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Interstate 405 (I-405, locally referred to as The 405) [2] is a major north–south auxiliary Interstate Highway in Southern California. The entire route is known as the northern segment of the San Diego Freeway .
Interstate 405 may refer to: Interstate 405 (California) , a bypass of Los Angeles, California Interstate 405 (Oregon) , western side of a loop around Portland, Oregon
The Sepulveda Pass on Interstate 405 begins just south of Ventura Boulevard in the San Fernando Valley, climbing to just south of Mulholland Drive, then descending to just north of Sunset Boulevard, where I-405 and Sepulveda Boulevard enter the Brentwood and Westwood areas of West Los Angeles. Northbound I-405 has five lanes and a carpool lane ...
The San Diego Freeway is one of the named principal Southern California freeways. It consists of the following two segments: Interstate 5, from California State Route 94 in San Diego to Interstate 405 in Irvine [1] Interstate 405, in its entirety from Interstate 5 in Irvine to Interstate 5 near San Fernando
The Santa Ana Freeway is one of the principal freeways in Southern California, connecting Los Angeles and its southeastern suburbs including the freeway's namesake, the city of Santa Ana. The freeway begins at its junction with the San Diego Freeway (Interstate 405, I-405), called the El Toro Y, in Irvine, signed as I-5.
It then passes under I-405 just before crossing Ventura Boulevard in Sherman Oaks. Sepulveda Boulevard then runs parallel to the east of I-405, crossing the Ventura Freeway (US 101) and the Los Angeles Metro G Line rapid transit route, and through the San Fernando Valley communities of Van Nuys and North Hills , to its northern terminus at the ...
A man was stabbed, an infant was pushed from a moving car and a woman rammed into a tree in a trail of death from Woodland Hills to Redondo Beach, police say.
Southern California residents idiomatically refer to freeways with the definite article, as "the [freeway number]", e.g. "the 5" or "the 10". [18] This use of the article differs from other American dialects, including that of Northern California, but is the same as in the UK (e.g.