Rosecrans Avenue
33°54′13″N 118°11′00″W / 33.903643°N 118.183414°W / 33.903643; -118.183414
- Rosecrans
- Douglas
junctions
I-405 in Hawthorne
I-110 in Los Angeles
I-710 in Paramount
SR 19 in Bellflower
I-605 in Norwalk
I-5 in Norwalk
CR N8 in La Mirada
SR 39 in La Mirada
Rosecrans Avenue is a major west-east thoroughfare in Los Angeles and Orange Counties, California, USA. It has a total length of 27.5 miles (44.3 km). The street is named after U.S. Union General William S. Rosecrans, who purchased 13,000 acres (5,300 ha) of Rancho Sausal Redondo southwest of Los Angeles in 1869.[1][2] Rosecrans Avenue was originally named Drexel Avenue, and ran through the Rosecrans Rancho which is part of modern-day Gardena.
Route description
Rosecrans Avenue begins at the beach near El Porto in Manhattan Beach. On its route, it crosses through Manhattan Beach, El Segundo (northside of street only), Hawthorne, Lawndale, Gardena, Harbor Gateway, Willowbrook, Compton, East Rancho Dominguez, Paramount, Downey (for one block between Century Blvd and Lakewood Blvd/SR-19), Bellflower, Norwalk, Santa Fe Springs, La Mirada, Buena Park (southside of street only; Fullerton and La Mirada connect on the northside near Beach Blvd/SR-39), and Fullerton where the road ends at Euclid Street (eastern terminus). It intersects the 405, 110, 710, 605, and 5 freeways (all Interstates). Rosecrans is mostly a straight road until the intersection with Clark Avenue in Bellflower and again at Valley View Avenue in La Mirada when it starts to curve through the West Coyote Hills. Rosecrans enters the cities of Fullerton and Buena Park crossing into Orange County after the intersection with Beach Boulevard. Rosecrans Avenue enters Buena Park approaching Ralph B. Clark Regional Park before entering Fullerton halfway the park (no signs indicate where La Mirada ends and Buena Park begins/ends; there is one for where Fullerton begins on the southside of street).
From Lakewood Boulevard in Downey/Bellflower to Valley View Avenue in Santa Fe Springs/La Mirada, Rosecrans is about one mile south of, and runs parallel to Imperial Highway.
Rosecrans at Maquardt Avenue in Santa Fe Springs has been considered the most hazardous railroad grade crossing in California because from 2013 to 2019 there were 31 accidents and 6 deaths and as a result an overpass that will take Rosecrans Avenue up over the train tracks is now under construction and will be completed in 2025.[3][4] BNSF, Amtrak's Pacific Surfliner and Southwest Chief, and Metrolink's Orange County and 91 lines run towards that crossing.
Termini
- Western terminus, The Strand in Manhattan Beach: 33°54′02″N 118°25′10″W / 33.900518°N 118.41955°W / 33.900518; -118.41955
- Eastern terminus, Euclid Street in Fullerton: 33°53′37″N 117°56′40″W / 33.8935°N 117.9445°W / 33.8935; -117.9445
Transportation
Beach Cities Transit line 109 (between Highland Avenue and Sepulveda Boulevard), Metro Local line 125 (between Sepulveda Boulevard and Norwalk Station) and Norwalk Transit line 5 (east of Norwalk Station) operate on Rosecrans Avenue. The Metro J Line Rosecrans/I-110 station on the Harbor Transitway is located on Interstate 110 below Rosecrans Avenue. At Douglas Street, the Metro C Line serves a station.
In popular culture
Rosecrans Avenue is well-known among hip hop culture for its reputation for violence and crime. The thoroughfare is commonly associated with Compton native Kendrick Lamar, as he often mentions it in numerous songs from his second studio album good kid, m.A.A.d city, in the songs "m.A.A.d city," "The Art of Peer Pressure," "Compton," and "Sherane a.k.a Master Splinter's Daughter."
The street is mentioned by Tupac Shakur in "California Love",[5] as well as "Genocide" and “ETA” by Dr. Dre.
Rosecrans is an album by DJ Quik and Problem named after Rosecrans Avenue. [6]
References
- ^ "General Rosecrans | South Bay History". blogs.dailybreeze.com.
- ^ Duke, Donald (1996). "Rosecrans: The Story of a General, a Boom Housing Tract, and a Railroad" (PDF). lawesterners.org. Retrieved 2021-05-17.
- ^ Sprague, Mike (2019-02-20). "Even without the high-speed train, state's most dangerous crossing in Santa Fe Springs will get fixed". Whittier Daily News. Retrieved 2021-12-09.
