San Francisco Chronicle

Mexico border near San Diego braces for brief shutdown in fall

- By Sandra Dibble Sandra Dibble is a San Diego Union-Tribune writer.

SAN DIEGO — Crossing the U.S.-Mexico border at San Diego can often be a long process. But for 57 hours in September, all cars will be barred from entering Tijuana through San Ysidro.

Lasting from 3 a.m. on Sept. 23 until noon on Sept. 25, the closure is part of a plan by the U.S. General Services Administra­tion to realign a portion of Interstate 5. The operation launches the third and final phase of the $741 million expansion of the San Ysidro Port of Entry.

The closure will affect tens of thousands of drivers — students, commuters, shoppers and others who regularly travel between San Ysidro and Tijuana, passing through the busiest border crossing in the Western Hemisphere.

Authoritie­s are comparing the operation to “Carmageddo­n,” when a large swath of the busy 405 freeway in Los Angeles was shut down for a weekend in 2011 for a highway expansion project.

In this case, the partial closure of I-5 at San Ysidro will cause all vehicle traffic crossing into Mexico during that period to be rerouted to Otay Mesa, where Mexico has only five inspection lanes.

“If you have to cross that weekend, plan on delays,” said Anthony Kleppe, a senior asset manager with the General Services Administra­tion.

At a forum hosted Monday by the San Ysidro Chamber of Commerce and the South County Economic Developmen­t Council, Kleppe announced key dates for the massive project, which entails rebuilding the southernmo­st stretch of I-5 as it leads into Tijuana’s El Chaparral Port of Entry.

The project is scheduled for completion in June 2019, Kleppe said.

The aim is to double the number of southbound lanes that feed into El Chaparral from five to 10. It will also involve adding eight more northbound inspection lanes at the San Ysidro Port of Entry, bringing the total to 33. In addition, plans call for southbound vehicle inspection booths to be operated by U.S. Customs and Border Protection inspectors, and a secondary inspection area.

During the constructi­on period, the northbound flow of vehicular traffic will not be affected, Kleppe said. Nor will the pedestrian crossings in both directions.

The 57-hour closure of the southbound vehicle lanes is necessary for the safe removal of a large steel-and-canvas canopy that currently covers a portion of the southbound car lanes, according to the General Services Administra­tion. During that time, workers will also remove concrete crash barriers, and install infrastruc­ture and temporary paving and striping.

“We start with a bang,” Kleppe said.

Following the closure, southbound lanes will be reduced from five to three for a two-month period. After that, the plan calls for adding a fourth lane before Thanksgivi­ng, and softening the current sharp 110-degree turn toward El Chaparral to 90 degrees. “It has a better curve, even though there are fewer lanes,” Kleppe said. The General Services Administra­tion expects that as a result of the gentler curve, the flow of traffic will not change significan­tly from what it is currently, despite the reduction in lanes.

Monday’s presentati­on was seen as the launching of an effort to get out the word about the closure and lane reductions. “As the message continues to go out, people are going to be able to plan their trips better,” said Efrain Ibarra, assistant director of the South County Economic Developmen­t Council.

“We hope to turn this into a positive,” said Jason Wells, executive director of the San Ysidro Chamber of Commerce, which fears that a drop in traffic could mean a loss of business.

Plans to hold a festival during the closure and promote pedestrian crossings “can make this an economic boost for us down here,” Wells said.

 ?? Monica Almeida / New York Times 2013 ?? The Tijuana-San Ysidro border crossing between Mexico and the U.S. will be shut down for 57 hours in September for road reconstruc­tion. Communitie­s and businesses on both sides are bracing for the impact.
Monica Almeida / New York Times 2013 The Tijuana-San Ysidro border crossing between Mexico and the U.S. will be shut down for 57 hours in September for road reconstruc­tion. Communitie­s and businesses on both sides are bracing for the impact.

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