MarketU.S. Route 101 in California
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U.S. Route 101 in California

U.S. Route 101 (US 101) is a north–south United States Numbered Highway stretching from Los Angeles, California, to Tumwater, Washington. The portion in the state of California is approximately 808 miles (1,300 km), running from the East Los Angeles Interchange to the Oregon state line. The majority of US 101 is overseen and maintained by the California Department of Transportation (Caltrans), except for the Golden Gate Bridge which is privately administered, nor is it officially part of the route despite maps and federal route logs saying otherwise. US 101 is a critical freeway serving the Greater Los Angeles and the San Francisco Bay Area, and acts as a communal backbone in the more rural Central Coast and Redwood Empire. A lengthy section in Southern California even follows an unusual east–west direction. From Santa Barbara to Gilroy, US 101 is a mix of freeway and expressway, while north of Sonoma County, it is a regular two-lane road with pockets of controlled-access configurations. In some more populous areas, US 101 features high-occupancy vehicle (HOV) lanes with time-based restrictions for vehicles that have a minimum of two occupants, and express lanes with a congestion toll scheme. The highway also passes through many important agriculture regions.

Description
Route US 101 runs through California. It is named Route 101 in Section 401 of the California Streets and Highways Code and defined as: Route 101 is from: (a) Route 5 near Seventh Street in Los Angeles to Route 1, Funston approach, and, subject to Section 72.1, the approach to the Golden Gate Bridge in the Presidio of San Francisco via Santa Barbara, San Luis Obispo, and Salinas. (b) A point in Marin County opposite San Francisco to the Oregon state line via Crescent City. The definition purposely omits the segment crossing the Golden Gate Bridge, as it is maintained by the Golden Gate Bridge, Highway and Transportation District and is not part of the state highway system. Despite this, U.S. Route logs from the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials include the bridge as part of US 101, as do most other maps. The bridge along with the rest of US 101 is also part of the National Highway System. US 101 is part of the California Freeway and Expressway System, and portions of it are eligible for inclusion in the State Scenic Highway System. It is officially designated as a scenic highway between Goleta and Las Cruces in Santa Barbara County and through Del Norte Coast Redwoods State Park in Del Norte County. Southern California US 101 begins in Boyle Heights at the East Los Angeles Interchange, a major freeway junction that includes I-5, I-10, and SR 60. The six-lane portion of the route is the northerly continuation of the Santa Ana Freeway, inheriting that title from I-5. After , US 101 turns west at the San Bernardino Split, a three-way junction with the San Bernardino Freeway that transitions into I-10 to the east. US 101 travels on a 1944 bridge across the Los Angeles River before passing Los Angeles Union Station. Proceeding in a generally northwestern direction, US 101 travels through downtown Los Angeles via the Downtown Slot between the Los Angeles Civic Center and El Pueblo de Los Ángeles, then intersects SR 110 at the Four Level Interchange. Starting here, US 101 is named Hollywood Freeway. It passes through Echo Park, Silver Lake, Los Feliz, and Hollywood, sharing a short segment with SR 2 through the area. North of Hollywood, US 101 traverses the Santa Monica Mountains via the Cahuenga Pass before entering the San Fernando Valley. It then passes Universal Studios Hollywood, after which is the Hollywood Split where US 101 shifts westward, superseding SR 134 on the Ventura Freeway, while the Hollywood Freeway continues north as SR 170. In this segment, US 101 intersects I-405 in Sherman Oaks and SR 27 in Woodland Hills. In Calabasas, US 101 changes from heavily urbanized to a somewhat rural character as it enters Conejo Valley, where it leaves Los Angeles County and enters Ventura County. In Thousand Oaks, US 101 and SR 23 run concurrently for about , from Westlake Boulevard to a three-way interchange with the Moorpark Freeway. before descending into the Oxnard Plain, where it travels through Camarillo and Oxnard. SR 1 and US 101 run concurrently in Oxnard; there is no signage confirming the overlap despite maps depicting this. Upon crossing the Santa Clarita River, the two routes reach Ventura, where they intersect SR 126 and then SR 33. About north of the Gaviota Tunnel, SR 1 splits from US 101 to resume its role as California's primary coastal highway. US 101 then enters Buellton, where it intersects SR 246. North of Buellton, US 101 intersects SR 154 again, and in Los Alamos, it intersects SR 135. In Orcutt, US 101 and SR 166 run concurrently for , until north of Santa Maria, where US 101 again intersects SR 135. Vineyards frequently surround US 101 between its northern SR 154 intersection and Orcutt. Here, US 