- ^ Linton, Joe (2021-12-07). "Metro Moving Forward with Rosecrans/Marquardt Grade Separation". Streetsblog Los Angeles. Retrieved 2021-12-09.
- ^ "2Pac (Ft. Dr. Dre & Roger Troutman) – California Love" – via genius.com.
- ^ Baker, Soren (April 20, 2016). "DJ Quik & Problem "Rosecrans" EP Stream, Cover Art & Tracklist". hiphopdx.com. Retrieved 2021-05-17.
- v
- t
- e
- Alameda St.
- Alvarado St.
- Atlantic Blvd./Atlantic Ave.
- Avalon Blvd.
- Aviation Blvd.
- Azusa Ave.
- Beverly Dr.
- Beverly Glen Blvd.
- Broadway
- Cahuenga Blvd.
- Central Ave.
- Crenshaw Blvd.
- Doheny Dr.
- Fairfax Ave.
- Fair Oaks Ave.
- Figueroa St.
- Garfield Ave./Cherry Ave.
- Glendale Blvd./Brand Blvd.
- Gower St.
- Grand Ave.
- Highland Ave.
- Hill St.
- Hoover
- La Brea Ave./Hawthorne Blvd.
- La Cienega Blvd.
- Lake Ave.
- Laurel Canyon Blvd./Crescent Heights Blvd.
- Lincoln Blvd.
- Los Angeles St.
- Main St.
- Normandie Ave.
- Ocean Ave.
- Orange Grove Blvd.
- Robertson Blvd.
- Rosemead Blvd./Lakewood Blvd.
- San Fernando Rd.
- San Pedro St.
- Sawtelle Blvd.
- Sepulveda Blvd.
- Sierra Hwy.
- Sierra Madre Blvd.
- Soto St.
- Pacific Blvd./Long Beach Blvd.
- Pacific Coast Hwy.
- Vermont Ave.
- Vine St.
- Western Ave.
- Westwood Blvd.
- Wilcox Ave.
- Adams Blvd.
- Alondra Blvd.
- Angeles Crest Hwy.
- Arrow Hwy.
- Artesia Blvd.
- Bandini Blvd.
- Beverly Blvd.
- Carroll Ave.
- Carson St.
- Century Blvd.
- Colima Rd./Golden Springs Dr.
- Compton Blvd./Marine Ave.
- Culver Blvd.
- Del Amo Blvd.
- El Segundo Blvd.
- Florence Ave.
- Franklin Ave.
- Garvey Ave.
- Hollywood Blvd.
- Huntington Dr.
- Imperial Hwy.
- Jefferson Blvd.
- Lomita Blvd.
- Los Feliz Blvd.
- Manchester Ave./Firestone Blvd.
- Manhattan Beach Blvd.
- Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.
- Melrose Ave.
- Montana Ave.
- Mulholland Dr.
- Nadeau
- Obama Blvd.
- Olympic Blvd.
- Pico Blvd.
- Rosecrans Ave.
- Santa Monica Blvd.
- Slauson Ave.
- Sunset Blvd./Cesar Chavez Ave.
- Temple St.
- Vernon Ave.
- Venice Blvd.
- Washington Blvd.
- Whittier Blvd.
- Wilshire Blvd.
- Arrow Hwy.
- Balboa Blvd.
- Cahuenga Blvd.
- Coldwater Canyon Ave.
- Colorado Blvd.
- Foothill Blvd.
- Glenoaks Blvd.
- Lankershim Blvd.
- Laurel Canyon Blvd.
- Mulholland Dr.
- Reseda Blvd.
- Riverside Dr.
- San Fernando Rd.
- Sepulveda Blvd.
- Sierra Hwy.
- Sunland Blvd./Vineland Ave.
- Topanga Canyon Blvd.
- Valley Blvd.
- Van Nuys Blvd.
- Ventura Blvd.
- Victory Blvd.
traffic circles
- Gower Gulch
- Hollywood and Vine
- Naud Junction
- SM Entertainment Square
- Sunset Junction
- Abbot Kinney Blvd.
- California Incline
- Centinela Ave./Bundy Dr.
- Pacific Coast Hwy.
- San Vicente Blvd.
- Telegraph Rd.
- Gaffey St.
- Western Ave.
- 77 Sunset Strip
- "All I Wanna Do"
- "Blue Jay Way"
- "Dead Man's Curve"
- "Down Rodeo"
- "Free Fallin'"
- "I Love L.A."
- King of the Mountain
- "LA Devotee"
- Mulholland Drive
- "Pico and Sepulveda"
- Sunset Boulevard (film, musical)
- Vine Street (+Live+ song)
Grove Street Facts