Smart Aleck
- Share via
The question Nov. 30: The federal government has endorsed building the last stretch of the Long Beach Freeway through South Pasadena. Where else in Southern California do we need a new freeway and why?
L.A. doesn’t need freeways. It needs trains and nonpolluting buses. Freeways divide and create sprawl, while public transportation promotes a cohesive, civilized urban society.
Tim Grant, West Hollywood
*
For 30 years they’ve tried to go through, around and over South Pasadena. Why not go under? I bet Britain or France has a good deal on a used Chunneling machine.
Joe R., South Pasadena
*
Needed: a north-south freeway paralleling La Brea Avenue/Hawthorne Boulevard from Cahuenga Pass to Palos Verdes. The 405 is on the Westside, 110 on the Eastside. The center has nothing.
Jan Rasmussen, Harbor City
*
Needed freeways:
* Back-to-the-Futurama Freeway: a road lost in time and space as it meanders through So Cal in an endless circuit of theme parks.
* SimiLinda Freeway (via Whittier and Bel-Air): It shouldn’t take executive privilege to zip between L.A.’s presidential libraries.
* Getty Spaghetti: Starts and ends in Brentwood. No interchanges.
* Crystal Carthedral: The first stealth freeway, built entirely of glass. A lattice of roads spanning the entire region. NIMBY won’t oppose what NIMBY can’t see.
* Terminal Island Freeway: A freeway connecting nowhere to nowhere on the outskirts of San Pedro (oops--that’s already built).
Randy Hall, La Can~ada
*
Extend the Glendale Freeway south to the Harbor, just south of the 10, to relieve that nightmare through downtown on the Pasadena Freeway.
Dave Arnett, Burbank
*
I am a 16-year-old male, and my mother will hardly let me drive anywhere in my little town, so I can pretty much forget about driving on a crowded, smelly, SigAlert infested, hand-gesture wielding Southern California freeway.
David Fingerote, Victorville
*
Sure you need a new freeway--right over the end of the Santa Monica Pier.
Harley W. Baczkowski, Twentynine Palms
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.