 | 33 | Huntington Drive – Monrovia, Arcadia | |||
| Monrovia | R33.91 | 34 | Myrtle Avenue – Monrovia | ||
| R34.74 | 35A | Mountain Avenue | |||
| Duarte | R35.24 | 35B | Buena Vista Street | ||
| Irwindale | R36.41 | 36A | Signed as exit 36B westbound | ||
| R36.41 | 36B | Mount Olive Drive (via I-605 north) | Signed as exit 36A westbound | ||
| R37.86 | 38 | Irwindale Avenue – Irwindale | |||
| Azusa | R38.96 | 39 | Vernon Avenue | ||
| R39.60 | 40 | ||||
| R40.60 | 41 | Citrus Avenue – Covina | |||
| Glendora | R41.59 | 42 | Grand Avenue – Glendora | ||
| R43.16 | 43 | Sunflower Avenue | |||
| R44.20 | 44 | Lone Hill Avenue | |||
| R44.38 | 45 | East end of I-210; west end of SR 210; former I-210 east | |||
| San Dimas | R45.46 | 46 | San Dimas Avenue – San Dimas | ||
| La Verne | R46.63 | 47 | Former US 66 | ||
| R48.08 | 48 | Fruit Street | |||
| Claremont | R49.53 | 50 | Towne Avenue | ||
| R51.85 | 52 | Base Line Road | Former SR 30 north | ||
| San Bernardino SBD 0.00-R33.18 |
Upland | 1.50 | 54 | Mountain Avenue – Mount Baldy | |
| 3.47 | 56 | Campus Avenue | |||
| Rancho Cucamonga | 4.60 | 57 | Carnelian Street | ||
| 5.90 | 58 | Archibald Avenue | |||
| 6.91 | 59 | Haven Avenue | |||
| 7.91 | 60 | Milliken Avenue | |||
| 9.14 | 61 | Day Creek Boulevard | |||
| 11.50 | 64A | ||||
| Fontana | 11.93 | 64B | Cherry Avenue | ||
| 12.93 | Beech Avenue | HOV-only interchange | |||
| 13.93 | 66 | Citrus Avenue | |||
| 14.93 | 67 | Sierra Avenue | |||
| Rialto | R16.03 | 68 | Alder Avenue | ||
| R17.39 | 70 | Ayala Drive | |||
| 19.00 | 71 | Riverside Avenue | |||
| 19.67 | 72 | Pepper Avenue | Interchange under construction | ||
| San Bernardino | 20.69 | 73 | State Street, University Parkway | ||
| R21.87 | 74 | Former I-15E | |||
| R22.94 | 75A | H Street | Signed as exit 75 eastbound | ||
| R23.10 | 75B | Eastbound exit is via exit 75 | |||
| R24.22 | 76 | ||||
| R25.72 | 78 | Del Rosa Avenue | |||
| R26.73 | 79 | Highland Avenue | |||
| Highland | R28.66 | 81 | |||
| R29.32 | 82 | Base Line Road | |||
| R30.23 | 83 | 5th Street | |||
| Redlands | R32.34 | 84 | San Bernardino Avenue | ||
| R33.18 | 85 | Eastbound exit and westbound entrance; signed as exits 85A (west) and 85B (east) |
References
- ^ a b California Department of Transportation, State Truck Route List (XLS file), accessed February 2008
- ^ CA Codes (shc:250-257)
- ^ CA Codes (shc:260-284)
- ^ "Early California History" (PDF). Los Angeles County Arboretum & Botanic Garden. http://www.arboretum.org/images/uploads/EARLY_CALIFORNIA_HISTORY(2).pdf. Retrieved 2009-09-09.
- ^ "Caminos – Newsletter of the Arcadia Historical Society" (PDF). Arcadia Historical society. 2007-07. http://www.ci.arcadia.ca.us/docs/caminosjul07.pdf. Retrieved 2009-09-09.
- ^ http://www.dot.ca.gov/hq/structur/strmaint/brlog/logpdf/logd07.pdf dot.ca.gov
- ^ 2007 Named Freeways, Highways, Structures and Other Appurtenances in California. Caltrans. p. 60. http://www.dot.ca.gov/hq/tsip/hseb/products/Named_Freeways.pdf. Retrieved 2007-03-28.
- ^ ETOnline: "'Drive' Takes Viewers on a Bumpy Ride"
- ^ http://www.dailybulletin.com/ci_13826270?source%253Dmost_emailed.26978592730A3B8C7F471EACE0DA4EF2.html
- ^ California Department of Transportation, Log of Bridges on State Highways, July 2007
- ^ California Department of Transportation, All Traffic Volumes on CSHS, 2005 and 2006
- ^ California Department of Transportation, California Numbered Exit Uniform System, Interstate 210 Freeway Interchanges, Retrieved on 2009-02-07.
External links
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Interstate 210 and State Route 210 (California) |
- California @ WestCoastRoads - Interstate 210
- Caltrans: Interstate 210 highway conditions
- California Highways: Interstate 210
- SANBAG Projects: State Route 210 - Foothill Freeway
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