Foothill Freeway
The Foothill Freeway, designated as California State Route 210, is a major east-west controlled-access highway in Southern California spanning approximately 85 miles (137 km) from its western terminus at Interstate 5 (I-5) near Sylmar in Los Angeles to its eastern terminus at Interstate 10 (I-10) near Redlands in San Bernardino County.[1] The western portion, signed as Interstate 210 (I-210), extends 44.9 miles (72.3 km) from I-5 to the interchange with State Route 57 (SR 57) in Glendora, while the eastern portion, signed as SR 210, continues 40.2 miles (64.7 km) through the Inland Empire to I-10.[2] It traverses the northern foothills of the San Gabriel and San Bernardino Mountains, serving as a vital corridor connecting the San Fernando Valley, San Gabriel Valley, Pomona Valley, and key cities including Pasadena, Arcadia, San Dimas, Upland, Rancho Cucamonga, Fontana, and San Bernardino.[1] Planning for the Foothill Freeway began in the 1940s as part of broader regional highway development, with the route officially defined in the California Streets and Highways Code in 1963 and approved as a chargeable Interstate Highway on September 15, 1955.[2] Construction commenced in 1958, with initial segments opening in the late 1950s and major portions built during the 1960s and 1970s amid the expansion of California's Interstate system.[3] The western I-210 segment was largely completed by 1981, though extensions and improvements continued; the full SR 210 alignment to Redlands reached substantial completion on July 24, 2007, marking the end of primary construction after nearly five decades of phased development.[3] The freeway derives its name from its alignment parallel to the historic Foothill Boulevard and the surrounding foothill terrain, officially designated as the "Foothill Freeway" by Senate Concurrent Resolution 29 (Chapter 128, Statutes of 1991).[4] In 2023, Assembly Bill 776 (Chapter 543, Statutes of 2023) redesignated the entire route as the "Southern California Native American Freeway" to honor the indigenous tribal lands it traverses, including those of the Tongva, Kizh, Serrano, and Cahuilla peoples, though the Foothill Freeway moniker remains in common use.[5] Notable features include high-occupancy vehicle (HOV) lanes along much of its length to manage congestion, seismic retrofitting for earthquake resilience, and integration with public transit via the Metro Gold Line (now A Line) in the Pasadena area.[2] The route handles over 250,000 vehicles daily in urban sections as of 2023, underscoring its role as a critical artery in one of the nation's most populous regions.[6]Route Description
Western Segment
The western segment of the Foothill Freeway, designated as Interstate 210 (I-210), begins at its interchange with Interstate 5 (I-5, Golden State Freeway) in the Sylmar district of Los Angeles and extends eastward approximately 45 miles (72 km) to its junction with State Route 57 (SR 57, Orange Freeway) in Glendora.[2] This portion traverses densely urbanized areas, passing through the cities of Los Angeles, Glendale, Pasadena, Arcadia, and Azusa, serving as a vital east-west corridor connecting the San Fernando Valley to the San Gabriel Valley.[7] The route generally follows a northeast trajectory, facilitating commuter traffic from northwestern Los Angeles County toward the Inland Empire region. Key interchanges along this segment include the complex junction with SR 134 (Ventura Freeway) in Pasadena, which provides access to downtown Los Angeles and the western San Gabriel Valley; the interchange with I-605 (San Gabriel River Freeway) in Baldwin Park, linking to southern Los Angeles County and Orange County; and the terminal interchange with SR 57 in Glendora, where I-210 connects to the eastern segment of the Foothill Freeway.[8] These interchanges feature multi-level structures to accommodate high traffic volumes, with the SR 134 junction handling over 300,000 vehicles daily as a major hub for regional travel.[2] From Pasadena to Arcadia, approximately 6 miles (9.7 km) of I-210's median hosts the Metro A Line light rail, an at-grade extension built along the former Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway right-of-way and completed in 2016.[9] This integration includes stations such as Memorial Park in Pasadena, offering connections to the Metro B Line and local bus services with a center platform for bidirectional access; Sierra Madre Villa in eastern Pasadena, serving nearby residential areas and the Huntington Library with elevated walkways over the freeway; and Arcadia Station at First Avenue and Santa Clara Street, featuring a center platform, 300 parking spaces, and bicycle facilities for commuters accessing the Santa Anita Racetrack and shopping districts.[10] A dedicated 584-foot bridge over I-210 links Sierra Madre Villa to Arcadia, enhancing transit efficiency while minimizing surface street disruptions.[9] The Metro A Line was further extended eastward from Azusa to Pomona on September 19, 2025, adding stations in Glendora, San Dimas, La Verne, and Pomona, and paralleling additional sections of the Foothill Freeway median to improve regional transit connectivity.[11] The terrain along the western segment transitions from flat, urban lowlands in Los Angeles and Glendale to rising foothills approaching the San Gabriel Mountains, with elevations gradually increasing from near sea level to about 800 feet (244 m) by Glendora.[7] This shift is evident near Pasadena's Devil's Gate area, where the freeway crosses arroyo washes and gains subtle grades, offering views of the mountain frontage while navigating suburban development at the urban-foothill interface.[2]Eastern Segment
