Metro Manila's major road network | |
Country: | PHL |
Map: | Radial and circumferential roads in Metro Manila.svg |
Map Notes: | Simplified map of radial (solid and colored lines) and circumferential (dashed and gray lines) roads in Metro Manila |
Maint: | the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) and the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA) |
Established: | 1945 |
Label1: | Radial road |
Field1: | Rx, Rxx |
Label2: | Circumferential road |
Field2: | Cx |
This list of roads in Metro Manila summarizes the major thoroughfares and the numbering system currently being implemented in Metro Manila, Philippines.
Metro Manila's major road network comprises six circumferential roads and ten radial roads connecting the cities of Caloocan, Las Piñas, Makati, Malabon, Mandaluyong, Manila, Marikina, Muntinlupa, Navotas, Parañaque, Pasay, Pasig, Quezon City, San Juan, Taguig, and Valenzuela, and the municipality of Pateros.[1] [2]
This list only covers roads that are listed on the Department of Public Works and Highways's Infrastructure Atlas, as well as the previous circumferential and radial road system prior to 2014, and other notable roads in the metro. These road classifications are defined as follows:
Both primary and secondary roads may be designated as bypass or diversion roads, which divert through traffic away from city or municipal business centers with affirmative feasibility studies, or roads that would connect or fill the gap between adjoining national roads.
Any roads not classified as mational primary, national secondary, or national tertiary may be classified as follows:
Additional classifications are unclassified roads, road not yet given official classification, and private roads, roads that are maintained by private entities and may have access restrictions.
The first road numbering system in the Philippines was adapted in 1940 by the administration of President Manuel Quezon, and was very much similar to U.S. Highway numbering system. Portions of it are 70 roads labeled Highway 1 to Highway 60. Some parts of the numbering system are Admiral Dewey Boulevard (Highway 1), Calle Manila (Highway 50) and 19 de Junio (Highway 54).
In 1945, the Metropolitan Thoroughfare Plan was submitted by Quezon City planners Louis Croft and Antonio Kayanan which proposed the laying of 10 radial roads, which purposes in conveying traffic in and out of the city of Manila to the surrounding cities and provinces, and the completion of six Circumferential Roads, that will act as beltways of the city, forming altogether a web-like arterial road system.[3] [4] The Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) is the government agency that deals with these projects.
The road numbering for radial roads are R-1 up to R-10. The radial roads never intersect one another and they do not intersect circumferential roads twice; hence they continue straight routes leading out from the city of Manila to the provinces. The numbering is arranged in a counter-clockwise pattern, wherein the southernmost is R-1 and the northernmost is R-10. Circumferential roads are numbered C-1 to C-6, the innermost beltway is C-1, while the outermost is C-6.
There are ten radial roads that serves the purpose of conveying traffic in and out of the city of Manila to the surrounding cities of the metropolis and to the provinces, numbered in a counter clockwise pattern.[5] All radial roads starts at Kilometer Zero, demarked by a marble marcos across the Rizal Monument in Rizal Park along Roxas Boulevard.[6] [7]
Name | Image | Route | Major cities | Component highways | Length | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Radial Road 1 | Manila–Cavite |
| ||||
Radial Road 1 connects the City of Manila to the province of Cavite, officially starting at Bonifacio Drive after Anda Circle. The road skirts the coastline of Manila Bay entering Roxas Boulevard and later, after crossing NAIA Road, as the Manila–Cavite Expressway. The road will keep skirting the coastline until it ends in a junction with the Governor's Drive in Naic, Cavite, spanning 41.5km (25.8miles) from Rizal Park to Cavite. | ||||||
Radial Road 2 | Manila–Cavite | |||||
The road lies parallel to Radial Road 1, connecting the City of Manila to Cavite and Batangas. The road starts from the Lagusnilad Underpass in front of the National Museum in Ermita. The road, as Taft Avenue, will follow a straight route, and after crossing EDSA in Pasay, becomes Elpidio Quirino Avenue. E. Quirino Avenue serves as the main road in the suburb of Parañaque, until it becomes Diego Cera Avenue upon entering Las Piñas. The road then becomes the Aguinaldo Highway after crossing the Alabang–Zapote Road. Aguinaldo Highway serves as the main thoroughfare in the Province of Cavite, ending in the Tagaytay Rotunda, and becoming the Tagaytay–Talisay Road, which ends in front of the Taal Lake. The Manila LRT Line 1 follows the route of R-2 from Padre Burgos Avenue to EDSA. | ||||||
