I-10 HOT Lanes
6 Documents in Project
Summary
SCH Number
2009061060
Lead Agency
California Department of Transportation, District 7
Document Title
I-10 HOT Lanes
Document Type
NOP - Notice of Preparation
Received
Present Land Use
Various (transportation, residential, industrial, commercial)
Document Description
Project proposes to convert an existing High Occupancy Vehicle lane to a High Occupancy Toll lane (HOT) on Interstate 10 (I-10) from Alameda Street to Interstate 605. I-10 will also be re-stripped to provide an additional HOT lane. In addition, the I-10 will also be restriped to provide one additional HOT lane for approximately 7.3 miles. The existing facility experiences travel performance problems. The project aims to maximize the efficiency of the HOV lane.
The purpose of the project is better utilization of a freeway's capacity and reduced congestion. The HOT lanes achieve this through encouragement of carpooling and permitting a controlled number of additional vehicles on the freeway to use the HOT lane to the point that capacity is available and overall performance of the lane is not adversely impacted. The HOT lanes will be actively managed to maintain a level of Service of C or better.
Contact Information
Name
Gary Iverson
Agency Name
California Department of Transportation, District 7
Contact Types
Lead/Public Agency
Phone
Location
Cities
Alhambra, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, City of, Alhambra, Rosemead, San Gabriel
Counties
Los Angeles
Notice of Completion
State Review Period Start
State Review Period End
State Reviewing Agencies
Air Resources Board, Transportation Projects, California Department of Fish and Wildlife, South Coast Region 5 (CDFW), California Department of Parks and Recreation, California Highway Patrol, California Native American Heritage Commission (NAHC), California Regional Water Quality Control Board, Los Angeles Region 4 (RWQCB), Department of Toxic Substances Control, Department of Water Resources, Office of Historic Preservation, Resources Agency
Project Issues
Aesthetics, Air Quality, Biological Resources, Cultural Resources, Cumulative Effects, Economics/Jobs, Growth Inducement, Hazards & Hazardous Materials, Noise, Transportation
Disclaimer: The document was originally posted before CEQAnet had the capability to host attachments for the public. To obtain the original attachments for this document, please contact the lead agency at the contact information listed above.