The eastern segment of the Foothill Freeway, designated as State Route 210 (SR 210), begins at the interchange with SR 57 in Glendora and proceeds eastward through the communities of San Dimas, La Verne, Claremont, Upland, Rancho Cucamonga, and Fontana before reaching its terminus at Interstate 10 (I-10) in Redlands.[2] This routing serves as a vital east-west corridor connecting the San Gabriel Valley to the Inland Empire, facilitating commuter and regional traffic flow.[12] It transitions seamlessly from the western Interstate 210 (I-210) segment at the SR 57 junction.[7] Spanning approximately 40 miles (64 km), SR 210 traverses a mix of foothill and valley terrain along the northern edge of the Pomona Valley and the base of the San Bernardino Mountains, with urban and suburban development dominating the landscape.[2] The route features three to five lanes per direction in most areas, with recent expansions adding mixed-flow lanes to alleviate congestion in growing population centers.[13] Notable landmarks along the path include the Claremont Colleges near the La Verne-Claremont border and industrial zones in Fontana, underscoring the segment's role in linking educational, commercial, and residential hubs.[2] Major interchanges enhance connectivity, including SR 83 (Euclid Avenue) in Upland for local access to northern San Bernardino County, the partial cloverleaf with I-15 in Rancho Cucamonga serving high-volume north-south travel toward Las Vegas, and the final junction with I-10 in Redlands providing seamless integration into the broader interstate network.[2] The segment's easternmost portion, from the Base Line Road interchange to I-10, represents the final major completion of the Foothill Freeway, with added lanes opening to traffic in June 2023 following construction that began in 2020.[13] This enhancement improved capacity by approximately 20% in the corridor, reducing bottlenecks during peak hours.[14]Glendora Curve
The Glendora Curve refers to the interchange between State Route 57 (SR 57, Orange Freeway) and the Foothill Freeway (Interstate 210/SR 210) located near the border of Glendora and San Dimas in Los Angeles County, California. This section features a tight S-curve on the Foothill Freeway mainline as it navigates the rugged foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains, allowing the route to transition from an east-west alignment to connect southward with SR 57. The curve plays a key role in linking the western and eastern segments of the Foothill Freeway.[15][2] The design of the Glendora Curve was engineered to accommodate the challenging terrain constraints of the mountainous foothills, resulting in a pronounced curvature that limits vehicle speeds for safety. The sharp S-turn requires drivers to reduce velocity significantly compared to the straightaway sections of the freeway, with advisory signage emphasizing caution through the area. This configuration reflects broader engineering efforts to balance connectivity with the natural landscape while minimizing environmental disruption during construction.[15][2] Construction of the Glendora Curve was completed in 2002 as part of the SR 210 extension eastward from the SR 57 interchange, opening the segment between SR 57 and Sierra Avenue on November 24 of that year and replacing earlier temporary alignments used during prior phases of Foothill Freeway development. This finalization integrated the curve into the modern freeway system, following decades of incremental builds on the original I-210 routing dating back to the 1970s. The project enhanced overall traffic flow but retained the curve's inherent challenges due to topographic limitations.[2] Safety features at the Glendora Curve include standard concrete guardrails along the curved barriers, prominent curve advisory signage, and rumble strips to alert drivers of lane departures. Recent maintenance efforts by Caltrans have involved repaving sections of the pavement to improve traction and reduce hydroplaning risks, particularly in wet conditions common to the foothill region. These measures address the curve's reputation as a locally notorious section for its demanding drive, which can contribute to congestion and occasional incidents during peak hours.[15][2]History
Early Planning