Radial Road 3 | Manila–Batangas | [8] | ||||
The entire road is an expressway, except for its northern end starting from its junction with Sales Interchange. It is jointly operated by the Skyway Operation and Management Corporation (SomCo) and the Citra Metro Manila Tollways Corporation (CMMTC). Although the kilometer zero of the road is at Rizal Park, the road officially starts from the junction of South Luzon Expressway and Quirino Avenue. The road will follow a straight route starting from Paco, Manila, passing through the provinces of Laguna and Cavite, to Santo Tomas, Batangas, where it becomes the Southern Tagalog Arterial Road or the STAR Tollway. The STAR Tollway then connects Santo Tomas to the Batangas Port in Batangas City. | ||||||
Radial Road 4 | Manila–Muntinlupa |
| [9] | |||
The road starts from the junction of Pedro Gil Street and Quirino Avenue in Paco, Manila, and it enters Makati after passing Tejeron Street before ending in an intersection with San Guillermo Avenue up to M. Almeda Street in Pasig. It will turn southwards reaching Pateros up to Alabang in Muntinlupa. The road currently spans 28.4km (17.6miles). | ||||||
Radial Road 5 | Manila–Laguna |
| [10] | |||
Radial Road 5 starts from Sta. Mesa as V. Mapa Street, and then continues as P. Sanchez Street until Sevilla Bridge in which it becomes Shaw Boulevard and it continues as Pasig Boulevard. R-5 continues as Ortigas Avenue after C-5 Road until Kaytikling Rotunda in which it continues as Taytay Diversion road and the road will eventually become the Manila East Road, the main transportation corridor of the Province of Rizal, and terminates in Pagsanjan, Laguna. | ||||||
Radial Road 6 | Manila–Quezon | [11] | ||||
Radial Road 6 starts from the junction of Mendiola Street, Recto Avenue, and Legarda Street. The road will serve as an important thoroughfare in Santa Mesa, Manila, and enters Quezon City before crossing G. Araneta Avenue to become Aurora Boulevard. The boulevard then enters the city of San Juan and the districts of New Manila and Cubao in Quezon City and serves as the main thoroughfare in Araneta Center. The road becomes Marikina–Infanta Highway (Marcos Highway) after crossing Katipunan Avenue. The highway then passes through the cities of Marikina then in Pasig and transverses the province of Rizal. The road continues further and terminates in Infanta, Quezon. The LRT Line 2 follows the route of R-6 from Legarda Street in Sampaloc, Manila to Marcos Highway in between the boundaries of Santolan, Pasig and Calumpang, Marikina. The road spans 88.6km (55.1miles) long. | ||||||
Radial Road 7 | Manila–Bulacan |
| [12] [13] | |||
Radial Road 7 starts from Sampaloc, Manila. The road follows a direct route towards Quezon City. After crossing the Quezon City Memorial Circle, it becomes Commonwealth Avenue, the widest road in the Philippines. The route then follows Regalado Highway in Fairview, Quezon City, and it ends in a junction with Quirino Highway in the Neopolitan Business Park in Lagro. The road drives north to Bulacan, until it ends with a junction with Fortunato Halili Avenue. The currently under construction North Luzon East Expressway or the R-7 Expressway is a continuation of this road. | ||||||
Radial Road 8 | Manila–La Union |
Spur: | [14] [15] | |||
Radial Road 8 starts from Quezon Bridge in Quiapo, Manila. The road will follow a direct route northwards, becoming the North Luzon Expressway after crossing EDSA. The road becomes SCTEX via Clark Spur Road in Mabalacat, Pampanga and then TPLEX in Tarlac City until its terminus in Rosario, La Union. It also has a spur segment in Quirino Highway, branching from the NLEX-Novaliches Interchange to Commonwealth Avenue, both in Quezon City. | ||||||
Radial Road 9 | Manila–La Union | [16] | ||||
The Radial Road 9 consists of the northern portion of the Pan-Philippine Highway or AH-26.(R-2 takes the southern portion) The LRT Line 1 follows the route of R-9 from Manila to Monumento, Caloocan. R-9 starts as the Rizal Bridge from Padre Burgos Avenue. It follows a straight northward route parallel to R-8. The road becomes MacArthur Highway after crossing the Monumento Roundabout in Caloocan. The road officially ends in the road diversion in Rosario where it diverges into Kennon Road. | ||||||
Radial Road 10 | Manila–Navotas |
| [17] [18] | |||
The Radial Road 10 is currently a 6.2km (03.9miles) highway from Anda Circle in Manila to C-4 Road in Navotas. |
There are six circumferential roads around the City of Manila that acts as beltways for the city. The first two runs inside the City of Manila, while the next three runs outside the City of Manila. All are beltways around Intramuros.