101 intersects SR 58 near Santa Margarita, then enters Atascadero, where it intersects SR 41. Upon reaching Templeton, US 101 and SR 46 run concurrently for about to Paso Robles. North of San Miguel, US 101 enters Monterey County, then passes Camp Roberts. before traveling through Greenfield, Soledad, Gonzales, Chualar, and Spence. US 101 then enters Salinas, where it intersects SR 68 and SR 183. North of Salinas, US 101 and SR 156 runs concurrently for approximately . SR 156 splits off near San Juan Bautista, after which US 101 intersects SR 129. San Francisco Bay Area US 101 enters the San Francisco Bay Area by crossing the Pajaro River watershed, where it enters Santa Clara County. US 101 then intersects SR 25, then continues north to Gilroy, where it changes from expressway to freeway. US 101 run concurrently with SR 152 for in this area; after which US 101 traverses San Martin and Morgan Hill in the Santa Clara Valley. US 101 then passes Bayview Park, the former location of Candlestick Park. US 101 then turns west and follows the old Central Freeway viaduct near San Francisco's Civic Center before transitioning to a surface street on Van Ness Drive. Here, MUNI bus lanes traverse the middle of the alignment, which also passes the rear of San Francisco City Hall. US 101 then turns west on Lombard Street, then northwest on Richardson Avenue where it passes the Palace of Fine Arts, after which it continues west and onto the grade-separated Presidio Parkway. Here, US 101 travels through the Presidio of San Francisco, where it passes through the Main Post and Battery tunnels,then turns northwest as it and SR 1 join near Crissy Field. This shared highway continues onto and crosses the Golden Gate Bridge. first entering Marin County as Redwood Highway, North of Olompali State Historic Park, US 101 enters Sonoma County, US 101 and SR 116 run concurrently from Petaluma to Cotati, where SR 116 splits off and US 101 continues north through Rohnert Park. US 101 then travels through Santa Rosa, where it intersects SR 12 and passes over Railroad Square via the Robert L. Bishop Memorial Bridge. and after exiting the canyon, it enters Sanel Valley, where it narrows to a two-lane road and crosses the Russian River again. US 101 then enters Hopland, where it intersects SR 175. US 101 and SR 20 separate south of Willits, where SR 20 travels through the town while US 101 bypasses it to the east. US 101 then reaches Cooks Valley. SR 271 closely parallels US 101 for two sections of this route: between Cummings and Legget, and Piercy and Cooks Valley; and Rio Dell. In the bay area, part-time HOV lanes have been built sporadically along US 101. The HOV lanes in Marin and Sonoma counties are the second longest in California, with a contiguous length of about between Richardson Bay Bridge and Windsor. In San Francisco, the right lanes on the Lombard Street segment of US 101 have been designated as temporary HOV lanes in a pilot project launched by the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency in 2021. There are no HOV lanes on US 101 in California outside the bay area and Santa Barbara County, however, they are being considered for a stretch between SR 23 and SR 33 in Ventura County. Tolls US 101 features High-occupancy toll (HOT) lanes between I-380 in San Bruno and SR 237 in Mountain View. HOT lanes in Santa Clara County are co-administered by the Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority, while the segment in San Mateo County is co-administered by the San Mateo County Express Lanes Joint Powers Authority. Tolls are also collected for southbound traffic on the Golden Gate Bridge. All-electronic tolling is used and can be paid by either a FasTrak transponder or license plate tolling. The HOV lane leading to the bridge requires three or more riders. == History ==
History
Precursors El Camino Real Long before California entered statehood, the 16th-century Alta California had a loose-knit network of transportation paths deemed by the monarchy of Spain as , or "royal roads". In the late 18th century, Gaspar de Portolá, under the stewardship of Junípero Serra, led Spanish missionaries on two expeditionary runs in the coastal regions; missions, pueblos and presidios were also established between San Diego and Monterey during this time. Six years after Portolá's last expedition, Juan Bautista de Anza followed Portolá's trail from present-day Los Angeles to the Presidio of San Francisco. George Wharton James's 1908 travelogue ''Through Ramona's Country'' describes the road these expeditions traced out; El Camino Real then became synonymous with it. Despite modest improvements in the mid-19th century, El Camino Real was difficult for stagecoaches and freight wagons to navigate. The movement to preserve and memorialize El Camino Real began in 1902, when Anna Pitcher of Pasadena presented a plan to restore the route. Later that year, the California Federation of Women's Clubs adopted the project; government agencies and other organizations signed on as well. In 1904, the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce