LA SEWERS


CITY OF LOS ANGELES
DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC WORKS

Search
Advanced
ABOUT THE CITY'S SEWER SYSTEM
CURRENT SEWER CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS
Air Treatment Facility - Jefferson Blvd.
  Air Treatment Facility - La Cienega and Jefferson
  Alvarado Crandall Relief Sewer
  Avenue 45 – Arroyo Drive Relief Sewer
  Central Outfall Sewer Rehabilitation Project
   Newsletter
  La Cienega Interceptor Relocation Project: Rodeo to Jefferson
MAZE 5 Sewer Rehabilitation Project
  Odor Control – Rodeo Road and La Cienega Boulevard
Upper Beachwood East Maintenance Hole Addition Project
  Upper Beachwood West Maintenance Hole Project
  Washington Boulevard - Oxford Avenue - Beach Avenue Relief Sewer Project
The Secondary Sewer Renewal Program (SSRP)
FUTURE SEWER CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS
LATERAL ROOT NOTIFICATION PROGRAM
FATS, OIL AND GREASE PROGRAM
SPILLS & BACKWATER VALVES
ODORS

 
Project Information from the Bureau of Engineering
Newsletter

City Sewers Current Construction

Central Outfall Sewer Rehabilitation Project

The City is now repairing a major, 100-year old sewer that is located in Los Angeles and Inglewood. The Central Outfall Sewer Rehabilitation Project (COS) construction will continue into 2012. This project will result in vital improvements to preserve public works infrastructure.

The COS is one of the City’s biggest and oldest sewers, serving a large portion of south and southwest Los Angeles. The section of the COS that will be repaired is 14,400 feet (2.7 miles) long and runs from Parking Lot C at LAX to a point near the intersection of Market St. and Hyde Park Blvd. in Inglewood. The portion of the sewer in Los Angeles is 8,600 feet long while the portion of the sewer in Inglewood is 5,800 feet long.

The 60 by 73-inch, brick-lined sewer, built in 1904, is deteriorating and needs to be rehabilitated to make it reliable so it maintains structural integrity, has adequate capacity, and does not release spills or odors. The repairs will include cleaning the entire sewer and installing new sewer pipe. Workers and equipment will get into the sewer through holes that will be dug in the ground, called access pits. Most pits are located away from areas where people live and work; however, due to the need to get into the sewer at specific, critical locations, some pit sites must be placed near residential and business areas.

Overall neighborhood construction impacts will be reduced, compared to projects that are built by digging along the entire sewer alignment, because most construction activities will only take place in or near the pits. Construction at the pits will include stringent mitigation measures to manage noise, odor, dust, hours of operation, traffic, and access.


QUICK FACTS
  • 14,400 linear feet of sewer
  • Construction period: late summer 2009 through late summer 2011

  • Estimated cost: $27.5 million

  • Some work will take place near residential and business areas

  • The City will make every effort to minimize construction impacts

  • Traffic controls and detours may be enforced on some local streets;

  • Parking may be restricted in some areas


CONTACT  AND  INFORMATION
Report Sewer ODORS
Report Sewer SPILLS   Or CALL 3-1-1, or (213) 473-3231
More information: (213) 978-0333,
or email bpw.pao@lacity.org
City of Los AngelesDepartment of Public Works
Copyright and Disclaimer
 BUREAU OF SANITATION
 BUREAU OF ENGINEERING
 CONTRACT ADMINISTRATION