Name | Image | Route | Major cities | Component highways | Length | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Circumferential Road 1 | Manila |
| ||||
Circumferential Road 1 or C-1 is a route that runs inside the Manila city proper, passing through the city districts of Tondo, San Nicolas, Binondo, Santa Cruz, Quiapo, Sampaloc, San Miguel, and Ermita. It starts from the North Port as Recto Avenue and becomes Legarda Street after crossing R-6. It then becomes Nepomuceno and P. Casal Streets in Quiapo. The road then crosses the Pasig River as Ayala Boulevard, which ends in Taft Avenue and enters Rizal Park as Finance Drive, which merges into the southern part of Padre Burgos Avenue, which ends in a junction with Roxas Boulevard. | ||||||
Circumferential Road 2 | Manila |
| [19] | |||
The C-2 Road starts from Tondo, Manila, passing through the Manila city districts of Santa Cruz, Sampaloc, Santa Mesa, Pandacan, Paco, and Malate. It starts from R-10 (Mel Lopez Boulevard) as Capulong Street, becomes Tayuman Street past Juan Luna Street, then continues on as Arsenio H. Lacson Avenue in Santa Cruz district and becomes Nagtahan Street past Nagtahan Interchange. It then crosses the Pasig River, then becomes President Quirino Avenue, which continues on until it reaches R-1 (Roxas Boulevard), passing through the Paco and Malate districts. | ||||||
Circumferential Road 3 | Navotas–Pasay |
| [20] | |||
The C-3 Road is a route that lies outside the City of Manila. It starts from Mel Lopez Boulevard as the C-3 Road in Navotas, and becomes 5th Avenue after entering Caloocan. It becomes Sgt. Rivera Avenue after crossing A. Bonifacio Avenue, and becomes G. Araneta Avenue after crossing Sto. Domingo Avenue in Quezon City. The road ends shortly after entering San Juan at N. Domingo Street, only resuming at the junction of J.P. Rizal Avenue and South Avenue. South Avenue becomes Ayala Avenue Extension after crossing Metropolitan Avenue. The route turns into Gil Puyat Avenue until the road ends at Roxas Boulevard in Pasay. | ||||||
Circumferential Road 4 | Navotas–Pasay |
| [21] [22] | |||
The C-4 Road starts from Navotas. It becomes Paterio Aquino Avenue, then becomes Gen. San Miguel Street and then Samson Road after entering Caloocan. After crossing the Monumento Roundabout, C-4 becomes EDSA, the most important thoroughfare in the metropolis. With 2.34 million vehicles and almost 314,354 cars passing through it and its segments everyday, the road is also the busiest highway and most congested in the metropolis. C-4 ends at the intersection of Roxas Boulevard in Pasay. | ||||||
Circumferential Road 5 | Valenzuela–Las Piñas |
| [23] [24] [25] | |||
The road starts at the Karuhatan Exit of the North Luzon Expressway (NLEX) Harbor Link segment that crosses the NLEX mainline and becomes Mindanao Avenue. The road will then follow the route of Congressional Avenue and Luzon Avenue, crossing Commonwealth Avenue and becoming Tandang Sora Avenue, which becomes Katipunan Avenue after crossing Magsaysay Avenue in the University of the Philippines Diliman campus. The road will then follow the route of Col. Bonny Serrano Avenue and become Eulogio Rodriguez Jr. Avenue until Pasig and Carlos P. Garcia Avenue upon entering Taguig. The road ends in the East Service Road in Taguig, parallel to the South Luzon Expressway (SLEX). Its southern extension across SLEX starts from the West Service Road in Pasay to Coastal Road in Las Piñas. | ||||||
