Country: | PHL | ||||
Type: | N | ||||
Marker Image: |
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Andrews Avenue | |||||
Alternate Name: | Nichols Road | ||||
Image Notes: | Andrews Avenue, looking west near Newport City with the elevated NAIA Expressway | ||||
Maint: | Department of Public Works and Highways - South Manila District Engineering Office | ||||
Length Km: | 4.3 | ||||
Direction A: | West | ||||
Terminus A: | in Baclaran, Parañaque (as Airport Road) | ||||
Junction: | |||||
Direction B: | East | ||||
Terminus B: | West Service Road at Sales Interchange, Pasay (as Sales Road)[1] | ||||
Cities: | Parañaque and Pasay | ||||
Previous Type: | N | ||||
Previous Route: | 191 | ||||
Next Type: | N | ||||
Next Route: | 193 |
Andrews Avenue (formerly and still commonly known as Nichols Road) is a major east-west thoroughfare in Metro Manila, Philippines that functions as a metropolitan linkage between Pasay and Taguig.[2] It runs underneath the NAIA Expressway almost parallel to Epifanio de los Santos Avenue (EDSA) to the north connecting Roxas Boulevard and Domestic Road near Bay City with South Luzon Expressway near Newport City. It has an arterial extension continuing 3.4km (02.1miles) northeast to 5th Avenue and McKinley Road in Bonifacio Global City known as Lawton Avenue.
Andrews Avenue also serves as the main feeder to Ninoy Aquino International Airport from the east and west and is the main access road to Newport World Resorts (formerly Resorts World Manila).
Andrews Avenue follows the old route of Nichols Road in Pasay and is split into three sections.
The avenue was formerly called Nichols Field Road,[4] later shortened to Nichols Road, after the US air base in Pasay which it served. Nichols Field, in turn, was named after Captain Henry E. Nichols, a US Navy commander of monitor ship USS Monadnock during the Philippine–American War.[5] [6] The air base was built in 1912[7] and the road to Fort McKinley (now Fort Bonifacio) and to Dewey Boulevard (now Roxas Boulevard) was constructed shortly thereafter. The whole stretch from Dewey to Fort McKinley was named Nichols Road.[8]
At present, the Fort Bonifacio/Taguig portion is named Lawton Avenue. In Pasay, the longest portion has been renamed to Andrews Avenue, in honor of Colonel Edwin Dudley Buencamino Andrews, the first Filipino post-war Philippine Air Force Commander who perished in the crash of 'Lili Marlene', a C-47 transport plane, at Mount Makaturing in Lanao on May 18, 1947.[9]
From 2004 to 2017, the NAIA Expressway was built above most of the road's Pasay portion. The Circulo del Mundo roundabout built on the avenue was opened to motorists in 2010, featuring its centerpiece, Layag Islas (Islands in Flight), which was constructed from September 2009 to December 2010 but was eventually dismantled in November 2014 due to public backlash over its perceived wastefulness.[10]
On April 14, 2024, a sinkhole formed along Sales Road near Villamor Air Base Gate 3, forcing the temporary closure of its two innermost eastbound lanes. Initially a pothole, it expanded to approximately 3m (10feet) in both width and depth.[11] On April 15, Maynilad Water Services reported that the sinkhole likely resulted from soil saturation due to a water leak from its secondary pipeline, with the company investigating potential external damage as the cause.[12] SMC Infrastructure also launched an investigation whether the sinkhole and the leak have compromised the integrity of the NAIA Expressway.[13] It was finally covered on April 17.[14]