The Foothill Freeway was first proposed in 1933 as part of California's state highway planning efforts, designated as Legislative Route Number 157 (LRN 157) by the California Highway Commission to connect from LRN 4 near Tunnel Station in the San Fernando Valley to LRN 9 near San Fernando, following an alignment along existing roads like Brand Boulevard and Foothill Boulevard through the foothill regions.[2] This early conceptualization aimed to provide a more efficient east-west corridor parallel to the urban cores of Los Angeles, addressing growing traffic needs in the rapidly developing San Gabriel Valley and beyond without penetrating central city districts.[2] By 1944, the proposed route gained formal recognition in the Los Angeles County Regional Planning Commission's master plan for metropolitan highways, which outlined a comprehensive network of freeways to serve the expanding region and incorporated the Foothill alignment as a key link between the San Fernando Valley and eastern suburbs.[16] The commission, working alongside engineering boards and the Automobile Club of Southern California, emphasized the route's potential to bypass congested urban areas while hugging the northern foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains for scenic and topographic advantages.[16] In the 1950s, the Foothill Freeway received federal designation under the Interstate Highway System, approved by the Bureau of Public Roads on September 15, 1955, as part of the national network to enhance interstate commerce and mobility.[2] Routing debates during this period, led by the California Division of Highways and local planning commissions, centered on precise alignments through Pasadena and adjacent foothill communities, balancing engineering feasibility, land acquisition challenges, and avoidance of densely populated urban cores to minimize disruption.[2] These efforts by state and local entities laid the groundwork for construction to begin in 1958.Initial Construction
Construction of the Foothill Freeway, designated as part of Interstate 210 (I-210), commenced in 1958 near Pasadena, following route alignments established in early planning documents from the 1950s that prioritized connectivity along the San Gabriel Valley.[17] This initial phase marked the beginning of a multi-decade effort to create an east-west corridor paralleling the San Gabriel foothills, with engineering focused on integrating the freeway into the region's diverse topography. Federal Interstate Highway Act funding, which provided 90% of costs through the Federal-Aid Highway Program, combined with California state bonds, supported the project's inception and early segments, reflecting the national push for interstate infrastructure during the post-World War II era.[17] The first key opening occurred in 1966, when the segment from Pasadena to Arcadia—a roughly 7-mile stretch—was completed, easing access between urban centers and foothill communities.[17] This was followed by the 1969 opening of the Arcadia to Irwindale section, approximately 5 miles long, which extended the freeway eastward toward the San Gabriel River and incorporated initial interchanges for local traffic integration.[17] Construction faced significant challenges due to the rugged terrain of the San Gabriel foothills, including steep gradients and unstable soils that required extensive earth cuts, viaducts, and bridges to navigate arroyos and elevations; a notable incident was the 1972 collapse of the Foothill Freeway bridge over the Arroyo Seco during erection, which killed six workers and led to enhanced safety protocols.[18] By the mid-1970s, these foundational efforts had resulted in about 30 miles of the core I-210 freeway, spanning from near the Ventura Freeway (SR 134) junction in Pasadena eastward to La Verne, forming a vital link for regional commuting despite ongoing gaps.[17] This built length represented a substantial portion of the original planned route through Los Angeles County, with design standards emphasizing six-lane divided roadways and auxiliary lanes to accommodate projected traffic volumes in the growing suburbs.[2]Major Extensions
In the 1980s, significant extensions advanced the Foothill Freeway's eastern reach, including the opening of a segment from Highland Avenue to Fifth Avenue in 1984.[8] The full connection from Highland Avenue to I-10 near Redlands opened on July 1, 1993.[2] These developments built on initial segments to connect key inland areas, avoiding the need for tunnels through the San Gabriel Mountains by routing along the foothill base, though they required extensive viaducts to span rail lines and washes, such as those over the Union Pacific tracks near San Bernardino.[2] Concurrently, the western portion of the freeway, designated as I-210, reached its connection to I-605 in the late 1970s and extended fully to SR 57 in Glendora by the mid-1980s, completing the core Interstate alignment through the San Gabriel Valley.[7] During the 1990s and 2000s, further lengthening focused on bridging gaps in the central corridor, particularly the Pomona to Upland segments, where planning for integration with I-10 emphasized seamless east-west connectivity across San Bernardino County.[13] Construction progressed with the opening of the freeway from SR 57 in San Dimas to Sierra Avenue in 2002, providing a direct link through Pomona, Claremont, and Upland, and alleviating congestion on parallel arterial roads like Foothill Boulevard.[2] This phase incorporated engineering solutions like elevated viaducts over active rail corridors, including the BNSF lines near Upland, to minimize disruptions and ensure seismic resilience without tunneling.[7] The year 2007 marked a pivotal milestone with the opening of the eastern segment from Sierra Avenue to I-10 near Redlands on July 24, accompanied by the full renumbering of former SR 30 portions to SR 210, standardizing the route's designation across its length.[8] This $233 million project added three general-purpose lanes and HOV facilities in each direction, expandable to five, and featured long-life pavement designed for durability in the region's variable terrain.[2] In 2023, the SR 210 Lane Addition and Base Line Interchange project was completed in July, adding mixed-flow lanes and auxiliary lanes from Highland Avenue to San Bernardino Avenue, enhancing capacity over rail viaducts and interchanges without new tunneling.[19] The $198.7 million effort improved traffic flow for over 100,000 daily vehicles while preserving the route's alignment parallel to the San Bernardino Mountains.[13]Route Designation Changes
