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  • 1
    Oct
    2012
    1:24am, EDT

    'Carmageddon' freeway reopens early in Los Angeles

    A time-lapse video shows how around the clock construction to upgrade a bridge on L.A.'s Interstate 405 averted a potential traffic nightmare. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    By Jason Kandel and Jonathan Lloyd, NBCLosAngeles.com

    Updated at 9:52a.m. ET -- The closure of a 10-mile stretch of the 405 Freeway in California came and went during the weekend as demolition crews completed work on the Mulholland Bridge in time to reopen the freeway for the Monday morning commute and a high-speed pursuit.

    Traffic was flowing through the Sepulveda Pass early Monday after bridge work that began Saturday as part of the freeway widening project. No major traffic problems were reported during the weekend-long freeway closure, which allowed crews to demolish the north side of the bridge.

     Ramps along the Santa Monica Freeway that connect with the 405 Freeway began to reopen by 8:45 p.m. Sunday. Northbound lanes opened later Sunday, followed by southbound lanes.

    Mayor Antonio Villaragosa called the project a success and thanked Los Angeles residents for cooperating and ensuring what had been dubbed "Carmageddon" actually was "Carma-Heaven."

    They survived Carmageddon, but now Los Angeles is coping with the sequel! Once again, the famous 405 freeway has been shut down, forcing Los Angeles drivers off the road. NBC News' Diana Alvear shows us how Angelenos are using this weekend to embrace car-free adventures.

    For more on this story, visit NBCLosAngeles.com

    California Highway Patrol officers said several people broke onto the closed freeway. Seven people were detained, including rollerbladers and skaters, the CHP said.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Hours after the freeway reopened, police began searching for the driver of a Jaguar who ran from the vehicle after a high-speed San Fernando Valley pursuit.

    The pursuit suspect ran from the vehicle after parking it on the side of the 405 Freeway in Van Nuys.

    Dan Kulka, a spokesman for the contractor Kiewit Infrastructure West Co., said Sunday that crews still had to clear debris and sweep the roadway before the work could be complete. Engineers had to inspect the bridge work, Kulka said.

    Crews took advantage of the closure to take on seven weeks of maintenance projects such as trimming trees and re-striping lanes, work that saved taxpayers $150,000 and will lead to fewer lane closures in the future, Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa said.

    The south side of the overpass was demolished during last summer's first "Carmageddon." No major traffic issues were reported during the July 2011 closure.

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    37 comments

    Somehow the billion dollar (two Soyndras) price tag doesn't raise any eyebrows when it's all about moving people around in 3000 pound cars with a single occupant in each one over a bridge. If a fraction of that was spent on a bike path or...heaven forbid...any kind of renewable energy Limbaugh would …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: california, los-angeles, featured, 405-freeway, carmageddon, commentid-featured
  • 29
    Sep
    2012
    5:38am, EDT

    Carmageddon II, the sequel: Bridge chunk gives a scare, but work goes on

    View more videos at: http://nbclosangeles.com.

    By NBC News and wire services

    Updated at 5:15 p.m. ET: A big piece of a bridge being demolished fell unexpectedly Saturday during the construction project known as "Carmageddon II," but work was only temporarily halted.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Officials on scene said a portion of the Mulholland Bridge overpass fell about 4 p.m. local time, but no one was injured. 

    Up to that point, other than having to chase some motorists, skateboarders, and walkers off a 10-mile stretch of Interstate 405, few problems were reported in the early hours of "Carmageddon II," officials said.

    The stretch of one of the world's busiest freeways was shut down early Saturday, and if all goes according to plan it'll stay that way until the bridge is rebuilt before the Monday morning traffic crunch.

    Dave Sotero, a spokesman for Metro, the agency overseeing the $1 billion widening of the San Diego Freeway, said that it's not clear what caused the large chunk of the bridge to fall.


    The chunk fell from the eastern span of the bridge onto the slope leading down to the edge of the freeway.

    "During the demolition of a huge bridge like this, it's not unusual for pieces of all sizes to come down," Dan Kulka of Kiewit Infrastructure West Co., told NBCLosAngeles.com. "Although we didn't anticipate this large of a piece to come down, this is certainly not unusual.

    "As soon as it happened we stopped and … had our structural engineers analyze it and redevelop the plan. And now we will continue to demolish it," he added.

    The work is to widen the bridge itself to expand the freeway below. 

    Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa had said Saturday afternoon that work was one hour ahead of schedule.

    For weeks drivers have been warned to stay away from the segment of Interstate 405 that is now shuttered through the Sepulveda Pass on Los Angeles' west side for the entire weekend.

    If drivers don't avoid the area, officials warn, a city-wide traffic jam could result. But beyond just scare tactics, city officials have been encouraging Southern Californians to get out and enjoy their own neighborhoods on foot, on bikes or via short drives on surface streets.

    During a similar closure last year commuters stayed away from the freeway in droves, the shutdown was considered a success, and crews finished the first phase of the work early.

