Despite Road-Closing Landslides, You Can Still Take A Big Sur Road Trip This Year - Here's How
By Sarah Feldberg, Travel & Leisure/ Travel/ Smithsonian/ smithsonianmag.com
This gorgeous stretch of coastline is harder to get to these days, but it’s not impossible.
Stretching 90 miles along the jagged western edge of the continental United States, Big Sur has long exercised a magnetic pull on people drawn to its dazzling landscape.
Here, earth and ocean meet, not with gently sloping sands but with muscular mountains bristling with redwoods, and rugged cliffs that drop into the turquoise surf below. Just 150 miles south of
San Francisco and 300 miles north of
Los Angeles, this oblong slice of California is endearingly, enduringly wild.
When construction on a highway tracing the coastline was completed after 18 years in 1937, Big Sur officially opened to the public. Today, roughly 3 million people pass through it each year, slaloming down Highway 1 on one of the county’s most iconic lengths of road.
However, that road is currently closed in four places, cut off by a crumbling bridge and a handful of landslides that have blanketed the asphalt in dirt and rock.
“There are a lot of people with a vested interest in seeing the road open up again,” said Rob O’Keefe, chief marketing officer for the
Monterey County Convention and Visitor’s Bureau. “This is literally the quintessential California road trip experience that’s broken.”
The closures are expected to cost the area $500 million in lost revenue, but even if you can’t cruise Highway 1 from Carmel to San Simeon this summer, much of Big Sur is still open for business. If reaching sections of this mythic coastline require more of an adventure than usual, that’s just part of the appeal...."
(Michele Falzone/Getty Images)
Richard