Circumferential Road 6 | Taguig–Pasig |
| [26] | |||
Currently operational in San Jose del Monte, Bulacan, San Mateo, Rizal, and from Taytay, Rizal to Taguig. It is planned to be extended north up to Marilao, Bulacan and south up to Noveleta, Cavite. The Southeast Metro Manila Expressway, a superhighway currently under construction, would be considered part of C-6. It will act as a beltway of Metro Manila, so that buses and other transportation vehicles coming from the southern provinces going to the northern provinces would not need to pass through Metro Manila, thus lessening traffic in the metropolis. |
The radial and circumferential road numbers are being supplanted by a new highway number system, which the Department of Public Works and Highways have laid out in 2014. The new system classifies the national roads or highways as national primary roads, national secondary roads, and national tertiary roads. Primary national roads are numbered with one to two-digit numbers. Secondary national roads are assigned three-digit numbers, with the first digit being the number of the principal national road of the region. Secondary national roads around Manila mostly connect to N1 and are numbered with 100-series numbers.
Expressways are assigned with numbers with an E prefix to avoid confusion with numbered national roads. The network consists of controlled-access highways and limited-access roads, with crossing traffic limited to overpasses, underpasses, and interchanges. Some existing expressways serving Metro Manila also form part of the latter's arterial road network (see the list above).
Expressway route | Image | Route | Component tollways | Length | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
–Rosario (La Union) | Part of R-8 | |||||
Makati– | Part of R-3 | |||||
Muntinlupa | Spur of E2 | |||||
Parañaque–Kawit | Part of R-1 | |||||
–Navotas | NLEX Mindanao Avenue Link and NLEX Karuhatan Link are part of C-5. | |||||
Parañaque–Taguig | Serves Ninoy Aquino International Airport |
Many other streets in the metropolis are considered major roads. Only Dr. Arcadio Santos Avenue (Sucat Road or N63) is designated a primary national road that is not part of the arterial road system. Roads with 3-number designations are secondary national roads.
This list only covers roads that are listed as National Primary, National Secondary, or National Tertiary Roads on the Department of Public Works and Highways's Infrastructure Atlas[27] [28] or are considered as notable roads for the specific city or municipality.
Districts | Notes | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Abad Santos Avenue | Secondary | two-way | 6–8 | Tondo | Road continues south as R. Regente Street | ||
Adriatico Street | Tertiary | one-way, two-way | 6 | Ermita and Malate | |||
Ayala Boulevard | Secondary | two-way | 4 | Ermita | |||
Blumentritt Road | Secondary | two-way | 2–4 | Santa Cruz and Sampaloc | |||
Bonifacio Drive | Secondary | two-way | 8 | Port Area, Intramuros, and Ermita | |||
Carlos Palanca Street | Tertiary | one-way, two-way | 4 | Quiapo and San Miguel | |||
Del Pilar Street | Tertiary | one-way | 2 | Ermita and Malate | |||
Dimasalang Street | Secondary | two-way | 4–6 | Santa Cruz and Sampaloc | |||
España Boulevard | Secondary | two-way | 8 | Sampaloc | |||
Escolta Street | Tertiary | one-way | 2 | Binondo | |||
Finance Road | Tertiary | two-way | 6 | Ermita | |||
Hidalgo Street | Tertiary | two-way | 4 | Quiapo | |||
