
Main portion of the interchange.
The
East Los Angeles Interchange complex is the
busiest
freeway interchange in the world, with its
southern portion handling over 550,000 vehicles per day (2008
AADT). At the time of its construction in the early 1960s it was
considered a
civil engineering
marvel.
Located about one mile (1.6 km) east of
downtown Los
Angeles
, California
along the east bank of the Los Angeles River, the interchange
comprises six freeway segments (i.e. there are six freeway 'paths'
of travel into the complex). Note that the actual number of
numbered highways intersecting at this interchange is four —
these freeways are:
The primary reason why the complex is so 'complex' is that the
intersecting freeways 'shift' alignments and directions:
- Interstate 5 enters the complex from the south as the Santa Ana
Freeway, but exits to the north as the Golden State Freeway. The
Santa Ana Freeway continues west as U.S. 101 to the Four Level
Interchange
(Bill Keene Memorial Interchange) in downtown Los
Angeles.
- Interstate 10 is not contiguous through the interchange.
Heading west into the complex on the San Bernardino Freeway (I-10),
the primary road (or trunk) heads to U.S. 101. In order to follow
the I-10 alignment, one must exit the trunk road and follow a
connector that merges with the alignment of southbound I-5, then
exit that trunk and follow another connector to the Santa Monica
Freeway (I-10); note also the change in the freeway's name.
- Heading west into the complex on the Pomona Freeway (SR 60),
the primary road (or trunk) heads into the Santa Monica Freeway
(I-10).
It should also be noted that there is not complete freedom of
movement within the interchange either. Traffic flowing into it on
certain freeways cannot leave it on all of the others. For example,
there is no direct connector between the westbound Pomona Freeway
(SR 60) and the southbound Santa Ana Freeway (I-5); travelers
wanting to make this transition must exit at the Pomona Freeway's
interchange with the Long Beach Freeway (
Interstate 710) located three
miles (5 km) to the east, head southbound, and then transition
to the Santa Ana Freeway at the interchange between those two
freeways.Further complication is added by the varying designs of
each intersecting freeway and their related transition roads. Some
have four lanes and are relatively straight and wide, while others
have one lane, are narrow, and/or have curves with tighter radii or
cambers. Thus, traffic congestion is exacerbated as vehicles moving
at high rates of speed on the wider transition roads try to merge
with slower moving vehicles coming from the narrow transition
roads.
Although
not commonly called such by residents and other reporters, the
freeway intersection was often called "Malfunction Junction" by former
KNX
Traffic reporter Bill Keene, due to its complicated
interchange structure.
References
External links