Nirya
Well-Known Member
The more I look at Gene Autry Way, the more I am confused as to why it was built in the first place.
From what I can tell, the main goal was to provide the easiest path from Angel Stadium to the 5 Freeway, and I guess in the future the city wanted it to run all the way to the convention center. But why? Angel Stadium already doesn't lack for routes in and out (the Angels are my team, and I've been to more than enough games to come to this conclusion), and completing the route to the convention center feels like a huge waste of resources from the city.
On top of that, I'm not even sure Gene Autry Way does a good job of getting people on the freeway to begin with. The main way to use it is the carpool lanes, as adding regular traffic on-off would complicate the routes already in place there, especially when there are perfectly-usable options on Katella and State College already.
At this point, Gene Autry Way feels like a proposal that was made by a city council long ago that planners continue to hold onto despite all available evidence pointing to it being a waste of city resources. The city should cut its losses and move on.
From what I can tell, the main goal was to provide the easiest path from Angel Stadium to the 5 Freeway, and I guess in the future the city wanted it to run all the way to the convention center. But why? Angel Stadium already doesn't lack for routes in and out (the Angels are my team, and I've been to more than enough games to come to this conclusion), and completing the route to the convention center feels like a huge waste of resources from the city.
On top of that, I'm not even sure Gene Autry Way does a good job of getting people on the freeway to begin with. The main way to use it is the carpool lanes, as adding regular traffic on-off would complicate the routes already in place there, especially when there are perfectly-usable options on Katella and State College already.
At this point, Gene Autry Way feels like a proposal that was made by a city council long ago that planners continue to hold onto despite all available evidence pointing to it being a waste of city resources. The city should cut its losses and move on.