Jose Laurel Street | Tertiary | two-way | 4 | San Miguel | Road continues west as C. Palanca Street | ||
Juan Luna Street | Tertiary | one-way, two-way | 4-6 | Binondo and Tondo | |||
Kalaw Avenue | Secondary | two-way | 6 | Ermita | |||
Lacson Avenue | Secondary | two-way | 4–8 | Santa Cruz and Sampaloc | |||
Legarda Street | Secondary | two-way | 4–8 | Quiapo and Sampaloc | |||
Lerma Street | Secondary | two-way | 8 | Sampaloc | |||
Magsaysay Boulevard | Secondary | two-way | 8 | Sampaloc and Santa Mesa | |||
Maria Orosa Street | Tertiary | one-way, two-way | 2 | Ermita and Malate | |||
Mendiola Street | Tertiary | two-way | 4–6 | San Miguel | |||
Nicanor Reyes Street | Tertiary | two-way | 4 | Sampaloc | Formerly known as Morayta Street | ||
Ocampo Street | Tertiary | one-way, two-way | 2–4 | Malate and San Andres Bukid | Formerly known as Vito Cruz Street | ||
Osmeña Highway | Secondary | two-way | 10 | Paco, Malate, and San Andres | Road starts at Quirino Avenue | ||
Padre Burgos Avenue | Secondary | two-way | 8 | Ermita | Road continues west as Katigbak Parkway, ends at Jones Bridge | ||
Padre Faura Street | Tertiary | one-way | 3 | Ermita and Paco | |||
Pascual Casal Street | Secondary | two-way | 4 | San Miguel and Quiapo | |||
Paula Sanchez Street | Secondary | two-way | 2–4 | Santa Mesa | |||
Pedro Gil Street | Tertiary | one-way, two-way | 2 | Ermita, Malate, Paco, and Santa Ana | |||
Quezon Boulevard | Secondary | two-way | 6–10 | Ermita, Quiapo, and Sampaloc | Road continues north as A. Mendoza Street, continues south as Padre Burgos Avenue | ||
Quintin Paredes Road | Tertiary | one-way | 4 | Binondo | |||
Quirino Avenue | Secondary | two-way | 4–6 | Malate, Paco and Pandacan | Includes the extension as N156 running from Quirino Avenue to UN Avenue | ||
Recto Avenue | Secondary | two-way | 4–6 | Tondo, Binondo, Santa Cruz, and Sampaloc | |||
Rizal Avenue | Secondary | two-way | 2–6 | Santa Cruz and Tondo | |||
Ronquillo Street | Secondary | one-way | 2 | Santa Cruz | |||
Roxas Boulevard | Primary | two-way | 8 | Ermita and Malate | Road continues north as Bonifacio Drive | ||
San Andres Street | Tertiary | one-way, two-way | 4 | Malate and San Andres Bukid | |||
San Marcelino Street | Tertiary | one-way | 4 | Malate, Paco, and Ermita | Road starts at Natividad Lopez Street and ends at San Andres Street | ||
Taft Avenue | Secondary | two-way | 4–8 | Ermita and Malate | Road continues north as Padre Burgos Avenue | ||
Tayuman Street | Secondary | two-way | 4 | Tondo and Santa Cruz | Road starts at Juan Luna Street and ends at Lacson Street | ||
Tejeron Street | Tertiary | two-way | 4 | Santa Ana | |||
Tomas Claudio Street | Secondary | one-way, two way | 2–4 | Paco, Pandacan, Santa Mesa | Road starts from Quirino Avenue. Part of the Nagtahan Link Bridge | ||
United Nations Avenue | Secondary | two-way | 4–6 | Ermita and Paco | Road starts at Roxas Boulevard and continues as Paz Mendoza Guazon Street | ||
Valenzuela Street | Secondary | one-way | 2–3 | Santa Mesa | Road starts at Magsaysay Boulevard and continues as P. Sanchez Street | ||
Victorino Mapa Street | Secondary | one-way, two-way | 4–6 | Santa Mesa | Road starts at Magsaysay Boulevard and continues as P. Sanchez Street | ||
Zobel Roxas Street | Tertiary | one-way, two-way | 2–4 | Malate, San Andres Bukid, and Santa Ana | Road starts at F. Muñoz Street and continues as R. Delpan Street |
