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Wikipedia

EDSA

Epifanio de los Santos Avenue, commonly referred to by its acronym EDSA, is a limited-access circumferential highway around Manila, the capital city of the Philippines. It passes through 6 of Metro Manila's 17 local government units or cities, namely, from north to south, Caloocan, Quezon City, San Juan, Mandaluyong, Makati, and Pasay.[1]


C-4
Epifanio de los Santos Avenue
EDSA
Map of highways in Metro Manila with EDSA highlighted in red.
EDSA in Guadalupe, Makati, looking north towards the Pasig River
Route information
Part of AH26
Maintained by the Department of Public Works and Highways[note 1] and the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority
Length23.8 km (14.8 mi)
Including extension to SM Mall of Asia
includes extension in Bay City, Pasay
Existed1940–present
Component
highways
RestrictionsNo heavy trucks, tricycles
Major junctions
Beltway around Manila
North endBonifacio Monument Circle in Caloocan
Major intersections
South endSM Mall of Asia Globe Rotunda in Bay City, Pasay
Location
CountryPhilippines
Major citiesCaloocan, Makati, Mandaluyong, Pasay, Quezon City, San Juan
Highway system
  • Roads in the Philippines

Named after academic Epifanio de los Santos, the road links the North Luzon Expressway at the Balintawak Interchange in the north to the South Luzon Expressway at the Magallanes Interchange in the south, as well as the major financial districts of Triangle Park, Araneta City, Ortigas Center, Makati CBD, and Bay City. It is the longest and the most congested highway in the metropolis, stretching some 23.8 kilometers (14.8 mi).[2]

Structure

The entire avenue forms part of Circumferential Road 4 (C-4) of Metro Manila's arterial road network, National Route 1 (N1) of the Philippine highway network and Asian Highway 26 (AH26) of the Asian Highway Network.[3] The locations around the avenue were marked with great economic and industrial growth, proven by the fact that all but two industrial centers in the Metropolis are directly accessible from the thoroughfare. The decent economic growth of the areas around the avenue adds a significant volume of traffic on the avenue, and in recent estimates,[4] and an average of 2.34 million vehicles go through it every day.[5] The avenue is a divided carriageway, often consisting of 12 lanes, 6 in either direction, with the elevated railroads Manila Metro Rail Transit System Line 3 and Manila Light Rail Transit System Line 1 often serving as its median. Although it is not an expressway, traffic rules and speed limits are strictly implemented to the vehicles that pass along it. It is operated by the Metro Manila Development Authority and is maintained and constantly being repaired by the Department of Public Works and Highways, whose maintenance over EDSA excludes the extension at Bay City in Pasay.[3]

Route description

 
Quezon City
 
Pasay
Street signs used for EDSA
 
The northern terminus of EDSA at the Bonifacio Monument in Caloocan.

EDSA starts from the Bonifacio Monument (Monumento) Circle in Caloocan, its intersection with MacArthur Highway, Rizal Avenue Extension, and Samson Road, the western side of the C-4 Road. The roundabout is also the marker of the 1896 Revolution by Andres Bonifacio. The 1.7 kilometers (1.1 mi) of the road are in Caloocan. The Avenue will then enter Quezon City through the Balintawak district, after an intersection with the North Luzon Expressway (NLEX) and A. Bonifacio Avenue at the Balintawak Interchange.

 
EDSA-Aurora Underpass in Cubao, Quezon City
 
EDSA looking north to SM North EDSA

EDSA crosses much of the northern part of Quezon City, passing through the Balintawak, Muñoz, and Project 7 districts. It sharply curves southwards after crossing the North Avenue-West Avenue Intersection in the Triangle Business Park. On the north side of EDSA is the SM North EDSA. In front of it are the TriNoma mall and the Eton Centris or Centris Walk. ABS-CBN Broadcasting Center and its transmitter can be easily seen from EDSA and continues southwards, slightly turning westwards slowly until it leaves the Triangle Park after crossing the East Avenue-Timog Avenue Intersection, where the GMA Network Center is located. It continues through the district of Cubao, entering the Araneta Center after crossing the Aurora Boulevard Tunnel. In Cubao, several malls, infrastructure and offices are located, most notably the Smart Araneta Coliseum, the biggest coliseum in Southeast Asia. The Avenue curves southwards and crosses Santolan Road near Socorro, where the twin bases of Camps Crame and Aguinaldo are located. The Greenhills Shopping Center and the Eastwood City are also located nearby. EDSA then continues on its route and serves as the boundary of the cities of San Juan and Quezon City. The People Power Monument can be seen on the northbound side of EDSA at its junction with White Plains Avenue. After 11 kilometers (6.8 mi) in Quezon City, the Avenue will eventually leave the city and enter the City of Mandaluyong. EDSA enters Mandaluyong after crossing the borders of the Ortigas Center. In the Ortigas Center, some notable buildings around the area are the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration building, Robinsons Galleria, SM Megamall, and the bronze EDSA Shrine, a memorial church to the 1986 Revolution. It then curves smoothly westwards after it crosses Boni Avenue and Pioneer Street, and crosses the Pasig River via the Guadalupe Bridge, leaving the city of Mandaluyong.

