State Route 91 (california) Article Index for
State Route
Limousines in
California
Website Links For
California State
 

Information About

State Route 91 (california)




  next Type Highway
  article Route 91
  length Mi 65
  length Km 104
  direction East-West
  section 391
  next Route 92
  previous Route 90
  cities Torrance <br/> Lawndale <br/> Gardena <br/> Harbor Gateway <br/> Carson <br/> Compton <br/> Long Beach <br/> Bellflower <br/> Cerritos, CA <br/> Artesia <br/> La Palma <br/> Buena Park <br/> Fullerton <br/> Anaheim <br/> Placentia <br/> Yorba Linda <br/> Corona <br/> Riverside


segment is highlighted in blue, the Artesia Freeway segment is highlighted in green, and the Riverside Freeway segment is highlighted in red.]]

State Route 91, also known as simply '''the 91''', is a major east-west Freeway located entirely within Southern California and serving several regions of the Greater Los Angeles metropolitan area. Its eastern terminus is located in Riverside at the junction with the Pomona , Moreno Valley , and Escondido freeways ( SR-60 , SR-60, and I-215 respectively). Its western terminus is at '' Vermont Avenue '' in Gardena , just west of the junction with the Harbor Freeway ( I-110 ). Before 1997, SR-91 continued all the way to SR-1 in Hermosa Beach . At that time, the route became discontinuous in Gardena , the portion between Vermont Ave. and '' Western Ave. '' being turned over to the city. In 2003, the western portion, from SR-1 to Western Ave. was relinquished to the local jurisdictions.

From the Harbor Freeway to its intersection with the Long Beach Freeway in northern Long Beach , SR-91 is named the Gardena Freeway . (Prior to 1991, it was known as the Redondo Beach Freeway, referring to Caltrans ' original intention for the freeway portion of the route to continue all the way to the never-built '''Pacific Coast Freeway'''.) Between the Long Beach Freeway and its intersection with the Santa Ana Freeway in Fullerton , it is named the Artesia Freeway . From the Santa Ana Freeway to its eastern terminus at the intersection of the Pomona, Moreno Valley, and Escondido Freeways, it is named the Riverside Freeway .

Although SR-91 is an east-west road, it inherited its odd (as opposed to even) route number from the now mostly decommissioned U.S. Highway 91 (U.S. 91) which passed through the Inland Empire in a northeasterly direction on its way to Las Vegas , Salt Lake City , and points beyond. Those segments of U.S. 91 now parallel, or have been replaced altogether, by Interstate 15 (I-15).

SR-91 traverses (from west to east) through Los Angeles , Orange , and Riverside counties.


91 EXPRESS LANES

See Also: 91 Express Lanes


By the early 1990s, rapid development of the areas of the Inland Empire around Riverside had made the Riverside Freeway—which is the sole freeway connecting the working, class bedroom communities and industrial areas of the Inland Empire to the wealthy suburbs and commercial centers of Orange County—one of the most congested in the Greater Los Angeles region. In response, a private consortium created the 91 Express Lanes , a fully automated, RFID -activated Tollway contained entirely within the median of the existing Riverside Freeway. This route operates between the Orange/Riverside county line and the Costa Mesa Freeway interchange in eastern Anaheim . Opening in 1995, the 91 Express Lanes were the first privately funded tollway built in the United States since the 1940s, and the first fully automated tollway in the world. In 2003, their ownership and operation was taken over by the Orange County Transportation Authority .


STATE LAW


Legal Definition of Route 91: California Streets and Highways Code, Chapter 2, Article 3, Section 391



CITIES/COMMUNITIES ALONG CA/SR-91 (WEST TO EAST)



EXTERNAL LINKS