Strong Republic Transit System Explained

The Strong Republic Transit System (SRTS) was a program initiated by President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo on June 14, 2003, aimed at integrating the various rail lines providing public transport in Metro Manila, Philippines. It aimed to provide a "reliable, seamless and integrated mass transit system that would be at par with international standards" by unifying existing rail infrastructure under one transit system and fare structure. The Manila Light Rail Transit System (Line 1 and Line 2), the Manila Metro Rail Transit System (Line 3) and the Philippine National Railways (PNR) Northrail and Southrail lines were covered by the SRTS project.[1]

Links

The SRTS project provided seven "links", i.e. interchange stations, where commuters can transfer from one line to another. When the program was initiated, four links were in use. The Santa Mesa and Recto Link were added in April 2004, when the already-under-construction Line 2 became fully operational. The Northrail project was cancelled in September 2012; because of this, the Caloocan Link is missing. The proposed extension of Southrail services to Caloocan, a part of SRTS, was not executed either. The closing of the loop has, as of 2015, almost been completed by extending Line 1 with five new stations, unlike originally outlined by the plan. Line 1 would require one more station to connect it with Line 2. In order of operation, the following links have been realized (colour coding has since changed):

LinkLines and stations
Blumentritt LinkBlumentrittPNR Southrail
Pasay LinkEDSA
Magallanes LinkPNR Southrail
Cubao LinkAraneta Center-CubaoAraneta Center-Cubao
Santa Mesa LinkPNR Southrail
Recto LinkLine 1
Caloocan Link PNR Southrail

Fare integration

The project aimed to unify fare systems on the lines through contactless smart cards, similar to the Octopus card in Hong Kong and the EZ-Link card in Singapore. The integrated system was not implemented, as the project was dropped. Instead, a weekly ticket, valid on Lines 1-3, was introduced in 2004. For 250, one can make unlimited rides per day on Lines 1-3 during one calendar week with the so-called Flash Pass Card.

See also

References

  1. https://web.archive.org/web/20040203065430/http://www.lrta.gov.ph/srts_project.htm The Strong Republic Transit System