    This time, the contractor faces a penalty if the work isn't done in 53 hours: $6,000 per lane of freeway per 10 minutes.

    Watch live video from NBCLosAngeles.com of bridge demolition:

    View more videos at: http://nbclosangeles.com.

    Meanwhile, TV news crews have a plan to avoid a traffic jam in the sky as they cover the shutdown.

    Residents complained of low-flying, noisy helicopters hovering nonstop over the region last year.

    Watch video report from NBCLosAngeles.com as Carmageddon 2 officially begins:

    View more videos at: http://nbclosangeles.com.

    "It was constant," Richard Close, president of the Sherman Oaks Homeowners Association, whose members live in many of the homes closest to the freeway, recently told The Associated Press. "It was a combination of the news media paparazzi and tour operators taking people who wanted to get a picture of the 405."

    Although the area gets its share of paparazzi helicopters because of Charlie Sheen and other celebrities who live in the area, Close said they usually go away when the sun sets. During Carmageddon, however, the area is brightly illuminated overnight so construction workers can safely do their jobs.

    This time, local television news directors have plans to pool coverage by using video from a single helicopter making limited flights over the freeway, according to Rick Terrell, executive director of the Radio & Television News Association of Southern California. 

    NBCLosAngeles.com as well as Reuters contributed to this report.

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    61 comments

    They should pave the road with the celebrities that live there. Win-win for everyone.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: california, los-angeles, featured, sequel, interstate-405, carmageddon
  • 23
    Sep
    2012
    3:49pm, EDT

    Los Angeles preps for ‘Carmageddon II’

    By NBC News staff and news services

    Reed Saxon / AP

    This July 16, 2011, file photo shows Interstate 405 free of traffic, seen looking south from the Skirball Drive bridge, as the demolition of two lanes Mulholland Drive bridge continue in Los Angeles at dawn. "Carmageddon II: The Sequel" is coming to one of the nation's most crowded freeways later this month.

    LOS ANGELES -- "Carmageddon II" — the sequel — is coming to one of the nation's most crowded freeways, and authorities are hoping its subtitle won't be "The Traffic Strikes Back."

    Transportation officials say what they would like to see during the last weekend of September is a rerun of last year's two-day closure, when hundreds of thousands of motorists dodged doomsday predictions by staying away until the busy, 10-mile stretch of Interstate 405 reopened. It was one of the lightest freeway traffic weekends anyone in Los Angeles could remember.


    Hopes are high that next weekend will have the same happy result, as businesses and residents prepare to avoid the roadway that must close again so work can be completed on a bridge.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    At Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center, just outside the Carmageddon Zone, officials plan to house as many as 300 doctors, nurses and other staff members in dorms at nearby hotels so nobody will have trouble getting to work.

    Some patients, including women in the latter stages of complicated pregnancies, are being encouraged to check in before the freeway closes at 12:01 a.m. Sept. 29.

    "Everybody, including myself, will be here to man the entire event, just to make sure everything goes safely for our patients and staff," says Shannon O'Kelley, the hospital's chief operations officer.

    A group of art enthusiasts, meanwhile, formed "Artmageddon," featuring activities at dozens of museums and art-house theaters and listing them on the website artmageddonla.com. People are encouraged to walk or bike.

    The UCLA campus, with about 41,000 students, has emergency traffic diversion plans in place. In Santa Monica, just down the road, a new emergency operations center opened last month. Authorities say every major transit, law enforcement and emergency services agency in the area has been cooperating in making contingency plans.

    In the meantime, just what should people do over the weekend when they will hopefully be too afraid to pull out of their driveways?

    Watch US News videos on NBCNews.com

    The city of Santa Barbara has a proposed solution: Leave your car at home and come visit us.

    The Car Free Santa Barbara Project is offering Carmageddon II special discounts on train service to Santa Barbara as well as hotels, activities and restaurants, according to The Los Angeles Times.

    Mary Boyd, manager of the program, which is sponsored by the Santa Barbara County Air Pollution District , told the Times: “We invite Los Angeles-area residents and visitors to use this freeway closure and traffic as a chance to think outside the car.”

    Or stay put. "Eat, Shop and Play Locally," advises the Los Angeles Metropolitan Transportation Authority, reciting its official Carmageddon II slogan.

    The agency is partnering with hundreds of restaurants, tourists attractions and other venues to offer discounts to people who can show they used mass transit to get there.

    If thousands of people hadn't stayed home on a mid-July weekend last year, authorities say they might have caused a traffic backup so massive it could have spread to connecting freeways, gridlocking the entire city highway system. The result, "Carmageddon," would have been miles and miles of idling cars filled with thousands and thousands of angry people.

    "The risk factors are exactly the same as they were last year, so nothing has changed in terms of the heartburn that traffic agency people are feeling right now," says Dave Sotero, a spokesman for the transportation authority.

    It's not just any freeway being shut down, but one that even on weekends, when traffic is relatively light, can carry a half-million vehicles. It's also the one that links the city's San Fernando Valley, where 1.7 million people live, to its dense, urbanized West Side and its beaches.

