Templin Highway

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Templin Highway is the completed part of a two-lane road project in

Golden State Highway with the north end of Castaic Lake
. The name is commonly misapplied to the old Golden State Highway, which runs north into Piru Gorge.

Proposal

Originally named Warm Springs Road, it was renamed in 1967 after county highway commissioner Newton H. Templin, who had promoted the road's construction.[1] Until plans were canceled in 1980, the road was to continue east; a 1958 plan shows it extending to San Francisquito Canyon Road as an expressway,[2] and by 1975 it was to connect with Spunky Canyon Road near the Bouquet Reservoir.[3]

Use in media

For the filming of "

cinder blocks.[4]

The highway also appears in the movie Serenity (2005) as the setting for the skiff chase scene.

The highway also appears in Furious 7 (2015) as the setting for the final scene.

References

  1. Valley News (Van Nuys)
    , October 20, 1967
  2. ^ Metropolitan Transportation Engineering Board, Master Plan of Freeways and Expressways, adopted February 28, 1958
  3. )
  4. ^ Terry J. Erdmann, Paula M. Block, Monk: The Official Episode Guide, 2006, p. 142