Gold Line Foothill Extension Photo Tour: Iconic Gold Line Freeway Bridge

In this third installment of our Foothill Gold Line photo tour series, we explore the Gold Line Foothill Extension’s iconic bridge over the 210 Freeway, as well as a closer look at the line’s other bridges.

Recently, Streetsblog’s Damien Newton and Aviv Kleinman joined a behind-the-scenes tour of the Gold Line Phase II under construction in the San Gabriel Valley. We joined Albert Ho, head of Media Relations for the Metro Gold Line Foothill Extension Construction Authority, and Jeff Rowland, the Community Relations Manager for the Kiewit-Parsons Joint Venture, the contractors building the project. Part 1 of the series documented the rail corridor and stations. Part 2 highlighted the Maintenance and Operations yard under construction in Monrovia.

For those just joining us, the Gold Line is a 19.7 mile light rail line running from East Los Angeles to Pasadena via Union Station in Downtown L.A. The line currently serves 21 stations, and is operated by Metro. The Gold Line Foothill Extension will extend from its current Sierra Madre Villa terminus east into the city of Azusa. The new 11.3-mile extension includes 6 new stations, serving five cities directly. It is proposed to transform the San Gabriel Valley entirely. Once bounded by distress of being caught in freeway gridlock, San Gabriel Valley residents will now have the freedom to commute by rail into Downtown L.A., and endless locations from there, by using the new Gold Line extension.

The Gold Line bridge, completed in 2012, was built to replace the previous flyover bridge used by the Santa Fe railroad to cross over the eastbound lanes of the 210 freeway. The Gold Line tracks run 4.1 miles along the median of the 210 before crossing the bridge into the city of Arcadia, heading southeast towards the downtown Arcadia station.

According to the Construction authority, the bridge was completed “on-time and on-budget” in December of 2012. The total cost was $18.6 million.

The bridge was designed by the artist Andrew Leicester. Leicester envisioned the bridge as “a memorable expression of the community, past and present.” The bridge’s design includes homages to the local culture, native wildlife, and, most notably, the Native American roots in the area. The two 25-foot tall, 17-foot diameter sculptural woven baskets flank the bridge and support it structurally as well as artistically. According to the Construction Authority, the bridge was “built for the same cost as was originally estimated for a typical structure of its make-up.” The bridge won five construction industry awards and is billed as “the largest single public art/transportation infrastructure piece in California.”

Below, we take a closer look at the other relatively-utilitarian bridges on the Gold Line Foothill Extension.