interchange in 1957. The interstate continues into
Sepulveda Boulevard via a temporary connector road. (left) and Carol Schumaker, at the Reece-designed I-10/I-405 interchange, 1964 I-405 was approved as a chargeable Interstate (in other words, an Interstate financed with federal funds) in 1955. The Division of Highways originally requested I-9 for the corridor, while the Santa Ana Freeway would be I-11; I-3 was later requested in April 1958 before the Division of Highways agreed to use I-405. Construction began in 1957 with the first section, mostly north of
Los Angeles International Airport, which was completed in 1961 and initially signed as SR 7. The section through Sepulveda Pass was dedicated on December 21, 1962, and cost $20 million to construct. It was designed with a maximum grade of 5.5 percent and required the relocation of Sepulveda Boulevard and the
Mulholland Highway, which was moved to the south along a new bridge over the freeway. Additional sections west of
Alameda Street were completed in 1962 and 1963, creating of continuous freeway. The highway was renumbered to I-405 during the
1964 state highway renumbering. The Orange County portion of the San Diego Freeway took 13 years to construct, with the first section opening in 1958. The final section of I-405, leading to I-5 in Irvine, was dedicated on December 6, 1968, and opened to traffic in January 1969.
"Carmageddon" A section of I-405 was closed over the weekend of Friday, July 15, 2011, as part of the Sepulveda Pass Improvements Project. Before the closing, local radio DJs and television newscasts referred to it as "Carmageddon" and "Carpocalypse", parodying the notion of
Armageddon and the
Apocalypse, since it was anticipated that the closure would severely impact traffic. In reality, traffic was lighter than normal across a wide area. The
California Department of Transportation (Caltrans) reported that fewer vehicles used the roads than usual, and those who did travel by road arrived more quickly than on a normal weekend. The
Los Angeles Times on Sunday, July 17, 2011, featured comments and images of people enjoying the moment next to the I-405 freeway with the free-flowing traffic. In response to
JetBlue's offer of special flights between
Hollywood Burbank Airport in Burbank and
Long Beach Airport, a
distance of only , for $4.00, a group of cyclists did the same journey in one and a half hours, compared to two and a half hours by plane (including a drive to the airport from West Hollywood 90 minutes in advance of the flight and travel time to the end destination). There was also some debate about whether the Los Angeles area could benefit from
car-free weekends regularly. The
Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority then had full closure of a stretch of I-405 on the weekend of September 29–30, 2012, while construction crews worked to demolish a portion of the Mulholland Bridge. Researchers at the
University of California, Los Angeles, used the closure of I-405 to study particulate matter air pollution. The researchers took air samples before, during, and after the closure. The researchers found an 83-percent reduction in ultrafine
particles, 55-percent reduction in fine particle matter, and 62-percent less
black carbon.
Sepulveda Pass Improvements Project The $1-billion Sepulveda Pass Improvements Project added a
high-occupancy vehicle (HOV) lane and associated changes to freeway entrances, exits, and underpasses along a stretch through
Sepulveda Pass between I-10 and US 101/Ventura Boulevard. The project was completed as a
design–build in contrast to the traditional
design–bid–build used typically in infrastructure improvement. This section of I-405 was closed for a weekend in mid-July 2011 to demolish the
Mulholland Drive Bridge, and a section was closed for the last weekend of September 2012. On May 23, 2014, the HOV lane was opened to traffic. ==Future==