    Stay informed with the latest headlines; sign up for our newsletter

    As they did for the first Carmageddon, officials have been posting flashing freeway signs for weeks warning people all over the state to stay away. On Labor Day weekend, people driving in and out of the desert resort of Palm Springs, 100 miles to the east, began seeing the signs.

    "We wanted to get that image of what the stakes were by frankly alarming the public, getting the public's attention, grabbing everybody by the lapels and saying, 'This is a real project that is going to cause a real disaster if we aren't prepared,'" says veteran Los Angeles County Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky, who is credited with publicly uttering the term Carmageddon.

    Although Yaroslavsky says he first heard the word from an aide, he jokes that it will be cited at the top of his obituary as one his greatest achievements.

    The freeway is scheduled to reopen at 5 a.m. Monday, Oct. 1, just ahead of the morning rush hour.

    Last year it opened 17 hours early, but Sotero says not to expect that again because there's more work this time.

    When all the work in the area is completed toward the end of next year, there will be a new, wider and seismically safer bridge crossing the freeway at the city's scenic Mulholland Drive.

    The 405 itself will also be wider, making room for a carpool lane through the Sepulveda Pass over the Santa Monica Mountains, where traffic notoriously clogs almost all the time.

    If the freeway doesn't reopen on time, that's when Carmageddon would really kick in.

    While they insist they don't expect that to happen, officials say they will be ready if it does.

    NBC News staff contributed to this report from The Associated Press.

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    32 comments

    let me get this straight...L.A. as in ... LOS ANGELES, California......PREPARED for something? ANY frigging thing.....bawhwaaaaahahahahaha....... man nobody... but nobody writes comedy like the folks here at msnbc...........:)

    Show more
    Explore related topics: los-angeles, traffic, featured, carmageddon
  • 14
    Sep
    2012
    2:01pm, EDT

    Closure of nation's busiest freeway drives 'Carmageddon II' fears in Los Angeles

    Eric Thayer / Reuters file

    In this file photo, a portion of the 405 freeway is vacant of cars in Los Angeles, Calif., during a weekend closure dubbed "Carmageddon," on July 16, 2011.

    By Vignesh Ramachandran

    As officials in Los Angeles get ready for another weekend closure of a section of the famously-crowded 405 freeway in late September, they're doing things a little differently this time around.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Los Angeles residents were bombarded with urgent warnings last summer, when a heavily-traveled part of Interstate 405 was closed down for weekend construction. "The 405" is the nation's busiest freeway. Southern Californians largely heeded the recommendations to stay off the 10-mile stretch for the 53-hour closure, and "Carmageddon" never lived up to its name.

    Later this month, Los Angeles is bracing for another closure of the 405, between Interstate 10 and U.S. 101, on the weekend of Sept. 29. It's already being dubbed "Carmageddon II," but officials are not depending on scare tactics alone this time, the Los Angeles Times reported.


    "We realized that you couldn't do what we did the first time the second time quite the same way," Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa said, according to the Times. "(Researchers) said this time around you can't scare people away from the area, it's better to encourage them to stay home ... That's why we're encouraging you to stay local, shop, eat, walk in your neighborhood."

    While  things went relatively smoothly in last summer's closure, the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority worries about complacency and says risk factors are exactly the same this time, spokesman Dave Sotero told NBC News. "Our concern is that the public will think that this will be a cakewalk," he said.

    That's why officials are still getting the word out via advertising campaigns and news conferences to encourage "Angelenos" to enjoy a car-free weekend.

    If drivers ignore the warnings and still hit the road, a worst-case scenario would result in extreme congestion and multi-hour delays, Sotero said. On a typical weekend, half a million drivers use the 10-mile portion of I-405. The goal, according to Sotero, is to get at least two-thirds of the traffic off roads for the closure.

    "Now we did this last year and Angelenos heeded our call to stay out of their cars. In fact they did such a great job that afterward we called it Carmaheaven," Villaraigosa said at a news conference Tuesday, according to the LA Times.

    Businesses across the city are offering incentives and discounts for people to stay close to home.

    "You don’t have to kill the economy on Carmageddon weekend, but you can explore your neighborhood by foot , or ride a bike or use public transit," Sotero said.

    Related from NBCLosAngeles.com: Did Carmageddon make way for a baby boom?

    Closures will begin on the evening of Friday, Sept. 28 and the freeway closure is expected to continue until the morning of Monday, Oct. 1.

    The closure is part of a $1 billion construction project, where contractors will complete demolition work of the Mulholland Bridge in order to widen the 405 freeway in LA. Sections of northbound 405 will be closed this weekend for 10 hours as crews prepare for the final demolition phase, NBCLosAngeles.com reported.

    NBCLosAngeles.com's Jonathan Lloyd and John Cadiz Klemack, as well as The Associated Press, contributed to this story.

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    43 comments

    Couldn't happen to a better area. The land of fruits, nuts and bankruptcies, both city and state.

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