The Foothill Freeway was designated as Route 210 in the California Streets and Highways Code effective in 1964, encompassing the planned corridor from Interstate 5 near the Angeles National Forest to Interstate 10 in the eastern San Gabriel Valley.[2] This legislative designation established the route's alignment through the San Gabriel and San Bernardino Mountains foothills, with the western segment intended for Interstate Highway status.[2] The eastern portion of the corridor, however, originated as part of State Route 30, which was defined in 1933 as Legislative Route 190 and signed as SR 30 starting in 1934; this included surface alignments that later became freeway segments of the Foothill Freeway east of the Glendora Curve.[20] SR 30 served as the predecessor designation for these eastern parts until major legislative changes in the late 20th century, with freeway construction in that area signed under SR 30 from the 1960s through the 1990s.[20] A short business route, SR 30 Business, operated along Highland Avenue from Rialto to Highland as a connector to the mainline freeway, providing local access until it was decommissioned in 2007 following the completion of adjacent freeway segments.[21] In 1998, Assembly Bill 2388 (Chapter 221) fundamentally altered the route's numbering by redefining SR 210 to include the entire Foothill Freeway corridor and renumbering the eastern SR 30 segments to SR 210, eliminating SR 30 as a designation west of its remaining alignment to Big Bear Lake.[22] This change aimed to unify the route under a single number, streamline signage, and position the eastern extension for potential federal Interstate funding by aligning it with Interstate standards such as full control of access and adequate right-of-way widths.[2] The western segment from I-5 to SR 57 in Glendora was concurrently signed as Interstate 210, reflecting its approval as a chargeable Interstate mile in 1955.[2] The 2007 completion of the final freeway segment between Foothill Boulevard in Upland and I-10 in Redlands prompted the full resigning of the eastern corridor as SR 210 by late 2008, with signage updates phased in through 2009.[23] The interchange with I-215 in San Bernardino, initially constructed in the late 1980s to connect the stub ends of SR 30 and I-215, underwent adjustments in the 1990s and early 2000s to accommodate growing traffic volumes and improve movements, including ramp additions completed in 2012 for full connectivity.[24] These modifications supported concurrency considerations along the corridor but did not alter the primary east-west designation.[24] As of 2025, the eastern segment from SR 57 to I-10 remains designated solely as SR 210 and has not achieved full Interstate 210 status, primarily due to substandard features like insufficient shoulder widths that preclude federal approval under Interstate Highway criteria; upgrades for Interstate eligibility continue to be evaluated for funding and implementation.[25] This partial Interstate designation reflects ongoing efforts to balance state maintenance responsibilities with federal aid eligibility for high-impact corridors.[2]Impacts and Controversies
Community Displacement
The construction of the Foothill Freeway's northern spur in Pasadena during the 1950s and 1960s displaced approximately 2,600 to 2,700 residents, with two-thirds of those affected being people of color, primarily from established Black communities in northwest Pasadena.[26] These neighborhoods, such as Orange Grove-Lincoln and Fair Oaks, were vibrant hubs for African American families who had settled there amid earlier racial covenants and segregation, only to face demolition for right-of-way acquisition that began in the early 1960s and extended through the freeway's completion in 1975.[26] The displacement severed social ties, destroyed local businesses, and forced many families into overcrowded inner-city housing in Los Angeles, exacerbating economic hardship as compensation often fell short of fair market values—homeowners received offers around $75,000 for properties valued at $85,000 or more.[27] Beyond Pasadena, the freeway's expansion led to home and business relocations in other communities along the route. In Arcadia, the 1968 shift of the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad tracks to accommodate the Interstate 210 alignment necessitated the dismantling of the historic Oakwood station and displaced nearby residents and commercial operations along Foothill Boulevard.[28] The routing decisions reflected deep racial inequities, as the freeway was deliberately aligned through minority-heavy areas previously redlined as "hazardous" on 1930s Home Owners' Loan Corporation maps due to their Black and Mexican American populations, while affluent white neighborhoods in places like La Cañada Flintridge were spared similar incursions.