Drivers
Zoom By Roadside Debris- A Home
Calif.
Motorists Zoom Past The Ultimate Roadside Debris- A House
LOS
ANGELES, Sep. 21, 2007
(AP)
Motorists traveling Southern California highways are used to seeing all sorts
of debris, from mattresses to luggage to clothing. But the ultimate in freeway
flotsam has landed along the Hollywood Freeway: a house.
Patrick
Richardson's now immobile home was being moved Saturday from Santa Monica to Santa
Clarita when several mishaps _ including a roof-shredding blow while attempting
to pass beneath an overpass _ slowed its progress and it fell off its trailer.
Richardson,
45, got an oversized load permit from the California Department of Transportation.
But instead of following the authorized Santa Monica-San Diego-Golden State freeways
route, authorities said, he headed through downtown Los Angeles and then onto
the Hollywood Freeway.
In
the downtown area, the wheels started falling off, California Highway Patrol Officer
Jason McCutcheon said.
"It
was pretty ugly."
Richardson
made some repairs and the roadhouse was moving again. But then the roof struck
an overpass and he had to pull over in the Cahuenga Pass, which separates Hollywood
from the San Fernando Valley.
Authorities
towed the house to a roomy freeway shoulder not far from the Hollywood Bowl. It
will sit there, surrounded by orange Caltrans cones, until Richardson gets it
safely moved again. In the meantime, vandals have scrawled graffiti all over it.
"It's
in bad shape. There is no hard-and-fast rule about how long a house can sit on
the side of the freeway," Caltrans spokeswoman Maria Raptis said. "It
will stay there until it can be moved safely."