Red Hill overpass reopens today
Deepa Bharath
COSTA MESA -- After 10 months of work, the Red Hill Avenue overpass
will reopened to the public today, just in time for the one of the
busiest holiday commutes of the year.
The bridge, reconstructed as part of improvements to the San Diego and
Costa Mesa freeways, was raised 18 feet to accommodate new connectors
being built to link the freeways’ carpool lanes.
The $5.5-million overpass, completed a month ahead of schedule, was
formally reopened during a brief ceremony Tuesday afternoon that included
representatives from the cities of Costa Mesa and Irvine, Caltrans and
the Orange County Transportation Authority.
The bridge stands 45 feet above the San Diego Freeway and spans 540
feet. About a million tons of steel framing holds up 6,000 yards of
concrete.
The $200-million project to improve the two freeways is funded by
Measure M, the half-cent sales tax approved by voters in 1990.The Costa
Mesa City Council also allocated $19 million for the entire improvement
project. Spending that kind of money was a tough decision to make, said
Councilwoman Heather Somers, who was present at the opening along with
council colleagues Libby Cowan and Joe Erickson.
“We had to decide if we needed to do this project right away,” she
said. “We realized it had to be done to progress with the rest of the
freeway system.”
The bridge will help relieve freeway traffic, said Peter Naghavi,
Costa Mesa’s transportation manager.
“We have 450,000 vehicles going through this area every day,” he said.
“That makes it one of the 10 busiest in the country.”
The biggest challenge was continuing construction without disrupting
traffic, said project manager Leonard Sequeira.
“It’s like trying to have a banquet in your house and trying to
redesign your house at the same time,” he said. “But it has turned out to
be one of our most successful closures.”
The rest of the project will move forward as planned, said Rose
Orem-Melgoza, spokeswoman for Caltrans.
“This is only one part of the project,” she said. “We’ve already
started planning the other phases and we’re happy we’re ahead.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.