East Los Angeles Interchange


The East Los Angeles Interchange complex in Boyle Heights, east of Downtown Los Angeles, California, is the busiest freeway interchange in the world, with its southern portion handling over 550,000 vehicles per day. The northern portion, called the San Bernardino Split, is often considered a separate interchange. Four numbered routes converge at the interchange: Interstate 5, I-10, U.S. Route 101, and State Route 60, but the freeway segments shift alignments and directions.
The interchange was named the Eugene A. Obregon Memorial Interchange, to honor U.S. Marine Corps member and Medal of Honor recipient, Eugene A. Obregon.

Description

At the time of its construction in the early 1960s, the East Los Angeles Interchange was considered a civil engineering marvel. Located along the east bank of the Los Angeles River in the Los Angeles district of Boyle Heights, east of Downtown Los Angeles, the interchange comprises six freeway segments; that is, there are six freeway paths of travel into the complex. The actual number of numbered highways intersecting at this interchange is four:
The interchange is so complex because the intersecting freeways shift alignments and directions:
There is not complete freedom of movement within the interchange. Traffic flowing into it on certain freeways cannot leave it on all of the others.
Further complication is caused 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, or have curves with tighter radii or cambers. Traffic congestion is thus exacerbated as vehicles moving at high speed on the wider transition roads try to merge with slower moving vehicles coming from the narrow transition roads.

History

Construction of the began in 1961. The enormity of the structure and the complexity of its many routes called for a $17,000 blueprint model of the highway. It has thirty-two bridges and twenty walls with of earth being excavated. They project laid of concrete pipe, used of structural steel and of reinforced steel.

In popular culture

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, because of its complicated interchange structure. The interchange has also been referred to as "The Beast" LA Interchange, the "East Delay" Interchange, and the "Nickel/Dime" during traffic reports.