[26] By 1960, over 80% of northwest Pasadena's population near the proposed route consisted of people of color, and the project amplified segregation by polarizing demographics—non-white occupancy in affected tracts dropped from over 50% in 1960 to 17% by 1980.[29] This pattern aligned with broader urban renewal practices that labeled such areas "blighted" to justify clearance, often excluding affected communities from planning input.[26] Mitigation measures during construction were severely limited, with relocation assistance primarily consisting of inadequate financial reimbursements that failed to account for discriminatory housing markets, leaving many displaced families unable to secure comparable homes.[27] Efforts like Pasadena's Pepper Project in the 1960s aimed to provide integrated affordable housing but displaced additional Black residents and collapsed amid white opposition and Proposition 14's reinforcement of housing discrimination in 1964.[29] In recent years, however, studies from 2023 to 2025 have brought renewed attention to "freeway racism," documenting these historical injustices and calling for reparative actions such as expanded housing preferences for displaced BIPOC residents and community reconnection initiatives.[29][26] As of October 2025, Pasadena's reparations advisory panel is considering expanding efforts to include families displaced by the I-210, with at least 51% of panel members to be descendants of affected residents.[30]Environmental Effects
The construction and operation of the Foothill Freeway (I-210) have led to significant habitat disruption in the foothill ecosystems of the San Gabriel Mountains, primarily through fragmentation that severs wildlife corridors and increases habitat loss. Major roadways like I-210 encroach on sensitive ecological areas, creating barriers to wildlife movement and elevating risks of vehicle collisions for wildlife. In the East San Gabriel Valley, this fragmentation affects critical habitats in the Puente Hills and wildland-urban interfaces, where urban expansion alongside the freeway exacerbates isolation of remaining natural patches.[31] Air quality impacts from the freeway include elevated emissions, particularly particulate matter, due to increased vehicle traffic and construction activities. A 2020 air quality study for the State Route 210 mixed-flow lane addition project from Highland Avenue to San Bernardino Avenue projected a 2% rise in PM2.5 emissions (an increase of 1 ton per year or 5 pounds per day) by 2040 under the build alternative compared to no-build conditions, alongside modest increases in NOx and CO2 from higher vehicle miles traveled. Construction phases for such expansions generate temporary PM2.5 spikes, with maximum daily emissions reaching 25 pounds from exhaust and fugitive dust, though these remain below South Coast Air Quality Management District thresholds with mitigation.[32] Runoff from I-210 construction has adversely affected local watersheds, introducing sediments, fuels, and other pollutants into surface waters like the San Gabriel River. Erosion along embankments and disturbed soils during bridge and lane additions increases sediment loads, potentially degrading water quality in downstream habitats and exceeding stormwater permitting limits without best management practices. These impacts are concentrated in the San Gabriel Watershed, where freeway-adjacent development amplifies non-point source pollution during rain events.[33] Recent Caltrans assessments from 2022 to 2025 evaluate HOV lane operations on I-210, noting slight degradation in facility performance but emphasizing mitigation through transit integration to curb vehicle miles traveled growth. The Foothill Gold Line (Metro A Line) extension along the corridor, advancing to Pomona by 2025, supports VMT reduction by promoting rail use over single-occupancy vehicles, with projected congestion relief offsetting some induced travel. Positive environmental measures include ongoing installation of noise barriers, such as the 16,000 feet of sound walls constructed along I-210 in Pasadena in 2024, which reduce noise pollution for adjacent ecosystems and communities. Additionally, green medians and landscaping integrated with the Metro A Line provide vegetated buffers that enhance stormwater filtration and habitat connectivity in urban segments.[34][35][36]Future Developments
Interchange Improvements
Several ongoing and proposed upgrades to interchanges along the Foothill Freeway (SR-210) aim to enhance safety, capacity, and connectivity in the Inland Empire region as of 2025. These improvements focus on addressing bottlenecks at key junctions, incorporating modern traffic management features while minimizing environmental impacts.[2][37] The proposed Victoria Avenue interchange near Highland represents a major addition to SR-210, featuring new ramps and signals to improve local access. Environmental review under the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) and National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) began in 2020, with public notices and assessments continuing through 2023. As of November 2025, the project remains in the project approval and environmental document (PA&ED) phase, with construction anticipated to start after environmental clearances, potentially leading to an opening in the late 2020s.[32][37][38] This interchange will connect SR-210 directly to Victoria Avenue, serving residential and commercial areas in Highland and San Bernardino.