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N11 Highway
National Route 11 (N11) is an major primary route that forms part of the Philippine highway network. It is a component and the main route of Circumferential Road 5 (C-5), connecting the cities of Taguig, Pasig and Quezon City. History When the routes were assigned by the Department of Public Works and Highways, the segment of Circumferential Road 5 (C-5) from Taguig to Quezon City, except for its at-grade section below the Bagong Ilog Flyover in Pasig, was assigned as N11. These roads under C-5 include Carlos P. Garcia Avenue, Eulogio Rodriguez Jr. Avenue, Bonny Serrano Avenue, and Katipunan Avenue. Route description The route's northern terminus starts from a route change from N129 while making a junction on C.P. Garcia Avenue, a tertiary road in Barangay U.P. Campus, Quezon City. It traverses to the Quezon City, Pasig, and Taguig. In Quezon City, the highway then follows Katipunan Avenue's at-grade section parallel to the Katipunan/Aurora Flyover, classified as a te ...
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Department Of Public Works And Highways
The Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH; ) is the executive department of the Philippine government responsible for serving as the country's engineering and construction arm. It is tasked with implementing the government's policy to maintain and develop its engineering capabilities to ensure the safety, efficiency, and quality of public infrastructure and construction projects. The DPWH oversees the planning, design, construction, and maintenance of infrastructure across the country, particularly national highways, flood control systems, water resources development, and other public works. Its functions are to be carried out in a decentralized manner, as much as possible. History History of the DPWH stretches back as far as the history of Philippine government itself. During Spanish times, the Spanish constructed the first roads in the Philippines. These public works projects were not only used in the connection of towns and fortresses, but also in improving commu ...
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C-5 Southlink Expressway
C5, C05, C V or C-5 may refer to: Military use * Lockheed C-5 Galaxy, a military transport aircraft * C-5 North Star, a 1940s Canadian military aircraft * , a 1906 Royal Navy C-class submarine * , a 1908 United States Navy C-class submarine * , an 1889 United States Navy protected cruiser * Albatros C.V, a World War I German military reconnaissance aircraft * AEG C.V, a World War I prototype German two-seat biplane reconnaissance aircraft * DFW C.V, a World War I German military reconnaissance aircraft * Fokker C.V, a 1924 Dutch light reconnaissance and bomber biplane aircraft * Halberstadt C.V, a World War I German single-engined reconnaissance biplane * Fokker C-5, an American military version of the Fokker F.VII aircraft * , a 1915 German Type UC I U-boat * C-5 (blimp), a United States Navy airship that attempted a trans-Atlantic flight in 1919 Transport, vehicles, roads, public transport routes Road * C5 automatic, a successor to Ford C4 transmission * Chevrolet ...
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N59 Highway (Philippines)
National Route 59 (N59) is a primary national route that forms part of the Philippine highway network. It runs from Antipolo, Rizal (province), Rizal to Quezon City#Cubao, Cubao, Quezon City, Metro Manila. Route description N59 follows a route that runs from Antipolo to Cainta in Rizal (province), Rizal, entering Metro Manila through Pasig, then Marikina towards Quezon City. The highway connects most major regional centers and runs through different landscapes. It continues westward as the N180 highway (Philippines), N180 highway and eastward as the N600 highway. Sumulong Highway N59 begins at Antipolo in Rizal (province), Rizal at the endpoint of L. Sumulong Memorial Circle Road (N600) in front of Robinsons Place Antipolo. The highway passes through different key locations at Antipolo, which is known for its scenic views of Metro Manila, given its mountainous terrain. The roadway goes downward until it meets with the Marikina-Infanta Highway at the Masinag Junction, where the ...
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N129 Highway (Philippines)
National Route 129 (N129), or Route 129, is a secondary national route in Metro Manila that forms part of the Philippine highway network. Entirely located within Quezon City, it comprises Congressional Avenue, Congressional Avenue Extension, a portion of Luzon Avenue, a portion of Tandang Sora Avenue, and a portion of Katipunan Avenue; most of them are part of C-5 except the EDSA–Mindanao Avenue segment. Route Description Congressional Avenue Route 129 starts at the junction between Fernando Poe Jr. Avenue (formerly Roosevelt Avenue) and Epifanio de los Santos Avenue in Barangay Ramon Magsaysay. It crosses Culiat Creek into Barangay Bahay Toro and heads towards the junction with Mindanao Avenue, where it becomes part of the Circumferential Road 5 system. It then briefly passes Visayas Avenue, towards Tandang Sora Avenue, into Barangay Culiat and Pasong Tamo, serving as its boundaries, and ends at the junction with Luzon Avenue. Luzon Avenue Route 129 turns southbound ...
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Circumferential Road 5
Circumferential Road 5 (C-5), informally known as the C-5 Road, is a network of roads and bridges which comprise the fifth beltway of Metro Manila in the Philippines. Spanning some , it connects the cities of Las Piñas, Parañaque, Pasay, Pasig, Quezon City, Taguig, and Valenzuela, Metro Manila, Valenzuela. It runs parallel to the four other beltways around Metro Manila and is also known for being the second most important transportation corridor after Circumferential Road 4. Originally planned to run from Navotas in the north, the route remains incomplete because of right of way controversies, but portions of the route are already open for public use. On July 23, 2019, the two segments of the route were connected with the completion of the CAVITEX C-5 Link through a flyover. It is also known as Metro Manila's deadliest highway route, having 31 fatalities in 2019, 27 in 2018, and 23 in 2017. This is due to trucks and motorcycles along the narrow highway, as well as its road c ...