Barangays | Notes | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Acacia Lane | Tertiary | two-way | 2–4 | Hagdang Bato Libis and Addition Hills | Also known as Welfareville Road. Road terminates at Shaw Boulevard in the north and loops around the Welfareville Compound in the south. | ||
A. Bonifacio Road | Tertiary | two-way | 2 | Mabini-J. Rizal and Hagdang Bato Itaas | |||
A. Luna Road | Tertiary | two-way | 2 | Hagdang Bato Itaas and Hagdang Bato Libis | |||
Argonne Street | Tertiary | two-way | 2 | Bagong Silang | Includes J. B. Vargas Street | ||
Barangka Drive | Tertiary | one-way, two-way | 2 | Highway Hills, Mauway, Barangka Itaas, Barangka Ibaba, Hulo | Road continues as Nueve de Pebero Street in the north. Leads to Estrella–Pantaleon Bridge in the south. | ||
Boni Avenue | Tertiary | two-way | 2–8 | Old Zañiga and Ilaya | Road continues as Rev. Aglipay Street in the west and as Pioneer Street in the east. | ||
EDSA | Primary | two-way | 10–12 | Wack-Wack Greenhills | |||
F. Martinez Street[29] | City Road | two-way | 4 | Pleasant Hills, Addition Hills, Plainview | |||
General Kalentong Street | Tertiary | two-way | 2–4 | Old Zañiga and Daang Bakal | Road continues as New Panaderos Extension and F. Roxas Street in the southwest and as F. Blumentritt Street in the northwest. | ||
Luna Mencias Road | Tertiary | two-way | 2 | Addition Hills | Road terminates at P. Guevarra Street in the north and terminates at Shaw Boulevard in the south. | ||
New Panaderos Extension | Tertiary | two-way | 4–6 | Mabini-J. Rizal and Namayan | Road continues northeast as General Kalentong Street | ||
Nueve de Pebero Street | Tertiary | two-way | 2–4 | Hagdang Bato Libis and Mauway | Also known as 9 de Febero Street and formerly known as Psychopathic Hospital Road. Road continues as Gomezville Street in the northwest and as Domingo Guevara Street in the east. | ||
Ortigas Avenue | Primary | two-way | 6–8 | Wack-Wack Greenhills | |||
Pedro Guevara Street | Tertiary | one-way, two-way | 2 | Bagong Silang | |||
Pioneer Street | Tertiary | two-way | 4 | Ilaya | Road continues west as Boni Avenue and terminates at Shaw Boulevard in the northeast. | ||
Shaw Boulevard | Secondary | two-way | 4–8 | Daang Bakal, Addition Hills, Highway Hills, Wack-Wack Greenhills East | Road continues as P. Sanchez Road in the west and continues as Pasig Boulevard in the east. |
Barangays | Notes | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
A. Bonifacio Avenue | Secondary | two-way | 4 | Barangka, Tañong, Jesus Dela Peña | Road continues east as Sumulong Highway, continues west as Aurora Boulevard in Quezon City | |
Bagong Farmers Avenue 1 | Tertiary | two-way | 4 | Tumana | Road continues west as Katipunan Street Extension in Quezon City | |
Bayan-Bayanan Avenue | Tertiary | two-way | 4 | Concepcion Uno, Marikina Heights | Road continues east as Liwasang Kalayaan Circle Road | |
FVR (Fidel V. Ramos) Road | Primary | two-way | 6-8 | Industrial Valley Complex | Known as C5 Access Road, road continues south as Eulogio Rodriguez Jr. Avenue in Quezon City | |
General Ordoñez Avenue | Tertiary | two-way | 2-4 | Marikina Heights | Formerly known as Molave Street; a type of ring road | |
J. P. Rizal Street | Secondary | two-way | 2-4 | Calumpang, San Roque, Santa Elena, Santo Niño, Malanday, Concepcion Uno, Nangka | Road continues north as General Luna Avenue in San Mateo, Rizal | |
Katipunan Street | Tertiary | two-way | 2 | Concepcion Uno, Concepcion Dos, Marikina Heights | Road continues south in Cainta, Rizal | |
