Almanac note · History and culture
The Arroyo Seco Parkway shows how the freeway age began
The Arroyo Seco Parkway between Pasadena and Los Angeles was the first freeway in the West, and it still shows the early shape of car-era planning.
The Arroyo Seco Parkway is one of those roads where the history is right under the tires. It opened in 1940 and is known as the first freeway in the West.
That does not mean it feels like a modern freeway. It was built when engineers were still learning how a limited-access road should work in a city. The curves, short ramps, older bridges, and close hillside setting make it feel more like a parkway that became a freeway before the rules were fully settled.
The route also became part of Route 66 history. It tied Pasadena and Los Angeles together in a new way, with the Arroyo Seco landscape running beside it. Later freeways grew wider, faster, and more standardized, but this one still carries the older experiment in its shape.
It is worth reading gently. The parkway helped open the car age in Southern California, but it also reminds you that big transportation ideas have tradeoffs. Traffic, neighborhood edges, speed, and safety all sit in the same story.
If you drive it, take the old design seriously. Leave room, expect quick ramps, and enjoy it as a short history lesson rather than a road to rush through.
Where to see it
Arroyo Seco Parkway, Route 110, between Pasadena and Los Angeles. Drive only when conditions feel comfortable.
Official sources
Official source trail
Reviewed July 1, 2026
California Porch explains the path. The official source is still the place to confirm the current rule, fee, form, map, deadline, or office decision.
Use the official page before you spend money, file paperwork, rely on a deadline, or change a property.
Connected places
Where it fits on the map
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