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Eyes on the Street: New Bus Lanes on Alvarado Street

New bus lane markings on Alvarado Street. All photos by Joe Linton/Streetsblog L.A.

The L.A. City Transportation Department (LADOT) and Metro are adding bus lane markings on Alvarado Street.

The Alvarado bus lanes will extend about 1.6-miles from 7th Street (at MacArthur Park) to Sunset Boulevard (near Echo Park).

This bus lane project was announced in December 2020. Alvarado is one of five recent new bus lanes that grew out of the bus speed improvement initiative spearheaded by L.A. City Councilmember and Metro Boardmember Mike Bonin. Of the recent crop of new Metro/LADOT bus lanes, these will be the first ones located outside of downtown L.A., though they are in neighborhoods just west of downtown that are still very much in the population-dense and transit-rich vibrant core of the city. The Westlake area arguably sees more people getting around on foot than downtown does, despite the area being more walked than walkable.

Per LADOT's initial report on the facility, the Alvarado project "will increase bus frequency along the corridor from approximately ten minutes to seven minutes, and reduce travel time by three minutes in each direction." To minimize parking loss, the bus lanes will operate only on weekdays, and at peak hours in peak directions: 7-10 a.m. southbound and 3-7 p.m. northbound. In addition to serving Metro line 200, the bus lanes will also, for a few blocks, serve LADOT's DASH Pico Union/Echo Park buses.

DASH
DASH Pico Union/Echo Park bus on the Alvarado Street bus lane
DASH

In early 2021, Metro and LADOT started doing outreach for the Alvarado project. In addition to targeted engagement, the two transit providers hosted a March 17 virtual public meeting, where the project received a lot of pushback from a few drivers. A repeated concern was that drivers would be subjected to delays of up to ninety seconds (per Metro's presentation). Ultimately, Metro Community Relations Manager Julia Brown responded to driver concerns saying that the project "focus is on equity;" it's about serving transit riders without causing excessive inconvenience for others.

In an email today, LADOT spokesperson Colin Sweeney provided some statistics on the expected ridership on the Alvarado bus lane. Out of 12,096 anticipated daily boardings, riders are:

    • Primarily: Latino (77 percent), women (52 percent), and/or over 35 years old (52 percent)
    • Local residents: 67 percent do not transfer lines
    • Car-free: 94 percent do not own a vehicle
    • Low income: 60 percent below the poverty line
    • Essential workers: 77 percent ride five days a week or more
    • Lifelong riders: 63 percent have been riding transit for five or more years

Construction crews were out working on the new Alvarado bus lane striping today.

Contractor truck scraping existing pavement markings this morning
Contractor truck scraping existing pavement markings this morning
Contractor truck scraping existing pavement markings this morning

The project appears to be nearly complete south of the 101 Freeway, with no new marking yet between the 101 and Sunset. Sweeney stated that LADOT crews are scheduled to complete work from 8th Street to the 101 this week.

The Alvarado bus lanes striping appears to be nearly complete below the 101 Freeway
The Alvarado bus lanes striping appears to be nearly complete below the 101 Freeway. (The photo was taken at an off-peak-hour, so the parked cars are allowed to park in the lane.)
The Alvarado bus lanes striping appears to be nearly complete below the 101 Freeway

So far, there is one red-backed area at the intersection of Alvarado and Beverly Boulevard.

Red bus lane on Alvarado Street just north of Beverly Boulevard.
Red bus lane on Alvarado Street just north of Beverly Boulevard.
Red bus lane on Alvarado Street just north of Beverly Boulevard.

There are some new signs posted, but not all of them appear to be installed yet.

Southbound xxxx
The Alvarado Street bus lane will operate 7-10 a.m. southbound. Note the 10 a.m. sticker has been placed over the sign that had read 9 a.m.
Southbound xxxx
Northbound
The Alvarado Street bus lane will operate 3-7 p.m. northbound.
Northbound

With the new bus lanes, the peak-hour parking restriction periods will be extended by one hour. Southbound it was 7-9 a.m., but will soon extend to 10 a.m. Northbound it was 4-7 p.m. and will soon start at 3 p.m.

LADOT seems to have reverted to the less bike-friendly version of the bus-only lane signage. In 2016, DOT switched to a sign that included bikes at the top of the sign, replacing an earlier version that noted "Bikes OK" at the bottom. The new signs on Alvarado follow the older format.

LADOT and Metro plan to open the new Alvarado bus lanes in Summer 2021. Also this summer, Metro and LADOT plan to begin outreach for the next new bus lanes project: a couplet on Grand Avenue and Olive Street in downtown L.A.

New Alvarado Street bus lane markings at the northeast corner of MacArthur Park. In this area Alvarado has three scramble diagonal crossings.
New Alvarado Street bus lane markings at the northeast corner of MacArthur Park. In this area Alvarado has three scramble diagonal crossings.
New Alvarado Street bus lane markings at the northeast corner of MacArthur Park. In this area Alvarado has three scramble diagonal crossings.

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