Elon Musk just witnessed the might of the Not In My Backyard empire firsthand.
Musk's Boring Company and West Los Angeles neighborhood associations have settled a lawsuit, brought by the groups, to prevent the Boring Company from digging a test tunnel for high speed transport without an environmental impact report, the Los Angeles Timesreported Tuesday.
The terms of the settlement are reportedly confidential, but Musk's company won't be pursuing the West LA tunnel that would have run beneath Sepulveda Boulevard anymore.
Instead, the Boring Company will continue work on its Dodger Stadium tunnel. It also recently completed its Hawthorne tunnel, which is set to open with tests for the public on December 10. Musk recently tweeted images of his drillers "breaking through" to the far end of the tunnel, and congratulated the team on the tunnel's compleiton.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
But not everything has been going as swimmingly for Musk and the Boring Company to the upper middle-class North of the working-class neighborhood Hawthorne site.
In April, the Los Angeles City Council approved the Boring Company's plans to build a West LA test tunnel, without the usually required environmental impact studies. The tunnel would have run 2.7 miles along Sepulveda Boulevard, which runs adjacent to the 405 freeway, between Pico and Washington Blvds. The tunnel was part of Musk's ultimate goal to "defeat traffic" and apparently personally save him the headache of sitting bumper-to-bumper on the 405.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
But neighborhood groups weren't too thrilled with Musk's campaign. In May, the Sunset Coalition and Brentwood Residents Coalition sued to stop the fast-tracking of the project.
Here's the thing: these neighborhood groups don't actually represent the residents who lived adjacent to the tunnel. Instead, they represent homeowners in Brentwood and Bel-Air — neighborhoods to the north-west of the planned tunnel — who also happen to be Elon Musk's neighbors (Musk owns a home in Bel-Air).
The Sunset Coalition was specifically formed to scrutinize development in the maddeningly traffic-clogged part of Brentwood near the 405 freeway. It has a history of scuttling development projects that would impact the Westside.
So, why should these LA residents, who live miles from the proposed test tunnel, care if Musk's company is building a tunnel a few miles from their hillside homes?
The groups pointed to a map Musk reportedly shared that showed his high speed tunnels reaching further up Sepulveda Blvd., into the heart of Brentwood, and through the Bel-Air adjacent Sepulveda pass. The groups said that this map indicated that the test tunnel was part of a larger project; they argued that a piecemeal approach to development should not exempt the Boring Co. from acquiring the necessary permits.
The Westside was also the first battleground for another tech transportation disruption: Bird scooters. The dockless e-scooter company debuted their product, without permits or neighborhood approval, in September 2017. That has led to an ongoing neighborhood and municipal struggle. The Bird battles, plus the influx of the tech industry residents into Westside neighborhoods, has led to a lot of ill-will towards tech companies seeking to disrupt life on the placid Westside.
The groups' arguments were apparently enough of a headache for the Boring Company to stop plans for a tunnel that *could*, eventually, reach the neighbors who were opposed to the plans.
So residents have successfully put the kibosh on plans for a future Brentwood tunnel, where the median household income is $114,557. Meanwhile, Musk's tunneling in Hawthorne — median household income $48,354 — is already done.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Elon Musk's Boring Company won't build a West LA test tunnel anymore-啜英咀华网
sitemap
文章
6973
浏览
7
获赞
3
YouTuber lets followers redecorate his bedroom via Twitter bot
Tech vlogger Michael Reeves doesn't know much about interior design, so he's letting his followers dPosting your kid's photo to Facebook? Maybe think twice.
Welcome toSmall Humans, an ongoing series at Mashable that looks at how to take care of – andSnap is still losing users, blames its Android app
Snapchat's poor Android app is still proving to be a major problem for the company.The app lost userAnna Kendrick finally explains her years
You want to know what real power looks like? Walking up to the President of the United States and caElon Musk shares render of Berlin Gigafactory, it's very pretty
In case you didn't know, there's a massive Tesla factory currently being built on the outskirts of BKanye West has heard your tiny
Kanye West's playing the long game -- or the large game. Earlier this month, Kanye really leaned intThe anatomy of the niche teen Instagram meme
Not all memes are relatable. In fact, the best ones are the opposite.The niche meme community has spSassy seal accidentally slaps man across the face with an octopus
It was the slap heard all around New Zealand.Kyle Mulinder, a self-described "GoPro content creator,Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 5G is available for preorder
Just a few days before Samsung's Galaxy Unpackedevent on Aug. 5, the company has listed its Galaxy ZYouTube to double pre
It's a familiar bugbear.There you are, watching a nice, long YouTube video, when an ad — usualFrontline's Facebook documentary sheds new light on company's mistakes
"I realized that because I didn't have people's information I needed to make it interesting enough sSnap is still losing users, blames its Android app
Snapchat's poor Android app is still proving to be a major problem for the company.The app lost userLas Vegas is facing a grasshopper invasion of Biblical proportions
It might be time to accept that the city of Las Vegas is now lost to us humans. It belongs to the grSupremely weird 'interview' with Drew Barrymore goes viral for all the wrong reasons
An interview (supposedly) with Drew Barrymore has gone viral but not for the reasons you might expecApple is no longer a $1 trillion company
Apple, the first ever U.S. company to be valued at $1 trillion, is no longer worth $1 trillion.News