Repairs to arson-damaged Los Angeles freeway expected to take at least 3
weeks
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[November 15, 2023]
By Steve Gorman
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - A Los Angeles freeway section heavily damaged by
a weekend fire can be salvaged and reopened after extensive repairs
rather than having to be demolished and rebuilt, a project that
nevertheless will likely take three to five weeks, officials said on
Tuesday.
The decision to brace and repair the stricken portion of the Santa
Monica Freeway in lieu of a more costly, months-long effort to tear down
and replace it, was based on engineering tests showing the structural
integrity of the freeway deck remained stronger than anticipated.
The project was expected to commence immediately and continue around the
clock until completed, California Governor Gavin Newsom said.
The announcement came during a morning press conference by the governor,
Mayor Karen Bass and other officials at the scene of Saturday's fire,
which investigators on Monday determined was the result of arson.
More than 100 columns of reinforced concrete supporting the elevated
freeway and the surface of the roadway itself were badly scorched in the
blaze, forcing closure of a stretch of the east-west artery in both
directions.
The Santa Monica Freeway, also known as the Interstate 10 - or "the 10,"
in local parlance - is traversed by some 300,000 vehicles daily, with
the downtown L.A. portion often congested under normal circumstances.
With the damaged section shut down, officials have urged commuters to
avoid downtown and to take public transit instead when possible, or to
work from home.
Still, detours around the closure were expected to ripple out and
compound heavy traffic across California's largest city, marking one of
the area's worst transportation disruptions since the Northridge
earthquake flattened two parts of the same freeway in 1994.
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Crew members work in the area, where a fire erupted over the
weekend, shutting down a heavily trafficked corridor in Los Angeles,
California, U.S., November 13, 2023. REUTERS/Jorge Garcia
Newsom said he expected that the latest repair project to take
closer to three weeks than five, with contractors being offered
bonus incentives for completing the work ahead of schedule.
Meanwhile, arson investigators were continuing their work seeking to
identify the person or persons responsible for setting the fire,
Newsom said.
State Fire Marshal Daniel Berlant said on Monday authorities had
determined the fire's origin, but he gave no details about how
investigators reached their conclusion or about the precise way in
which the blaze was ignited or why.
The flames erupted in the early morning hours of Saturday and spread
through storage yards beneath the freeway filled with stacks of
wooden pallets, containers and parked vehicles, authorities said.
Newsom said the state had leased the site to Apex Development Inc, a
company based in Calabasas, north of Los Angeles. According to the
governor, the state recently sued to evict the company, which he
said had quit paying rent and was violating other terms of the
lease. Apex did not respond to Reuters' requests for comment as of
Tuesday.
(By Steve Gorman; Editing by Alistair Bell)
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