Lilac Street | Tertiary | two-way | 2 | Concepcion Dos | Road continues south as Hon. B. Soliven Avenue in Antipolo, Rizal | |
Marikina–Infanta Highway | Primary | two-way | 8-10 | Barangka, Calumpang, San Roque | Known as Marilaque Highway and Marcos Highway | |
Mayor Gil Fernando Avenue | Secondary | two-way | 4 | San Roque, Santa Elena, Santo Niño | Formerly known as Angel Tuazon Avenue; road continues south as Felix Avenue in Cainta, Rizal | |
Shoe Avenue | Tertiary | two-way | 4 | San Roque, Santa Elena, Santo Niño | Formerly the line of old train tracks of PNR Rosario-Montalban branch; road continues north as Daang Bakal Road | |
Sumulong Highway | Secondary | two-way | 6 | Santo Niño | Road continues west as A. Bonifacio Avenue | |
Barangays | Notes | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
A. Luna Avenue | San Nicolas and San Joaquin | Road continues as A. Mabini Street. | ||||
ADB Avenue | two-way | 4–6 | San Antonio and Ugong | |||
Lopez-Jaena Stree | two-way | 2–4 | Caniogan and Kapasigan | |||
Cipriano Raymundo Avenue | two-way | Santa Lucia and Kapasigan | Road continues as Tramo Street | |||
Dr. Sixto Antonio Avenue | two-way | Santa Lucia and San Nicolas | ||||
East Bank Road | two-way | Manggahan and Santa Lucia | ||||
Eulogio Amang Rodriguez Avenue | two-way | 4 | Santolan and Santa Lucia | |||
Eulogio Rodriguez Jr. Avenue | two-way | 8–10 | Ugong and Bagong Ilog | Road continues south as Carlos P. Garcia Avenue | ||
Julia Vargas Avenue | one-way, two-way | 4–6 | San Antonio and Ugong | Road starts from EDSA and ends at Eulogio Rodriguez Jr. Avenue | ||
Lanuza Avenue | two-way | 4–6 | Ugong | |||
Meralco Avenue | two-way | 4–8 | Ugong and San Antonio | |||
Ortigas Avenue | two-way | 6–8 | Ugong, Santa Lucia, and Rosario | Road continues east as Manila East Road | ||
Pasig Boulevard | two-way | 4 | Bagong Ilog and Sagad | Road is a continuation of Shaw Boulevard. | ||
Pioneer Street | two-way | 4 | Kapitolyo | |||
San Miguel Avenue | two-way | 6 | San Antonio | |||
Shaw Boulevard | two-way | 4–8 | Road continues as Pasig Boulevard. | |||
West Bank Road | two-way | Manggahan and Santa Lucia |
Barangays | Notes | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aurora Boulevard | two-way | 4 | Ermitaño, Balong-Bato, Salapan | |||
EDSA | two-way | 8–10 | Greenhills | |||
F. Blumentritt Street | two-way | 2–4 | Rivera, San Perfecto, Pedro Cruz, Batis, Tibagan, Kabayanan | Road continues as General Kalentong Street. | ||
F. Manalo Street | two-way | 2 | Onse, Santa Lucia, Maytunas, Kabayanan, Batis, San Perfecto | |||
Gregorio Araneta Avenue | two-way | 6–8 | Progreso | |||
Luna-Mencias Road | one-way | 2 | Addition Hills | |||
M. J. Paterno Street | two-way | 2 | Pasadeña | |||
Nicanor Domingo Street | two-way | 2–4 | Progreso, San Perfecto, Rivera, Pedro Cruz, Balong-Bato, Corazon de Jesus, Ermitaño, Pasadeña | Road continues west as Old Santa Mesa Road. | ||
Ortigas Avenue | two-way | 4–8 | Greenhills | Road continues west as Granada Street. | ||
Pedro Guevarra Street | one-way, two-way | 2 | Maytunas, Addition Hills, Santa Lucia, Little Baguio, St. Joseph, Corazon De Jesus | |||
Pinaglabanan Road | two-way | 2–6 | Pedro Cruz, Balong-Bato, Corazon de Jesus | Road continues as Bonny Serrano Avenue. |
Barangays | Notes | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alabang-Zapote Road | two-way | ||||
CAA Road | two-way | ||||
Daang Hari Road | two-way | ||||
