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6th Street east – Downtown Long Beach: Southbound exit and northbound entrance: 9th Street, Anaheim Street – Port of Long Beach: Northbound exit and southbound entrance: I-710 north (Long Beach Freeway) – Pasadena: Northbound exit and southbound entrance: 1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
A new freeway, the Mid County Parkway, from Interstate 215 in Perris to State Route 79 in San Jacinto. [8] An extension for Interstate 710, the Long Beach Freeway, to its originally planned terminus at Interstate 210, the Foothill Freeway, in Pasadena, via a tunnel underneath the city of South Pasadena [9] or some other means. Caltrans, however ...
Long Beach: 3.50 [N 1] Berth T136 Gate 2: Continuation beyond SR 47: 3.50 [N 1] I-710 north / SR 47 south – Downtown Long Beach, Piers B-J and T, San Pedro: South end of SR 47 overlap; south end of SR 103 South end of freeway: 3.58 [N 1] 4: New Dock Street: Southbound exit & northbound entrance: Long Beach–Los Angeles line: 3.88 [N 1]
I-405 (San Diego Freeway) / 190th Street – Santa Monica, Long Beach: 190th Street is not signed northbound; I-405 is former SR 7; I-405 north exit 37, south exit 37A: Los Angeles: 9.87: 15.88: 10A: SR 91 east (Gardena Freeway) Signed as exit 10 southbound; SR 91 west exit 6: 9.87: 15.88: 10B: SR 91 west (Gardena Freeway) — I-110 Express Lanes
The Metro C Line serves a station at Interstate 105.. Metro Blue Line at Long Beach Blvd. and 20th St., 1995. The Metro A Line falls in the middle of the boulevard between Willow and 1st Streets in Long Beach, serving the: Willow Street, Pacific Coast Highway, Anaheim Street, 5th Street, and 1st Street stations.
Atlantic Boulevard starts off as a southerly continuation of Los Robles Avenue at Huntington Drive in northern Alhambra, and ends on East Ocean Boulevard in Downtown Long Beach. [2] Through most of its route from Maywood south, Atlantic travels parallel to the Long Beach Freeway and the Los Angeles River. South of Randolph Street, Atlantic ...
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, [5] east of Downtown Los Angeles, the interchange comprises six freeway segments; that is, there are six freeway paths of travel into the complex.
The Los Alamitos Traffic Circle, informally known as the Long Beach Traffic Circle (or just the Traffic Circle, as there is only one other high volume traffic circle in Southern California [citation needed]), is a roundabout at the intersection of Lakewood Boulevard (State Route 19), Pacific Coast Highway (State Route 1/former U.S. Route 101 Alternate) and Los Coyotes Diagonal in Long Beach ...