Elysian Park landslide

1937

Elysian Park landslide

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United States United States > California > Los Angeles County > Los Angeles
This view of boulders across the broken pieces of Riverside Drive where it turns to meet the Riverside Drive-Dayton Avenue Bridge captures the riverbed as well as a piece of the temporary water pipe and the barriers set up to stop traffic.The Elysian Park landslide, which started near the top of Point Grand View (Buena Vista Peak) as a small crack in the earth and grew to 500-foot fissure over three weeks, culminated on November 26, 1937 when a million and a half tons of loose rock and dirt created a "moving mountain" destroying a 600-foot stretch of Riverside Drive. Dayton Avenue (later N. Figueroa Street) has had three different bridges. The Riverside Drive-Dayton Avenue Bridge first built in 1903 was replaced with a concrete one completed in 1928. In 1939, after the Elysian Park landslide and heavy floods in 1938, the Army Corps of Engineers built a replacement bridge with steel trussing, known as the Riverside Drive Bridge (Riverside-Figueroa Bridge) that was demolished in 2011.
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mason_n 
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Photo published on
 June 24, 2019 at 01:53 PM


© Herman J Schultheis
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