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Caltrans came out in force yesterday to host the groundbreaking ceremony for the long awaited El Camino Renewal Project, aka the Little Big Dig. A larger than usual contingent of local pols showed up to issue lots and lots of kudos for all involved. Pertinent promises made included “this will take three years, give or take” and “there will be some inconveniences”. Readers come to the Voice to get the take they can’t get anywhere else and there was a really fun incident during the speechifying yesterday. After Josh Becker and Diane Papan spoke and just before “the most important person on the project”, Michael Brownrigg, was introduced, a full-size semi tractor trailer pulled up next to the city lot H, hit the air brakes and the driver hopped out to do a delivery to Walgreens–cutting southbound traffic down to one lane. They do this all the time and so does Amazon, FedEx, UPS, etc. as we noted here.

But not yesterday. A BPD officer who was at the event immediately went over and told the driver to move. I was reminded of Gavin Newsom cleaning up the streets of EssEff for the APAC conference and Chinese premier Xi Jinping. With some effort, the truck managed to pull into the city lot between Walgreen’s and Safeway where it blocked access to half the lot for about a half hour. I had visions of things to come. Knowing Michael, I’m sure he wasn’t too comfortable with his intro but as the incoming mayor at last night’s council rotation, he will be the point person for 2026 either way. Caltrans followed up with an email today that noted something new:

Caltrans will begin construction on the El Camino Real Roadway Renewal Project as early as January 5, 2026, in the vicinity of Dufferin Avenue and Rosedale Avenue.

The initial work will consist of tree removals on the northbound side of El Camino Real in Burlingame requiring full closures of the road. One to two blocks of El Camino Real may be closed at a time. Detour information will also be emailed in the coming weeks, and detour signage will be in place for affected blocks. Residents and businesses will continue to have access to their properties during construction.  In addition to tree removals, drainage work will be performed along the southbound side of the road.

We’ve been told for months they would start at the tree work at the south end and PG&E at the north end, but things have apparently changed. Caltrans will be keeping us up to speed at elcaminoproject.com. Here are some pics of yesterday’s dropping of the green starting flag. Will the checkered flag wave on January 5, 2029?

I’m thinking the Little Big Dig might be what pushes me over the line to buy an e-bike.

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19 responses to “El Camino: Drop the green flag, go time”

  1. Joe

    Former city council candidate Steve Duncan is banging the nail on the head in this LTTE to the DJ:

    Editor,

    I hope the “big dig” on El Camino Real goes better than the past 20 years, where rampant potholes of various sizes made drivers think you were driving in a developing nation.

    A simple, fast, quick fill and press down was nonexistent by CalTrans. A few weeks ago some potholes were filled, many not filled. Your gas tax dollars at work —incompetence!

    I even went to a Burlingame City Council meeting in May and voiced my concerns.

    I also voiced my concerns about a “blind” crosswalk at Bellevue and Almer where cars parked up to the crosswalk on both sides — violating the January 2025 California law prohibiting parking within 20 feet of a marked crosswalk.

    Nothing has been done. I guess injuries and deaths would have to happen before anything gets done.

    When construction begins on El Camino Real watch the congestion traffic flow to California Drive, (thanks to the engineers and bicycle crowd that was changed from two lanes in each direction to one lane in each direction) — drivers could find congestion and lines longer than a summer day in Disneyland.

    Steve Duncan

    Burlingame

  2. Joe

    And here we goooooo:

    SAN MATEO COUNTY ― Caltrans crews will close a section of El Camino Real between Rosedale Ave. and Grove Ave. in Burlingame to perform tree removals starting on January 5, 2026. The section of roadway will be closed from 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. daily.

    Residents, business owners, and customers may access the road but should allow a few minutes so that construction crews can make the area safe for passage.

    SamTrans bus riders may want to use the bus stop at El Camino Real and Easton Dr.

    Detours

    Heading southbound
    Drivers should turn left on Rosedale Ave., right on California Dr., right on Grove, and left on El Camino Real.

    Heading northbound
    Drivers should turn right on Grove Ave, left on California Dr., left on Rosedale, and right on El Camino Real.
    ——————————
    Now we will find out how unpopular the shrinkage on Calfornia Dr. really is.

