California State Route 130
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Route 130 | ||||||||||||||||||
Length: | 22 mi (35 km) | |||||||||||||||||
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Formed: | ||||||||||||||||||
Major cities: | San Jose | |||||||||||||||||
Direction: | East-West | |||||||||||||||||
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State Route 130 (SR 130) is an urban street and rural road that runs between San Jose, California, and Mount Hamilton. Much of its length goes through the Diablo Range as Mount Hamilton Road where it is a narrow 2 lane highway. The remainder of SR 130 is numbered along Alum Rock Avenue in San Jose.
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[edit] Route summary
SR 130 begins in the west at U.S. Highway 101 just east of Downtown San Jose and runs along the 4-6 lane Alum Rock Ave. SR 130 continues over a junction with Interstate 680 through San Jose's Alum Rock neighborhood. The road narrows as it begins to run into the foothills from 4-6 lanes down to 2. Where Alum Rock Ave and Mt Hamilton Rd meet SR 130 heads east up into the mountains along Mt Hamilton Rd. As the road climbs it continually offers outstanding vistas of San Jose and the Santa Clara Valley that increase the further east you travel. SR 130 also travels through some of the last remaining ranch and naturally wild land in Santa Clara County as well as Joseph D. Grant County Park. As SR 130 approaches the base of Mt Hamilton itself the road narrows further and is barely capable of supporting two cars abreast. The narrow road begins a series of tight switchbacks that culminate on the summit of Mount Hamilton at the Lick Observatory. The observatory also serves as the existing route's eastern terminus at around 4,200 ft. (1280 m) elevation. When snow falls on the higher elevations of the road, it's closed until crews can clear the snow.
[edit] History and legislative status
SR 130 did not exist as a state highway before 1964, however the roads it travels had existed since Lick Observatory was built. Legislatively SR 130 continues for 30 additional miles east of Lick Observatory to State Route 33 in Patterson, California through the San Antonio Valley. It is not signed as such and is not commonly recognized as existing beyond Lick observatory. Both locals and most map makers do not acknowledge SR 130 existing east of the summit. In addition east of Lick Observatory the road is maintained by the county rather than the state, as it is west of Lick Observatory further supporting the position that the eastern portion of the road is not actually part of SR 130 and that the eastern portion still remains technically unbuilt.
[edit] Proposed freeway
Currently money has been set aside by the state to study the feasibility of turning part of SR 130's legislative route from San Antonio Valley Rd east to Interstate 5 into a freeway. The road is intended to facilitate traffic between the Santa Clara Valley and the Central Valley, the latter presently experiencing booming population growth and real estate development. The project's main proponent was former United States Representative Richard Pombo, who was the House Resources Committee chair when in Congress and himself a member of a family with extensive Central Valley property holdings near the proposed freeway's path.
The proposed freeway's path west of San Antonio Valley Road would bypass Mt. Hamilton either to the north toward State Route 237 or to the south toward the San Jose's Evergreen district. The feasibility of this project has come into question, however, as crossing a freeway over the Diablo range near three of its highest peaks (Mt. Hamilton included) would be very difficult. The project also faces stiff opposition from taxpayers, environmentalists, residents of the area looking to preserve their area's local charm and from the Lick Observatory. (A freeway through the mountains near the observatory would render it useless due to light pollution.)
[edit] Landmarks
- San Jose Mexican Heritage Plaza
- Joseph D. Grant County Park
- Lick Observatory (University of California)
[edit] State law
Legal Definition of Route 130: California Streets and Highways Code, Chapter 2, Article 3, Section 430
Note: SR 130 was never completed east of Mt. Hamilton.