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Steady progress is being made on the Wallis Annenberg Wildlife Cross in Agoura Hills, according to a recent update provided by the California Department of Transportation.
Last week, crews worked overnight to pour “hundreds of tons” of wet concrete for the foundation of the bridge wall next to the southbound lanes of Highway 101, Caltrans said.
Photos of the project shared by Caltrans show the area where concrete was poured as part of the integral bridge wall that will eventually suspend the largest wildlife crossing ever constructed.
The price tag for the project was originally estimated to be more than $90 million.
The freeway crossing is planned to open to wildlife in 2025, Caltrans says.

Caltrans provides update on world’s largest wildlife crossing
Steady progress is being made on the Wallis Annenberg Wildlife Cross in Agoura Hills, according to a recent update provided by the California Department of Transportation. Last week, crews worked o…

I really like this idea, but as a California tax-payer - I have sticker shock on the cost to construct. Particularily because HWY 101 in my area of the Central Coast is in desperate need of expansion. Ninety Mil would go a long ways towards aiding congestion.