[39] At the SR-210/I-215 interchange, ramp widening efforts completed in the 2010s increased capacity to handle growing traffic volumes between the two routes.[40] High-occupancy vehicle (HOV) connectivity enhancements, including auxiliary lanes and ramp improvements to support potential express lane operations, are planned as part of long-term corridor projects.[37] These upgrades will facilitate smoother transitions for vehicles merging from I-215 onto SR-210, reducing weave-related delays.[41] Safety enhancements at the Glendora Curve on I-210, a notorious high-accident section, are ongoing under Caltrans' Highway Safety Improvement Program, including signage updates and pavement rehabilitation efforts.[42][2] These measures target the curve's history of speed-related incidents, promoting safer navigation through the San Gabriel Mountains foothills. In 2025, additional maintenance such as bridge deck rehabilitation and lane reductions in the Pasadena area through summer are addressing pavement and safety needs.[43][44] Funding for these interchange projects draws from federal and state sources, including grants under the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA) of 2021, which has allocated millions for SR-210 enhancements such as ramp widenings and new interchanges.[2] Additional support comes from California's Senate Bill 1 (SB1) road repair funds and local Measure I sales tax revenues in San Bernardino County.[45] For instance, IIJA contributions have backed planning for the Victoria Avenue project.[37] Overall, these improvements are expected to reduce congestion by increasing throughput at critical points. They also enhance access for Inland Empire communities, supporting economic activity by improving links to employment centers and regional transit. The completion of Foothill Gold Line Phase 2B to Pomona in 2025 will further integrate public transit options along the corridor.[46]Potential Extensions
The designation of the entire Foothill Freeway as Interstate 210 has been under consideration since the completion of the SR 210 segment in 2007, with ongoing debates centered on whether the eastern portion meets federal Interstate Highway standards. As of 2025, the route from SR 57 near San Dimas to I-15 in San Bernardino remains signed as SR 210 due to substandard features, including insufficient lane widths (less than 12 feet in some areas) and shoulders narrower than the required 10 feet. Caltrans has stated that upgrades to these elements are prerequisites for full Interstate designation and associated signage changes, though no firm timeline for completion has been set.[47][48][49] Building on the September 2023 completion of the SR 210 Lane Addition project between Baseline Road and I-10, which added mixed-flow lanes to alleviate bottlenecks, Caltrans and the San Bernardino County Transportation Authority (SBCTA) have outlined further capacity enhancements, including mixed-flow lane expansions with environmental enhancement work continuing through fall 2027.[41] The 2025 California HOV Facilities Degradation Action Plan specifies mitigation measures for existing HOV facilities on SR-210, such as enhanced enforcement, public awareness campaigns, and auxiliary lane additions (construction starting 2029), alongside broader transit improvements like the Foothill Gold Line extension to address degradation and improve traffic flow for over 150,000 daily vehicles.[34] Long-term plans include potential HOV lane additions from I-215 to I-10, though unfunded and programmed for completion by 2045.[37][50] These proposed enhancements face significant challenges, including securing funding through sources like Measure I sales tax revenues, which have allocated over $167 million for SR 210 projects but require competitive state and federal matching. Environmental reviews under the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) are mandatory, evaluating impacts such as air quality degradation and habitat disruption in the San Bernardino Mountains foothills. Community opposition is also prominent, with concerns over increased noise, pollution, and historical displacement patterns similar to those during initial construction, leading to delays in approval processes.[41][51][52] Timelines for implementation vary by segment, with ongoing construction for mixed-flow lane additions expected to extend through fall 2027, and potential groundbreaking for auxiliary lanes and related interchanges targeted between 2026 and 2030, contingent on funding approvals and environmental clearances.[41][37]Exit List
I-210 Exits
The Interstate 210 (I-210) segment of the Foothill Freeway extends approximately 45 miles from its western terminus at Interstate 5 (I-5) in Sylmar to its eastern terminus at State Route 57 (SR 57) in Glendora, serving urban and suburban areas in the San Fernando and San Gabriel Valleys. Exits are numbered sequentially based on post miles from the I-5 interchange, with some split exits (e.g., A/B) for closely spaced ramps. The route includes major interchanges with SR 118, SR 134, SR 2, SR 19, I-605, and SR 57, providing access to local streets, business districts, and HOV facilities in select locations. The configuration remains unchanged as of 2025, consistent with updates through the 2010s.[53][54][55] The following table lists all exits along I-210 from west to east, including post miles (approximate for later interchanges where specified), exit numbers, and primary destinations for each direction. Notes indicate partial access, HOV connections, or other relevant details where applicable.| mi | Exit (EB) | Destinations (EB) | Exit (WB) | Destinations (WB) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.00 | – | I-5 North/Sacramento; I-5 South/Los Angeles | – | I-5 South/Los Angeles; I-5 North/Sacramento | Western terminus; HOV direct ramps available |
