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Bullet-train planners face huge engineering challenge

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Descending the Tehachapis, the trains will barrel through miles of creosote and sagebrush across the oven-hot Mojave Desert, and cut through neighborhoods of homes, churches, schools and businesses, some of which will have to be flattened. It will kiss the boundary of a top-secret Lockheed Martin aerospace plant and sail alongside a Disney movie lot in Santa Clarita.

Reaching the San Fernando Valley, it will pass through an industrial corridor before dipping underground near Glendale and running deep beneath the Los Angeles River. It will most likely pop up in Chinatown, where some of Hood’s laborers settled.

One measure of the topographic challenge: Over that 141 miles from Bakersfield to Los Angeles, up to 59 percent of the track would run in tunnels or on viaducts, according to preliminary planning documents.

If completed as planned, it would close a gap in the state’s rail network. Passenger service through the Tehachapis was discontinued in 1971. Today, Amtrak passengers have to take a bus from downtown Los Angeles to Bakersfield to catch northbound trains.

Closing that gap is expected to yield a big payoff in ridership and passenger convenience. Planning for the challenge posed by Southern California’s mountain ranges already has begun, and officials hope construction can follow work on the first 130 miles of bullet train track in the Central Valley, where a groundbreaking is expected next year.

C. Michael Gillam, a vice president at engineering company Parsons Brinckerhoff who is overseeing the project’s Southern California design, said he was “very confident about our ability to do this.” A veteran of bullet train projects in China and Taiwan, Gillam has a staff of about 200 working on the Bakersfield-to-Los Angles segment, and his team will begin plotting the exact route next year, when detailed environmental impact reports are scheduled to be released. It will roughly parallel Hood’s route.

Despite Gillam’s confidence, a lot could go wrong that would spike the cost. At this point, the rail authority estimates it will cost about $7.7 billion to build the 83 miles of rail from Bakersfield to Palmdale and about $12.5 billion to build the 58 miles of rail from Palmdale to Union Station.

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