San Diego Freeway Car-Pool Lane Draws Record Number of Drivers
- Share via
While work on 10 miles of southbound car-pool lane on the San Diego Freeway is not expected to be completed until next week, the northbound commuter lane has gotten off to a fast start, California Department of Transportation officials said Tuesday.
After less than a week of operation, the northbound lane has attracted more cars during the peak morning commute hour than any new commuter lane in Orange County, authorities said.
The new 10-mile stretch of car-pool lanes, which extend from the Santa Ana Freeway to the Corona del Mar Freeway, links to a 14-mile segment completed last summer between the Corona del Mar and San Gabriel River freeways to form the longest continuous commuter system in the state.
Between 6:45 a.m. and 7:45 a.m., the lane drew more than 800 cars, about 200 more than were lured to the car-pool lanes on the Costa Mesa Freeway during its initial days of operation, said Joe El-Harake, Orange County commuter lanes coordinator for Caltrans. The new lane drew about 250 more cars than were attracted to the 14-mile segment on the San Diego Freeway when it opened last September, he said.
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.