| 0.84 | 1 | Yarnell Street (Sylmar) | 1C | Yarnell Street (Sylmar) | Local access |
| 1.92 | 2 | Roxford Street (Sylmar) | 2 | Roxford Street (Sylmar) | Local access |
| 3.28 | 3 | Polk Street (Sylmar) | 3 | Polk Street (Sylmar) | Local access |
| 4.11 | 4 | Hubbard Street (Sylmar) | 4 | Hubbard Street (Sylmar) | Local access |
| 4.94 | 5 | Maclay Street (San Fernando) | 5 | Maclay Street (San Fernando) | Local access |
| 5.91 | 6A | SR 118 West/Ventura | 6B | SR 118 East/Simi Valley | Partial cloverleaf interchange |
| 6.00 | 6B | Paxton Street (Sylmar) | 6A | Paxton Street (Sylmar) | Local access |
| 7.82 | 8 | Osborne Street/Foothill Boulevard (Lake View Terrace) | 8 | Osborne Street (Sylmar) | Local access |
| 9.43 | 9 | Wheatland Avenue (Lake View Terrace) | 9 | Wheatland Avenue (Sylmar) | Local access |
| 11.08 | 11 | Sunland Boulevard (Sunland-Tujunga) | 11 | Sunland Boulevard (Sunland) | Local access |
| 14.17 | 14 | La Tuna Canyon Road (Sun Valley) | 14 | La Tuna Canyon Road (Sun Valley) | Local access |
| 15.62 | 16 | Lowell Avenue (Sun Valley/Tujunga) | 16 | Lowell Avenue (Tujunga/Sun Valley) | Local access |
| 16.77 | 17A | Pennsylvania Avenue (La Crescenta) | 17A | Pennsylvania Avenue (La Crescenta) | Local access |
| 17.40 | 17B | La Crescenta Avenue (Montrose) | 17B | La Crescenta Avenue (Montrose) | Local access |
| 18.22 | 18 | Ocean View Boulevard (Montrose) | 18 | Ocean View Boulevard/Montrose (Montrose) | Local access |
| 18.88 | 19 | SR 2 South/Glendale Freeway (Los Angeles) | 19 | SR 2 (Glendale Freeway) (La Canada Flintridge) | Partial access eastbound to south only |
| 19.88 | 20 | SR 2/Angeles Crest Highway (La Canada Flintridge) | 20 | SR 2/Angeles Crest Highway (La Canada Flintridge) | Full access |
| 20.60 | 21 | Gould Avenue/Foothill Boulevard (La Canada Flintridge) | 21 | Foothill Boulevard (La Canada Flintridge) | Local access |
| 21.53 | 22A | Berkshire Place/Oak Grove Drive (La Canada Flintridge) | 22A | Berkshire Avenue/Oak Grove Drive (La Canada Flintridge) | Local access |
| 22.49 | 22B | Arroyo Boulevard/Windsor Avenue (Pasadena) | 22B | Arroyo Boulevard/Windsor Avenue (Pasadena) | Local access |
| 23.19 | 23 | Lincoln Avenue/Washington Boulevard (Pasadena) | 23 | Lincoln Avenue (Pasadena) | Local access |
| 24.06 | 24 | Seco Street/Mountain Street (Pasadena) | 24 | Mountain Street/Seco Street (Pasadena) | Local access |
| 24.96 | 25A | Fair Oaks Avenue South (Pasadena) | 25B | Fair Oaks Avenue/Marengo Avenue (Pasadena) | Local access |
| 24.96 | 25B | SR 134 West/Ventura Freeway (Eagle Rock) | 25A | SR 134 East/Ventura Freeway (Pasadena) | HOV access available; partial cloverleaf |
| 25.60 | 26A | SR 134 West/Ventura Freeway, Del Mar Boulevard/California Boulevard/Colorado Boulevard (Pasadena) | – | – | Continuation ramp |
| 26.33 | 26 | Los Robles Avenue/Lake Avenue (Pasadena) | 26B | Lake Avenue (Pasadena) | Local access |
| 26.94 | 27 | Hill Avenue (Pasadena) | 27A | Hill Avenue (Pasadena) | Local access |
| 27.41 | 27B | Allen Avenue (Pasadena) | 27B | Allen Avenue (Pasadena) | Local access |
| 28.25 | 28 | Sierra Madre Boulevard/Altadena Drive (Pasadena) | 29A | Sierra Madre Boulevard/San Marino (Pasadena) | Local access |
| 28.68 | 29A | San Gabriel Boulevard (San Gabriel) | – | – | Eastbound only in some configurations |
| 29.29 | 29B | Madre Street/Sierra Madre Villa Avenue (Pasadena) | 29B | Madre Street (Pasadena) | Local access |
| 29.80 | 30A | SR 19 South/Rosemead Boulevard South (Temple City) | 30 | SR 19 South/Rosemead Boulevard/Michillinda Avenue (Arcadia) | Local access |
| 29.80 | 30B | Rosemead Boulevard North/Michillinda Avenue (Rosemead) | – | – | Northbound access |
| 30.82 | 31 | Baldwin Avenue (Arcadia/Sierra Madre) | 31 | Baldwin Avenue/Sierra Madre (Arcadia) | Local access |
| 31.88 | 32 | Santa Anita Avenue (Arcadia) | 32 | Santa Anita Avenue (Arcadia) | Local access; HOV lane access nearby |
| 32.89 | 33 | Huntington Drive (Arcadia/Monrovia) | 33 | Huntington Drive/Arcadia (Arcadia) | Local access |
| 33.91 | 34 | Myrtle Avenue (Monrovia) | 34 | Myrtle Avenue (Monrovia) | Local access |
| 34.74 | 35A | Mountain Avenue (Monrovia) | 35A | Mountain Avenue (Monrovia) | Local access |
| 35.24 | 35B | Buena Vista Street (Monrovia) | 35B | Buena Vista Street (Monrovia) | Local access |
| 36.41 | 36A | I-605 South (Duarte) | – | – | Major interchange; southbound only eastbound |
| 36.43 | 36B | Mount Olive Drive/I-605 North (Baldwin Park) | 36A | Mount Olive Drive (Baldwin Park) | Partial access; I-605 north from EB via loop |
| 37.86 | 38 | Irwindale Avenue (Irwindale/Baldwin Park) | 38 | Irwindale Avenue/Irwindale/Baldwin Park (Baldwin Park) | Local access |
| 38.96 | 39 | Vernon Avenue (Azusa) | 39 | Vernon Avenue (Azusa) | Local access |
| 39.60 | 40 | Azusa Avenue/SR 39 (Azusa) | 40 | Azusa Avenue/CA-39 (Azusa) | Local access |
| 40.60 | 41 | Citrus Avenue (Covina/Azusa) | 41 | Citrus Avenue/Covina/Azusa (Azusa) | Local access |
