The San Gabriel River, highlighted in red (on the right). The
Los Angeles River is highlighted in red on the left
Morris Dam on the San Gabriel River
The San Gabriel River flows 75 miles (121 km) through southern Los Angeles County, California. It rises in the San Gabriel Mountains, flowing southwest into and through the western San Gabriel Valley before turning southward at the Whittier Narrows to enter the Los Angeles Basin. It forms the boundary between Los Angeles and Orange counties for a brief stretch before it empties into the Pacific Ocean between Long Beach and Seal Beach. It derives its name from the Spanish Mission San Gabriel Arcángel which was originally built in the Whittier Narrows (1771) before being moved to its present location in San Gabriel.
Like most rivers in southern California, the San Gabriel River today bears little resemblance to the river it was before the arrival of early Spanish settlers. It is dammed five times along its length: once along the West Fork by the Prescott F. Cogswell Dam, then twice more downstream of the forks in the San Gabriel Mountains to create reservoirs at the San Gabriel Canyon Dam, and at the former naval test site Morris Dam; at the Santa Fe Dam in the Santa Fe Dam Flood Control Basin in Irwindale; and with the nearby Rio Hondo (to which it is also connected by a short channel) at the Whittier Narrows Dam, between the cities of South El Monte and Pico Rivera. Its channel is lined with concrete for most of its length below the mountains. These alterations were made in response to disastrous flash floods in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. During periods of heavy rainfall, the Los Angeles District of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers can shift flows between the Rio Hondo (a tributary of the Los Angeles River) and the San Gabriel River.
The San Gabriel River course is also the site for companion highways. In the lowlands it is adjoined by the San Gabriel River Freeway (Interstate 605) which replaced an older Rivergrade Road. Into the San Gabriel Canyon it is followed by State Route 39 to a terminus nearly 30 miles upstream.
East Fork of the San Gabriel River near Cattle Canyon
As with the similarly modified Los Angeles River, the San Gabriel is a notorious symbol of environmental depredation, and efforts to restore its ecosystem have had only limited success due to water pollution and fertilizer runoff.
Crossings
From mouth to source (year built in parentheses):[1]
- Marina Drive (1963)
- State Route 1 - Pacific Coast Highway (1931)
- Westminster Avenue - twin bridges (1964)
- State Route 22 - East 7th St - twin bridges (1941, 1959)
- College Park Drive (1964)
- Southbound Interstate 605 ramp to northbound Interstate 405 (1966)
- Interstate 405 - San Diego Freeway (1964)
- Southbound Interstate 405 ramp to northbound Interstate 605 (1966)
- East Willow Street (1962)
- East Spring Street (1952)
- East Wardlow Road (1963)
- San Gabriel River Bicycle Path [bike bridge]
- Carson Street - twin bridges (1971)
- Del Amo Boulevard (1966)
- South Street (1952)
- 183rd Street (1972)
- Artesia Boulevard (1941)
- Railroad
- State Route 91 - Artesia Freeway (1968)
- [Pedestrian Bridge]
- Alondra Boulevard (1952)
- Rosecrans Avenue (1951)
- Foster Road [Pedestrian Bridge]
- Eastbound Interstate 105 ramps to Interstate 605 (1987)
- Interstate 105 - Glenn Anderson Freeway and Metro Green Line (1987)
- Interstate 605 ramps to westbound Interstate 105 (1987)
- Imperial Highway (1952)
- Railroad
- Firestone Boulevard (1934)
- Florence Avenue (1951)
- Interstate 5 - Santa Ana Freeway (1953)
- Telegraph Road (1937)
- Railroad
- Slauson Avenue (1958)
- Railroad
- Washington Boulevard (1953)
- State Route 72 - Whittier Boulevard (1968)
- Railroad
- East Beverly Boulevard (1952)
- San Gabriel River Parkway (1954)
- Whittier Narrows Dam
- Peck Road - twin bridges (1952)
- State Route 60 - Pomona Freeway (1967)
- Valley Boulevard (1916)
- Railroad
- Interstate 10 - San Bernardino Freeway (westbound 1933, eastbound 1956)
- Ramona Boulevard (1961)
- Lower Azusa Road (1960)
- Interstate 605 - San Gabriel River Freeway - twin bridges (1970)
- Live Oak Avenue (1961)
- Arrow Highway (1949)
- Santa Fe Dam
- Interstate 210 - Foothill Freeway (1968)
- Foothill Boulevard/Huntington Drive (1922)
- [Pedestrian Bridge]
- Mountain Laurel Way
- Rock Springs Way
- State Route 39 - San Gabriel Canyon Road (1933)
- Morris Reservoir
- San Gabriel Reservoir
East Fork
- Forest Route 2N16/Upper Monroe Rd to Fire Camp 19
- East Fork Road (1936)
North Fork
- East Fork Road (1949)
- West Fork enters
- State Route 39 (1967)
- State Route 39 (1967)
- State Route 39 (1932)
West Fork
References
External links
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