formed a convention to support commemorating El Camino Real; a second convention was held in Santa Barbara that same year. The first distinctive bells marking El Camino Real were erected in 1906 and in 1915, the Automobile Club of Southern California produced a map detailing El Camino Real and the missions. In 1924, a roadway that would eventually become part of US 101 replaced an outdated segment of El Camino Real in Ventura; the replaced segment was later re-signed as part of SR 1. El Camino Real was part of the Pacific Highway, a chain of highways that existed until 1926. The route was declared California Historical Landmark No. 784 in 1963, the same year the state assumed maintenance of the bell markers. The route was also codified in the California Streets and Highways Code. Redwood Highway Prior to the 20th century, almost all commerce on the Redwood Coast was done by sea, whereupon ships would dock at portside towns to transport passengers and deliver and receive goods. In 1910, the California government passed the State Highway Bond Act, authorizing funds for a statewide road system. with another section constructed on tidal wetlands bordering Humboldt Bay between 1918 and 1919. In 1921, Crescent City hotelier A.D. Lee proposed the name Redwood Highway to honor Save the Redwoods League and their work preserving redwood forests in the area. Local communities and the city of San Francisco endorsed the proposal, which was adopted in 1957. The California Highway Commission also set stringent limits on the number of trees that could be cleared during the highway's construction, while the trees that were cut down were often used as guardrails, drainage control devices, Ultimately, increased awareness of the destruction of the redwoods led to the establishment of Redwood National Park. Landslides and washouts repeatedly frustrated progress on Redwood Highway, with overall construction lasting about nine years, during which the highway opened segment by segment. The first paved section opened in Ukiah, after which Jack London became the first person to ride the stretch on his way to Crescent City. and the full highway opened on October 29. To boost tourism in the area, the Redwood Highway Association marketed the highway's beauty, most successfully with the internationally publicized Redwood Highway Marathon, held in 1927 and 1928. The National Automobile Club also surveyed a split route for Redwood Highway in 1928, but it was not adopted. Hollywood Freeway In 1924, Los Angeles voters backed the Major Traffic Street Plan to address the city's worsening traffic congestion. A "stop-free express highway" between downtown Los Angeles and the San Fernando Valley via the Cahuenga Pass was included in the project and the city acquired many residential and commercial properties to make room for it. Creation The American Association of State Highway Officials announced its intent to establish US 101 in California in 1925. The highway was originally envisioned to start at the Mexican border at Tijuana and continue for to the Oregon state line south of Brookings, aligning with the future Hollywood Freeway as well as State Legislative Routes 1 and 2 and also occupying El Camino Real and all but the Crescent City–Grants Pass section of Redwood Highway. With this alignment, US 101 would be the westernmost route in the United States Numbered Highway System. The numerical selection for US 101 proved problematic in that it ran afoul with the system's three-digit number conventions. However, because 101 was the only odd number assigned west of US 99, to follow conventions the numeral 101 is treated as having two digits instead of three: a 10 and a 1. The US 101 designation received its official approval on November 11, 1926, its routing in California mostly unchanged from the conceptual phase. US 101 traffic signs were erected by the Automobile Club of Southern California in southern California and California State Automobile Association in the north. The first signs were placed the San Diego–Los Angeles segment in January 1928, with the rest placed that summer. Mexican border to Los Angeles At its inception, US 101 traversed San Diego suburbs on Beyer Boulevard in San Ysidro, Broadway in Chula Vista, and National City Boulevard in National City. From there, it took an erratic path through the city, coming within a few blocks of Balboa Park before turning west and traveling through downtown, then turning north onto India Street. North of Mission Bay, US 101 turned west through Pacific Beach, before turning back north on La Jolla Boulevard and serving the business areas of La Jolla. By the 1940s, however, the downtown section was truncated onto Harbor Drive close to the San Diego Bay and the La Jolla segment rerouted inland on Rose Canyon Road. In Del Mar, US 101 aligned with the Torrey Pines bypass, dubbed the Million Dollar Highway and built in 1933 to bypass a dangerous highway that predated federal designations. Also in this area, the route traversed the Surf Line and Los Peñasquitos Creek estuary via bridges, after