The Oklahoman

Calif. set to break ground on wildlife bridge in January

Project over LA freeway will be largest of its kind

- Laura Anaya-Morga

LOS ANGELES – The California Department of Transporta­tion expects to break ground early next year on an $87 million wildlife crossing on the 101 Freeway in Agoura Hills that experts said is crucial to help save an isolated population of mountain lions in the region from extinction.

The bridge at Liberty Canyon will allow mountain lions and other species to cross safely over a busy eight-lane stretch of the freeway used by an estimated 300,000 vehicles a day, officials said.

When completed, the 200-footlong, 165-foot-wide wildlife bridge will be the largest of its kind in the world, officials said.

The project is being backed by a number of public and private organizati­ons, officials said.

The project will likely go out to bid next month with constructi­on set to begin in late January, said Sheik Moinuddin, a Caltrans project manager. The project will be divided into two phases, the first will cover the area across the 101 Freeway and the second will cover the two-lane stretch across Agoura Road.

Officials noted that it has taken years to raise awareness and the money to make the project a reality.

“This is an unpreceden­ted project that Los Angeles should be incredibly proud of,” said Beth Pratt, regional executive director in California for the National Wildlife Federation who has been working on the project for almost a decade. “Back then it was just an idea.”

The nonprofit federation has managed to raise more than $72 million so far from more than 4,000 private, philanthro­pic and corporate donors around the world for their #SaveLACoug­ars campaign. Those funds include a $25 million challenge grant from Wallis Annenberg and the Annenberg Foun

“This is an unpreceden­ted project that Los Angeles should be incredibly proud of.”

Beth Pratt, regional executive director in California for the National Wildlife Federation

dation. The federation hopes to raise $6 million more by the end of the year to cover constructi­on costs.

The bridge, which was recently renamed the Wallis Annenberg Wildlife Crossing, is set to be completed by October 2023, officials said.

As envisioned, the bridge will be designed to look like part of the natural landscape, with native vegetation and irrigation systems. It will shield animals from the commotion below with sound walls and light deflectors to dampen the effects of the noise and glare of headlights.

The project will set a worldwide model for what is possible in terms of coexistenc­e in urban places between wildlife and humans, Pratt said. The purpose of the bridge is to reverse the effects that fragmented landscapes have had on wildlife.

Upon the opening of the bridge, Pratt said she is most excited to see photos of the first animals using it.

“That’s when we’ll know we’ve made the Santa Monica Mountains whole again,” she said.

 ?? LIVING HABITATS AND NATIONAL WILDLIFE FEDERATION/TNS ?? A rendering of the Wallis Annenberg Wildlife Crossing, which is set to break ground in late January.
LIVING HABITATS AND NATIONAL WILDLIFE FEDERATION/TNS A rendering of the Wallis Annenberg Wildlife Crossing, which is set to break ground in late January.

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