Support for LAist comes from
Local and national news, NPR, things to do, food recommendations and guides to Los Angeles, Orange County and the Inland Empire
Stay Connected
Listen

The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • The L.A. Report
    Listen 4:13
    Praise for Kimmel's return to ABC, Some UCLA grants restored, San Bernardino Co mudslide damage— The A.M. Edition
Jump to a story
  • Caltrans says Big Sur route could reopen next year
    An aerial photo shows bulldozers and excavators working to remove landslide material from above Highway 1. In the background, rocky cliffs and California coastline.
    Slope stabilization work at the Regent's Slide area.

    Topline:

    Come next spring, a road trip up to Big Sur should be a little easier for SoCal residents. That’s because Caltrans now says crews are aiming to have Highway 1 fully reopened through the Regent’s Slide area by the end of March 2026.

    What happened? Two back-to-back landslides — the Paul Slide and the Regent’s Slide — have kept a portion of the road above the Big Sur coastline closed since January 2023.

    Remote control excavators: Kevin Drabinski, a spokesperson with Caltrans District 5, said crews have faced big challenges clearing more than 300,000 cubic yards of material. “We were faced with this, literally a crack in the ground, that we could not bring bodies across,” Drabinski said. Workers were able to use remote-controlled excavators and bulldozers to make progress.

    It’s not all closed: Roughly 7 miles between the Esalen Institute in the north and the Lucia Lodge in the south remain closed, but there’s still about 100 miles of smooth Highway 1 driving between Cambria and Carmel.

    Setbacks? Caltrans officials caution that further slide activity and bad weather could “impact the estimated reopening timeline.”

    Go deeper... on why Highway 1 in Big Sur keeps slipping into the ocean.

Loading...