  3. Phinancier

    Never forget the six phases of a big government project

    1. Enthusiasm,
    2. Disillusionment,
    3. Panic,
    4. Search for the guilty,
    5. Punishment of the innocent, and
    6. Praise and honor for the nonparticipants.

  4. resident

    I just got a letter from the contractor Teichert saying the project would be done by the Fall of 2029 so I guess we are back to four years ;-(

  5. Joe

    There were 15 or more yellow vest guys walking along the north end of ECR this morning, but no equipment in sight. Today was to be the start, but around 10:30 nothing was happening.

  6. resident

    El Camino is backing up big time at Broadway. If we are to spend years with one lane in each direction we should make it No Left Turn on the southbound side. I sat through three lights to get through.

  7. Resident

    Hazmat spill and power outage on Broadway complicated things a bit on Wed/Thurs, might need to wait to see if backups continue before new restrictions are put in place- but in general seems like left turns are going to bring ECR to its knees if we are single lane. Suspect that restricting left turns for the entire stretch of single-laned ECR may be needed.

  8. Resident

    On a related note- if there are restaurants/shops that you enjoy on Broadway, they could use your support this weekend. The blackout and road closures killed business here on Wed and Thurs and many of these places operate on a razor-thin margin. Think about a weekend trip to Broadway to your favorite places to help keep them afloat!

    https://www.smdailyjournal.com/news/local/broadway-closure-hits-burlingame-hard/article_c77ffb51-fe5f-46ab-b194-2618a138a09b.html

  9. resident

    I agree with you Capital R Resident on the full length No Left Turn change.

  10. Bruce Dickinson

    Well looks like Bruce Dickinson prescience has struck again! My fans and neighbors on the BV will probably recall that I said it makes no sense to start the “Big Dig” in the winter, which is prone to disruptions by storms. While who knows the contributing cause of the gas station leak on Broadway/California, for sure in the middle of winter when there are storms, flooding, wind, electrical issues, etc, stuff can and is more likely happen where nearby roads are also disrupted in ways unrelated to tree removal.

    Deciding to start tree removal in the middle of winter when other road hazards, flooding, issues are likely to surface and of all times to start, right when everyone gets back to school and work after the holidays makes little to no sense…unless you are trying to maximize disruption and probability of delays, then it’s a great time to start!. We seriously need some ‘noggin’ upgrades starting with very basic levels of common sense!

  11. Jennifer Pfaff

    I think one of the reasons they started this project in winter (maybe the main reason) is that there are otherwise frequently nesting birds that have to be professionally removed/ relocated –probably another agency’s job. I still have no idea what happened on Broadway, this weekend it still looked like a crime scene with all the yellow tape. I wonder were the chemicals new, or just newly discovered and there quite awhile? ‘Not sure.

  12. Handle Bard

    A grid of holes upon the Euc perch,
    A map where sweetness used to flow,
    The finch returns from her nesting search,
    To find the grove fallen low.

    The hearty canopy, once soft and deep,
    Has vanished with the chainsaw’s edge;
    No cradle now for eggs to sleep,
    Beyond the El Camino hedge.

  13. Jennifer Pfaff

    Another great one! Are you the talented one, or AI??

  14. Handle Bard

    That one is HI + AI. The best of both worlds.

  15. Jennifer Pfaff

    OK, I wonder what is “HI”?

  16. Joe

    It’s “Human Intelligence”, Jen

  17. Peter Garrison

    Duh. (Spoken in ironic.)

  18. Thanks, I guess I should have figured that one out!

  19. Joe

    The DJ is calling the project the “Big Dig”–probably because the “Little Big Dig” is taken :-). 30 Eucs down, 352 to go. I still wish they would keep one or two per block as a pedestrian safety barrier. From the DJ today:

    In around the first month since a long-awaited major renovation project began on the Burlingame section of El Camino Real, around 30 trees have been removed and road closures have begun, Caltrans Public Information Officer Jeneane Crawford said.

    The project, which is estimated to end in 2029, includes planned removal of 382 trees from the street.

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