which, it continued along the Pacific Coast through Solana Beach, Encinitas, Carlsbad, and Oceanside. US 101 continued past Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton, where it entered Orange County and passed through San Clemente. At Doheny Park north of San Clemente, US 101 originally split into two routes, with US 101 Alternate serving the beachside cities before converging with the main route in Oxnard, while the main route veered inland through San Juan Capistrano, Laguna Niguel, and Mission Viejo, after which it zigzagged through Irvine and Tustin, with a concentrated section in Tustin once containing the Tustin Garage and up to ten fuel stations for motorists traveling from the south. North of Tustin, US 101 followed Katella Avenue and Spadra Road, then traversed southeastern Los Angeles County on Montebello Boulevard and entered Los Angeles on Whittier Boulevard. Due to increased traffic, US 101 between Carlsbad and Oceanside was rolled over to Interstate 5 in the 1950s. and in 1964, California both streamlined its numbered routes across the state and stipulated that U.S. highways be removed in favor of Interstate highways. As a result, I-5 supplanted US 101 entirely from Los Angeles to the Mexican border, after which, many of US 101's original surface roads were relinquished for municipal and county control. The section through Camp Pendleton was closed off to the public, The Downtown Slot also opened in 1954, Proposed interchanges with the Beverly Hills Freeway near Glendale, with the never built Malibu Freeway near Malibu Canyon, and with the never built Laurel Canyon Freeway at the Hollywood Split were cancelled in response to the freeway revolts in the 1960s and 1970s. In 1952, the State Highway Commission announced plans for a freeway along El Camino Real through Los Angeles's San Fernando Valley. between Sepulveda Boulevard and the western city limit, was constructed and opened in segments between from 1956 to 1960, The Conejo Grade was built as part of this upgrade; it replaced a windy two-lane road built in 1914. Grade separation in Camarillo was also part of the upgrade; completed in 1954, it eliminated the last railroad crossing on US 101 between Los Angeles and San Francisco. West of Santa Barbara, US 101 traversed the Gaviota Pass, which was originally part of El Camino Real and was declared California Historic Landmark No. 248 in 1937. The Gaviota Tunnel opened to northbound traffic in the pass in 1953, with the previous road repurposed for southbound traffic. By 1954, the entire freeway was upgraded to expressway standards through the pass. North of Gaviota, bypasses funded by the Collier–Burns Highway Act of 1947 allowed US 101 to bypass most town centers by the 1950s, although a US 101/SR 1 interchange was constructed in Las Cruces in 1967, destroying the town. Conversely, a 1951 study determined that frontage-road businesses along a new Santa Barbara–Buellton alignment saw minimal impact on the businesses' customer volume. This combined with improvements into Santa Ynez Valley lengthened US 101 by , but shortened travel time because it allowed for higher speeds. In the northern central coast, the Prunedale Cutoff replaced a more hazardous route over the Gabilan Range via the San Juan Grade in 1932 and the Cuesta Pass opened as an expressway in 1938. In Salinas, US 101 was built as a freeway for by 1954; the Sala Road interchange, adopted in 1964, connected to this segment. San Francisco Bay area Bayshore Highway, located on the San Francisco peninsula, was completed in 1929, the first section opened being a tolled arterial between San Bruno and Visitacion Valley. Between 1929 and 1936, Additional ferries traversed the Golden Gate prior to completion of the Golden Gate Bridge in 1937. In 1936, US 101 on the San Francisco Peninsula was truncated at Bayshore Highway, while El Camino Real was re-signed as US 101 Alternate. However, due to local outrage, this section of US 101 was reverted to El Camino Real two years later, while Bayshore Highway was renamed US 101 Bypass. US 101E was also re-signed as SR 17 during this time. Bayshore Highway was upgraded to a freeway starting in 1940. The first segment, a stretch between San Mateo and Burlingame, was completed in 1947, making it the Bay Area's first freeway. The freeway was extended to San Jose and San Francisco in 1962, after which it was designated part of US 101 while El Camino Real was re-signed as SR 82. Plans to build a direct connection to the Golden Gate Bridge on the Central Freeway, a northerly continuation of the Bayshore Freeway, were canceled in 1959 due to backlash by residents; as a result, only one section of this segment of US 101 was completed. In Marin County, US 101's Sausalito–San Rafael segment was completed in the early 1930s, concluding with a redwood bridge over Richardson Bay. Twin bores of the Waldo Tunnel, which connect Sausalito and Marin City at the highest point of the Waldo Grade, opened individually in 1937 and 1954, and the bridge across Richardson Bay was replaced in 1956. Additionally, numerous