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Philippine Highway Network
The Philippine highway network is a network of highway, national roads owned and maintained by the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) and organized into three classifications according to their function or purpose: national primary, secondary, and tertiary roads. The national roads connecting major cities are numbered from N1 to N83. They are mostly single carriageway, single and dual carriageways linking two or more cities. As of October 16, 2023, it has a total length of of concrete roads, of asphalt roads, of gravel roads, and of earth roads, with a grand total of . According to a 2011 report from the Asian Development Bank, the extent of the road network in the Philippines is comparable with or better than many neighboring developing countries in Southeast Asia. However, in terms of the quality of the road system, i.e., the percentage of paved roads and the percentage of those in good or fair condition, the country lagged behind its neighbors . Classificat ...
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South Luzon Expressway
The South Luzon Expressway (SLEX), signed as E2 of the Philippine expressway network and R-3 of the Metro Manila arterial road network, is a controlled-access highway that connects Metro Manila to the provinces in the Calabarzon, Mimaropa and Bicol Region on the island of Luzon in the Philippines. The expressway has a length of , traveling from its northern terminus at the Magallanes Interchange in Makati to its southern terminus at Santo Tomas, Batangas, connecting it to the Southern Tagalog Arterial Road (STAR Tollway). A portion of the expressway from the Magallanes Interchange to the Calamba Exit is part of Asian Highway 26 of the Asian highway network. It will be the longest expressway in the Philippines starting with the completion of Toll Road 4 surpassing the Subic–Clark–Tarlac Expressway (SCTEX) as well as providing a gateway to Visayas upon the completion of Toll Road 5. The expressway also serves as a major utility corridor, carrying various high voltage o ...
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Southeast Metro Manila Expressway
The Southeast Metro Manila Expressway (SEMME), also known as Skyway (Metro Manila), Skyway Stage 4, C-6 Expressway and formerly Metro Manila Expressway, is a proposed tolled expressway running across eastern Metro Manila and western Rizal (province), Rizal. The expressway will help decongest the existing roadways across Metro Manila, such as EDSA and Circumferential Road 5. The expressway is part of the larger Circumferential Road 6 project, expanding from the original C-6 currently passing from General Santos Avenue in Taguig up to Highway 2000 (Phase 1) in Taytay, will expand to Cainta, Pasig, Marikina, San Mateo, and in Quezon City. The expressway will begin at the Skyway (Metro Manila), Skyway near Food Terminal, Inc., FTI (now Arca South), Taguig, and end at the Batasang Pambansa Complex in Quezon City. It will also connect to the North Luzon Expressway (NLEX) in Balagtas, Bulacan, Balagtas, Bulacan. The entire expressway will be a spur component of Expressway 2 (E2) of th ...
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Taguig
Taguig (), officially the City of Taguig (), is the List of cities in the Philippines, fifth-most populous city in the Philippines situated on the eastern shores of Metro Manila, the national capital region. It is a center for culture, finance, technology, entertainment and media, academics, and the arts and fashion. The city hosts several embassies, making it an important center for the country's Diplomacy, international diplomacy. As the home of Bonifacio Global City, major multinational corporations have their headquarters in the city, and it has the List of tallest structures in the Philippines#Cities with the most high-rises and skyscrapers, fourth largest skyline in the Philippines, with 289 high-rises, 80 of which exceed . Taguig is located alongside the northwestern shores of Laguna de Bay, and is situated in the southeastern portion of Metro Manila. The city covers about and it is bordered by Pasig and Pateros to the north, Makati and Mandaluyong to the northwest, Pas ...
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Kalayaan Avenue
Kalayaan Avenue is a major east–west route in Makati and Taguig, Metro Manila, Philippines. For most of its length, it runs parallel to J. P. Rizal Avenue to the north from East Rembo near Fort Bonifacio to Barangay Singkamas, Makati, Singkamas by the border with Santa Ana, Manila, Santa Ana, Manila. It is interrupted by Bel-Air, Makati, Bel-Air Village between Rockwell Drive and Epifanio de los Santos Avenue (EDSA). The avenue east of EDSA is designated as a component of National Route 190 of the Philippine highway network. Previously, it was part of the Radial Road 4, which is currently designated to J. P. Rizal Avenue. History Kalayaan Avenue was formerly called Pasig Line Street as it mostly followed the defunct Paco–Pasig tram line of the Manila Electric Railway (operated by Meralco) for most of its length; the street in the district of San Andres in Manila still bears that name. The line was built in 1908 but was heavily damaged during World War II. Subsequent develo ...
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Ortigas Avenue
Ortigas Avenue is a highway connecting eastern Metro Manila and western Rizal in the Philippines. It is one of the busiest highways in Metro Manila, serving as the main thoroughfare of the metro's east–west corridor, catering mainly to traffic to and from Rizal. The western terminus of the highway is at the boundary of San Juan and Quezon City. The highway then traverses through Ortigas Center and along the cities of Mandaluyong, Quezon City, and Pasig, followed by the municipality of Cainta, and finally ending in the municipality of Taytay. The portion of Ortigas Avenue from EDSA–Ortigas Interchange, Quezon City to the Buli Bridge at the Pasig–Cainta boundary is designated as Radial Road 5 (R-5). The highway is also designated as National Route 60 (N60) and National Route 184 (N184) of the Philippine highway network, respectively. Etymology The highway is named after Filipino lawyer and businessman Don Francisco Emilio Barcinas Ortigas Sr. (1875&ndas ...
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