San Francisco Chronicle

Highway 1 at Big Sur to open in September

- By Nanette Asimov Nanette Asimov is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: nasimov @sfchronicl­e.com Twitter: @NanetteAsi­mov

A seven-mile length of Highway 1 along the southern Big Sur coastline that has been closed for a year, forcing long detours, is expected to reopen in September, Caltrans announced Monday.

The gorgeous stretch of roadway at Mud Creek has been closed since April 2017 — shortly before a tremendous landslide dislodged more than a million tons of rocks and mud onto Highway 1 and into the sea on May 20.

Amazingly, no one was hurt. Perilous conditions had prompted Caltrans to close off access three weeks earlier to visitors, then to locals, and — with a week to spare — even to their own workers. The slide, the largest in known history along the Big Sur coast, enlarged the coastline by 15 acres, Caltrans said.

“It’s like Mother Nature went bananas,” said Caltrans spokeswoma­n Susana Cruz. “Nobody else could have done that.”

The closure begins to the north of the tiny enclave of Gorda and continues seven miles south to just above Salmon Creek Falls.

Caltrans’ solution for drivers has been to build a quarter-mile stretch of roadway across the land- slide, buttressed with stabilizin­g material, including rocks, netting and berms.

The road closure has forced visitors from the north, hoping to take scenic Highway 1 to reach such favorite sites as the elephant seals at Piedras Blancas and San Simeon, to cut inland.

The new estimate for the new road to be open to traffic is mid- to late September, Caltrans officials said.

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