North Bay improvements in the 1950s centered on upgrading US 101 from expressway to freeway, as well as bypassing cities. An exception was Santa Rosa, where US 101 was routed through the city; even so, it was brought to full freeway standards with the completion of the Steele Lane interchange in 1965. Additional bypasses were constructed in Novato and Geyserville in the 1970s. In Santa Clara County, a four-lane alignment replaced a winding roadway across the Pajaro River in Sargent in the early 1940s and a bypass through the southern Santa Clara Valley was adopted in 1961 and constructed in the early 1970s. Northern California While Redwood Highway was completed in 1926, and a new 1940s alignment in Piercy lowered the segment's total curvature from 2,978 degrees to 807. Despite these and other upgrades, freeway and expressway segments are not as prevalent on US 101 in this area compared to elsewhere. A variety of factors, most of which came into play in the middle of the 20th century, contributed to this, most notably local business owners opposed bypasses and conservationists opposed the destruction construction of a multi-lane highway would require. Conversely, the Eureka-based Times-Standard as well as several local taxpayer groups supported the improved safety that upgrades would bring. The Redwood Empire Association also urged the State Highway Commission to not truncate US 101 outside state park boundaries. Ridgewood Grade, located in Mendocino County and opened in 1954, was the first section of Redwood Highway upgraded to expressway. The following year, Assemblyman Frank P. Belotti introduced legislation that would allot $10 million from the state parks' funds towards a bypass through Humboldt Redwoods State Park. Governor Goodwin Knight later vetoed the bill, after which the two sides agreed to expand the bypass to around the park and only remove trees with heights less than . This bypass was completed in the 1960s at an estimated $36 million , while the old alignment, known as the Avenue of the Giants, became SR 254. In Eureka, the Big Lagoon trestle was demolished in favor of embankments carrying a expressway, which opened in 1959 at a cost of $1.84 million . Additionally, the Arcata–Trinidad freeway located north of Eureka was completed by the early 1960s, as was a second freeway section from Hydesville to south of Eureka with bypasses at Fortuna and Loleta; the southern segment was later augmented by the Herrick Avenue interchange in 1984. Elsewhere along Redwood Highway, a freeway upgrade was completed in Ukiah in 1965, then extended north through Redwood Valley in the late 1980s, and a $1 million , thirteen-span viaduct opened across the Eel River in 1964. Additionally, numerous bridges were damaged during the Christmas flood of 1964, each of which was repaired or replaced by the following March, the last being a new construction that replaced Douglas Memorial Bridge over the Klamath River. Modern developments Los Angeles and the Central Coast The last traffic signal on US 101 between Los Angeles and San Francisco, located in Santa Barbara, was removed in 1991. A lane was added in both directions of the Ventura Freeway in the 1990s, eliminating several bottlenecks, and new lanes and truck pullouts were added to the Cuesta Grade in 2004 as well. Three interchanges were also added in Prunedale in 2014. Construction of the Wallis Annenberg Wildlife Crossing also began in 2024; this crossing, a vegetated overpass spanning the Ventura Freeway in Agoura Hills, will connect the Santa Monica Mountains with the Simi Hills and upon completion will be the largest wildlife crossing in the world. San Francisco bay area In 1984, San Mateo and Santa Clara County residents voted to use sales tax funds to fund high-occupancy vehicle (HOV) lanes on US 101 in their counties. These lanes were extended through San Jose and into Morgan Hill by 2000 and the Mountain View–Redwood City section was converted to high-occupancy toll lanes in 2022, Furthermore, US 101 was expanded to eight lanes between SR 85 in San Jose and Cochrane Road Morgan Hill in 2003 and a new interchange at Bailey Avenue, planned since the 1970s, opened in 2004. The 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake caused severe damage to San Francisco's Central Freeway, prompting its immediate closure. In 1997, a narrow majority of residents voted to rebuild the freeway; however, another vote the following year saw the majority vote for it to be dismantled, and this vote was affirmed the year after that. Demolition was completed by 2005 and the vacated right-of-way was redeveloped into Octavia Boulevard. In 2000, Caltrans and the Metropolitan Transportation Commission unveiled a joint plan to build continuous HOV lanes on US 101 throughout the North Bay. At the time, facilities were already existent in Marin County, having been converted from contraflow bus lanes in the 1980s, but a gap at San Rafael was not filled until 2011. HOV lanes opened in Sonoma County in 2022 and the final segment between Petaluma and Sonoma County opened in 2025; these