A deadly crash on the southbound U.S. Highway 101 on-ramp at South Van Ness Avenue in San Francisco shut down the approach this morning, after emergency crews found a person unresponsive on the roadway shortly after midnight. The individual was confirmed dead at the scene, and the on-ramp stayed closed for several hours while authorities worked the crash site and traffic crawled through the area.
The California Highway Patrol logged the collision at about 12:58 AM, according to CHP Fatal. Investigators remained on scene into the early morning, trying to determine how the person ended up on the ramp and what led up to the fatal impact.
Fire crews who responded confirmed the victim had suffered fatal injuries, and at least one lane of the on ramp was blocked while responders documented the scene, collected evidence and coordinated with the medical examiner, as reported by RWB Press. Caltrans and tow operators were called in to help manage traffic, clear debris and remove any involved vehicles.
Where This Happened And Safety Context
The southbound US 101 on ramp at South Van Ness sits in a stretch that the SFMTA has already flagged for safety upgrades under its Quick Build and Vision Zero programs, which identify higher crash and KSI, or killed or seriously injured, rates along South Van Ness. Those efforts are intended to boost visibility and cut down on high risk turning movements and speeding near the freeway ramps, according to SFMTA…