| 41.59 | 42 | Grand Avenue (Glendora) | 42 | Grand Avenue/Glendora (Glendora) | Local access |
| 42.50 | 43 | Sunflower Avenue (Glendora) | 43 | Sunflower Avenue (Glendora) | Local access |
| 44.00 | 44 | Lone Hill Avenue (Glendora) | 44 | Lone Hill Avenue (Glendora) | Local access |
| 44.90 | 45 | SR 57 South/Orange Freeway (Pomona/Santa Ana) | 45 | SR 57 (San Dimas) | Eastern terminus; partial access to SR 57 north via continuation to SR 210 |
SR 210 Exits
The SR 210 segment continues the Foothill Freeway eastward from its junction with Interstate 210 (I-210) and SR 57 in San Dimas, with exit numbering maintained sequentially from the I-210 portion for continuity. Postmiles for SR 210 are measured independently from 0.00 at the SR 57 interchange to approximately 40.4 at the I-10 interchange in Redlands. The route traverses Los Angeles and San Bernardino counties, serving urban and suburban areas with interchanges primarily for local arterials and major routes.[53] The table below details all exits along SR 210, including postmile, exit number, destinations (signed similarly eastbound and westbound), associated city or area, and notes on recent developments where applicable.| Postmile | Exit | Destinations | City/Area | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.00 | 45 | SR 57 / Santa Ana Freeway | San Dimas | Western terminus of SR 210; SR 57 provides access south to Pomona and Anaheim. |
| 0.58 | 46 | San Dimas Avenue | San Dimas | Local access to San Dimas commercial district. |
| 1.76 | 47 | Foothill Boulevard (Historic SR 66 / SR 66) | La Verne | Connects to historic Route 66 corridor and La Verne business areas. |
| 3.16 | 48 | Fruit Street | Claremont | Serves Claremont colleges and residential neighborhoods. |
| 4.67 | 50 | Towne Avenue | Claremont | Access to Claremont village and industrial zones. |
| 7.25 | 52 | Baseline Road | Upland | Links to Upland retail centers. |
| 8.75 | 54 | Mountain Avenue / Mount Baldy Road | Upland | Gateway to Mount Baldy State Park and San Gabriel Mountains recreation. |
| 10.74 | 55 | Campus Avenue | Rancho Cucamonga | Serves California State University, San Bernardino satellite campus and local businesses. |
| 11.85 | 56 | Carnelian Street | Rancho Cucamonga | Residential and commercial access in northern Rancho Cucamonga. |
| 13.15 | 57 | Archibald Avenue | Rancho Cucamonga | Major north-south arterial connecting to Ontario International Airport vicinity. |
| 14.16 | 59 | Haven Avenue | Rancho Cucamonga | Access to Victoria Gardens shopping center and industrial parks. |
| 15.16 | 60 | Milliken Avenue | Rancho Cucamonga | Serves growing suburban developments and logistics facilities. |
| 16.41 | 61 | Day Creek Boulevard | Rancho Cucamonga | Local connector to Etiwanda community and schools. |
| 18.90 | 63 | I-15 / Ontario / Barstow / San Diego | Fontana | Major interchange with I-15; provides connectivity to High Desert and Southern California coast. |
| 19.18 | 64 | Cherry Avenue | Fontana | Industrial and residential access in Fontana. |
| 21.18 | 66 | Citrus Avenue | Fontana | Connects to Kaiser Permanente hospital and local commerce. |
| 22.18 | 67 | Sierra Avenue | Fontana | Serves Fontana Speedway area and northern residential zones. |
| 23.28 | 68 | Alder Avenue | Rialto | Access to Rialto industrial corridor. |
| 24.64 | 69 | Ayala Drive / SR 83 | Rialto | Partial access to SR 83 north; local arterial for Rialto and Colton. |
| 26.25 | 71 | Riverside Avenue | San Bernardino | Links to downtown San Bernardino and historic sites. |
| 26.92 | 72 | Pepper Avenue | San Bernardino | Interchange opened in 2018 to support regional goods movement; auxiliary lanes extended in 2023 for better traffic flow.[56] |
| 27.94 | 73 | State Street / University Parkway | San Bernardino | Serves California State University, San Bernardino campus. |
| 29.12 | 74 | I-215 / Barstow / Riverside | San Bernardino | Northern leg of I-215 interchange; connects to I-215 north to Cajon Pass. |
| 30.19 | 75A | H Street | San Bernardino | Local access to San Bernardino neighborhoods. |
| 30.35 | 75B | I-215 / Los Angeles / Riverside | San Bernardino | Southern leg of I-215 interchange; I-215 south to Riverside and I-10. |
| 31.47 | 76 | SR 18 / Waterman Avenue / Lake Arrowhead | San Bernardino | Beginning of SR 18; eastbound on-ramp widened to two lanes, completed August 2025, to improve traffic flow.[57] |
| 32.97 | 78 | Del Rosa Avenue | San Bernardino | Residential and community access. |
| 33.98 | 79 | Highland Avenue / SR 259 | Highland | Key link to SR 259 north; serves Highland commercial areas. |
| 35.99 | 80 | SR 330 / City of San Bernardino / Big Bear Lake | Highland | Access to mountain resorts via SR 330; auxiliary lanes added in 2023 between this and Base Line Road.[13] |
| 36.57 | 82 | Base Line Road | Redlands | Major east-west arterial; part of SR 210 lane addition project, including ramp improvements completed in 2023.[2] |
| 39.59 | 83 | San Bernardino Avenue | Redlands | Connects to Redlands historic district and University of Redlands. |
| 40.41 | 85A–B | I-10 / Los Angeles / Indio (split; 85A westbound, 85B eastbound left) | Redlands | Eastern terminus of SR 210; I-10 west to Los Angeles, east to Palm Springs and Arizona. Proposed new interchange at nearby Victoria Avenue under environmental review as of 2023, with construction potentially starting post-2025. |