Imperial Valley Press

Elon Musk says LA-area test tunnel almost complete

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HAWTHORNE, Calif. (AP) — Billionair­e Elon Musk says he’s almost completed a tunnel under a Los Angeles suburb to test a novel transporta­tion system that would scoot commuters undergroun­d on electric sleds called skates.

Musk tweeted Thursday that, pending regulatory approvals, free rides will be offered to the public in a few months. He also posted an Instagram video of the interior of the tunnel.

Last year, the Hawthorne City Council approved an approximat­ely 2-mile (3.2-kilometer) test tunnel from Musk’s SpaceX rocket plant to a point east of Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport.

Musk has described a system in which vehicles would descend via elevators into tunnels and move on electrical­ly powered platforms called skates. He envisions multiple levels of tunnels to escape congestion that plagues surface traffic systems.

“As mentioned in prior posts, once fully operationa­l (demo system rides will be free), the system will always give priority to pods for pedestrian­s & cyclists for less than the cost of a bus ticket,” Musk tweeted.

Musk’s tunneling operation, called The Boring Co., is currently seeking approval to push into the city of Los Angeles, which requires separate authorizat­ion. So far, a committee of the City Council has agreed that the project should be exempt from environmen­tal review.

Musk suddenly added tunneling ideas to his SpaceX rocketry and Tesla electric car endeavors more than a year ago.

A few weeks after tweeting “Tra c is driving me nuts” and “am going to build a tunnel boring machine and just start digging,” he said in January 2017 that tunnel was about to get underway. He acquired a tunnel-boring machine that had been used in a San Francisco Bay Area project and put it down a shaft in a parking lot at the SpaceX facility in Hawthorne.

He has also tweeted about a vision for a tunnel that would stretch along the Interstate 405 corridor from LAX to U.S. Highway 101 in the San Fernando Valley, a span of about 17 miles (27 kilometers).

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