segments were also part of a separate 30-year, $1.5 billion US 101 improvement project that was completed in 2025. As part of this project, HOV lanes were built between between Novato and Sonoma County, the entire route between Novato and Petaluma was upgraded to freeway standards, and new bridges were built across the San Antonio Creek and Petaluma River. In 2009, a project began to replace US 101's Golden Gate Bridge approach through the Presidio. The new Presidio Parkway incorporated two sets of tunnels and opened in 2015, while the Presidio Tunnel Tops recreational area, located above the tunnels, opened in 2022. Also in 2022, San Francisco Municipal Railway built center bus lanes and landscaped medians on US 101's Van Ness Avenue segment as part of the Van Ness Bus Rapid Transit project. Northern California US 101 was truncated onto a new alignment through Prairie Creek Redwoods State Park from the late 1980s to early 1990s. In 2009, a section of US 101 north of Leggett was moved across the Eel River via the Confusion Hill Bridges in order to prevent the infrequent but expensive winter closures that occurred along the old alignment. This project, controversial because it re-routed US 101 through protected wetlands, cost $459 million , included a viaduct across a flood plain, and re-located the US 101/SR 20 interchange from inside city limits to south of the city. , the remainder of the old route was still part of the state highway system, under the designation 101U (for unrelinquished). Future In Los Angeles, two plans to cap US 101 have been proposed: one downtown, and the other in Hollywood. wit the Hollywood freeway cap estimated to cost $1 billion in 2015 and the downtown cap $180 million in 2017 . with an expected completion date of December 2028, and improvements between Cuesta Grade and the northern county line are also under study. In Monterey County, preliminary work on multiple improvements to an stretch between Salinas and Chualar, the result of which would upgrade the corridor from expressway to freeway, began in 2024, with construction scheduled to begin in 2031. The US 101-SR 156 interchange has also been proposed for reconstruction and US 101 upgraded from expressway to freeway through it. and the county also has plans to add of express lanes between I-380 and the north county line, after which US 101's express lanes would span the entire county. US 101's HOT lanes are also planned to be extended south from Mountain View to I-880 in 2026, while a $135 million construction project to improve the US 101/SR 25 interchange began in 2025 with an expected completion in 2027. In more long term plans, several proposals have been made to address sea level rise on a particularly vulnerable stretch of US 101 in Marin City by 2050. In northern California, Caltrans determined in 2000 that a bypass around Richardson Grove State Park was cost-prohibitive and instead recommended the section be realigned in compliance with the Surface Transportation Assistance Act of 1982, but , the re-alignment had not begun. Caltrans has also proposed a tunnel between Klamath and Crescent City that would replace a windy segment prone to erosion and landslides; it was estimated to cost $2 billion in 2026. Smaller projects in northern California include fixing a portion of US 101 slipping into the South Fork Eel River near the Mendocino-Humboldt county line. ==Names and memorials==
Names and memorials
California residents usually refer to US 101 as "101" ("one-oh-one"); however, southern California speakers often attach the definite article the ("the 101"), as they do with other numbered freeways. Segments of US 101 bear various names and memorial designations, although many are not used colloquially. Hollywood Freeway, and Ventura Freeway, while the entire Ventura County segment is named Screaming Eagles Highway, with the segment between the Conejo Grade and Camarillo's Old Town district also named Adolfo Camarillo Memorial Highway. Some segments of US 101 between Southern California and the Bay Area are named El Camino Real or El Camino Real Freeway; some also coincide with the Juan Bautista de Anza National Historic Trail. In the Bay Area, US 101 is variously called South Valley Freeway, Bayshore Freeway, and Central Freeway. A segment between Cochrane Road in Morgan Hill and SR 85 in San Jose is also named Sig Sanchez Freeway, while the section between SR 85 and Embarcadero Road in Palo Alto is officially known as Frederick E. Terman Highway. In San Francisco, US 101 is named James Lick Freeway, and the rural stretch between Petaluma and Novato was referred to as Novato Narrows before HOV lanes were added in 2025. Sections in Eureka are known by various names, including Michael J. Burns Freeway for the expressway, Broadway on the north-south street segment (largely unsigned and not registered on Caltrans' logs), and by its street names along the downtown couplet. US 101 is also referred to by its street names along its couplet in Crescent City. ==Major intersections==
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