Diego Cera Avenue | two-way | ||||
J. Aguilar Avenue | two-way | ||||
Marcos Alvarez Avenue | two-way | ||||
Naga Road Avenue | two-way |
Barangays | Notes | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Amorsolo Street | national tertiary road | San Lorenzo, Dasmariñas (Makati CBD) | |||
Arnaiz Avenue | national tertiary road | 4 | San Lorenzo, Bangkal, Pio del Pilar | ||
Ayala Avenue | private road | San Lorenzo, Urdaneta, Bel-Air, San Antonio (Makati CBD) | |||
Chino Roces Avenue | national tertiary road | Dasmariñas, La Paz, Olympia, Pio del Pilar, San Antonio, San Lorenzo, Tejeros | |||
EDSA | national primary road | Guadalupe VIejo, Guadalupe Nuevo, Bel-Air, Pinagkaisahan, Urdaneta, Forbes Park, San Lorenzo, Dasmariñas, Bangkal, Magallanes | |||
Estrella Street | national tertiary road | Bel-Air, Poblacion, Guadalupe Viejo | |||
Gil Puyat Avenue | national secondary road | Bel-Air, Palanan, Pio del Pilar, San Antonio, San Lorenzo, Urdaneta | |||
Jose P. Rizal Avenue | national tertiary road | Comembo, East Rembo, West Rembo, Cembo, Guadalupe Nuevo, Guadalupe Viejo, Poblacion, Valenzuela, Olympia, Tejeros | |||
Kalayaan Avenue | national tertiary road | Singkamas to Poblacion in Makati and Pinagkaisahan to East Rembo in Makati | |||
McKinley Road | national tertiary road | Dasmariñas to Bonifacio Global City in Taguig | |||
Makati Avenue | private road (within Makati CBD), national tertiary road | San Lorenzo (Makati CBD) to Poblacion | |||
Nicanor Garcia Street | city road | Bel-Air, Valenzuela, Poblacion | |||
Osmeña Highway | national secondary road | Palanan, San Isidro, Pio del Pilar, Bangkal | |||
Paseo de Roxas | private road | San Lorenzo to Bel-Air (Makati CBD) | |||
national tertiary road | Santa Cruz to Olympia |
Barangays | Notes | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alabang-Zapote Road | national secondary road | Ayala Alabang, Alabang | |||
Commerce Avenue | private road | Ayala Alabang, Alabang | Serves Ayala Alabang Village, Madrigal Business Park and Filinvest City | ||
Daang Hari Road | national secondary road | Ayala Alabang | Mostly travels along Las Piñas-Muntinlupa boundary | ||
Filinvest Avenue | private road | Alabang | serves Filinvest City | ||
Manuel L. Quezon Avenue | national secondary road | Alabang, Sucat | |||
Meralco Road | national secondary road | Sucat | |||
National Road (Manila South Road/Maharlika Highway) | national primary road | Alabang, Bayanan, Putatan, Poblacion, Tunasan | |||
Muntinlupa–Cavite Expressway | expressway | Poblacion |
Barangays | Notes | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aseana Avenue | private road | ||||
Dr. Santos Avenue (Sucat Road) | national primary | ||||
Doña Soledad Avenue | city road | ||||
Quirino Avenue | national secondary road | ||||
NAIA Expressway | expressway | ||||
NAIA Road (MIA Road) | national secondary | ||||
Ninoy Aquino Avenue (Imelda Avenue) | national secondary | ||||
Pacific Avenue | private road |
Barangays | Notes | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Andrews Avenue | national secondary | ||||
Arnaiz Avenue (Libertad Street) | national tertiary | ||||
Domestic Road | national secondary | ||||
F.B. Harrison Street | national tertiary | ||||
Jose W. Diokno Boulevard | national tertiary | ||||
Macapagal Boulevard | national tertiary | ||||
NAIA Expressway | expressway | ||||
NAIA Road (MIA Road) | national secondary | ||||
Tramo Street | national secondary |