After crossing the Pasig River, EDSA enters the city of Makati through Guadalupe, where it provides access to the Rockwell Center, a major mixed-use business park in Makati, through J.P. Rizal Avenue. The highway also provides quick access to the city of Taguig and the Bonifacio Global City nearby. After crossing Buendia Avenue, the highway enters the Ayala Center, an important commercial district in the Philippines, where the Greenbelt and Glorietta shopping centers are located via Ayala Avenue. The road then curves eastwards, continues on a straight route to the city of Pasay, and passing the Chino Roces Avenue, Osmeña Highway and South Luzon Expressway (SLEX) through Magallanes Interchange.

 
EDSA Extension looking west towards SM Mall of Asia

EDSA enters Pasay shortly after crossing SLEX and Osmeña Highway in Makati. In Pasay, the highway provides access to Ninoy Aquino International Airport via a flyover to Tramo Street. EDSA would pass through Pasay Rotonda within Taft Avenue and continues on a straight route until it crosses to Roxas Boulevard. After crossing Roxas Boulevard, it becomes known as EDSA Extension and enters Central Business Park 1-A of the Bay City reclamation area, where SM Mall of Asia is located. EDSA's terminus is at the Globe Rotunda fronting SM Mall of Asia.

Traffic management

 
Heavy traffic on EDSA as seen from Boni station, looking south towards Guadalupe

The lead agency that manages the flow of traffic along EDSA is the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA), a government agency under the Office of the President of the Philippines and is advised by the Metro Manila Mayors League. One of the MMDA's traffic management schemes that is in effect on EDSA, among other major thoroughfares in the metropolis, is the Uniform Vehicular Volume Reduction Program.

Many[by whom?] have observed that the cause of many traffic jams on EDSA is its change from being a highway to an avenue. This resulted the erection of erring establishment, buses and jeepneys. Subsequently, buses have been the target of other traffic management programs, like the MMDA's Organized Bus Route Program.[6] The MMDA is strictly implementing also the Motorcycle and Bus laning in EDSA, making it the second highway in the Philippines ever to have such traffic rule to be enforced, after Commonwealth Avenue.[5][7] The average speed of vehicles in EDSA is 15 kilometers per hour (9.3 mph).

On January 18, 2016, strict implementation on bus lanes started on the Shaw–Guadalupe segment, where plastic barriers are placed and prohibited entry of private vehicles and taxis on the bus lanes except when turning to EDSA's side streets.[8] Despite the plastic barrier, many private vehicles still enter the lanes.[8]

In June 2020, bus routes in the avenue were rationalized, creating the EDSA Carousel line carried by the new EDSA Busway. The EDSA Busway is separated from normal road traffic and now used only for buses and emergency vehicles. The new bus lane spans from Monumento to PITX and is divided by concreted barriers and steel fences. The old rightmost bus lanes was now opened for all vehicles, with the avenue now having total of 4-5 public-use lanes per direction instead of 3, excluding interchanges.

Decongestion program

A decongestion program under the Build! Build! Build! Infrastructure Program is ongoing to help decongest EDSA (which is under overcapacity, carrying 402,000 vehicles daily while has the capacity of 288,000).[9] This involves the construction of other roads and bridges that will divert traffic from the avenue. The government aims to reduce travel time from Cubao to Makati to 5–6 minutes.[10]

History

Construction of what was then called the North and South Circumferential Road began in 1939 under President Manuel L. Quezon.[11] The construction team was led by engineers Florencio Moreno and Osmundo Monsod.[1]

The road, starting from North Bay Boulevard in Navotas and ending at Taft Avenue (formerly known as Taft Avenue Extension / Manila South Road) in Pasay, then in the province of Rizal,[12] was finished in 1940 shortly before the outbreak of World War II and the subsequent Japanese Occupation. It was then known as the Manila Circumferential Road or simply as Circumferential Road.[13][14] It was also renamed to Highway 54 and thus designated as Route 54.[15][16] Due to the route number, there was a common misconception on that time that the avenue is 54 kilometers (34 mi) long.[1] The present-day North EDSA section in Caloocan and Quezon City was referred to as Calle Samson (Samson Street),[12] while its section in Pasay was also known as P. Lovina Street. After the independence of the Philippines from the United States in 1946, the road was renamed Avenida 19 de Junio (June 19 Avenue), after the birth date of national hero José Rizal.[1]

In the 1950s, the northern end of the avenue was designated to its present terminus at Bonifacio Monument in Caloocan and its section west of it later became known as Samson Road, General San Miguel Street, and Letre Road, respectively.[17] In the same decade, Rizalists wanted the avenue's name to remain 19 de Junio, while President Ramon Magsaysay wanted the avenue named after Rizal. Residents of Rizal province (to which most parts of Metro Manila belonged until 1975) wanted the avenue to be named after a Rizaleño: the historian, jurist and scholar named Epifanio de los Santos y Cristóbal. The Philippine Historical Committee (now the National Historical Commission of the Philippines), the Philippine Historical Association, the Philippine Library Association, Association of university and College Professors, the Philippine China Cultural Association, and the Philippine National Historical Society, led by fellow Rizaleños Eulogio Rodríguez, Sr. and Juan Sumulong, supported the renaming of Highway 54 to Epifanio de los Santos Avenue.

On April 7, 1959, De los Santos' birth anniversary, Republic Act No. 2140 was passed, renaming the avenue to honor him.[18] Rapid urbanization in the 1960s and 1970s, particularly after the annexation of several Rizal towns to the newly established National Capital Region, marked the growth of the industrial centers along the road, and several other roads connected to the avenue, such as Ayala Avenue and McKinley Road in Makati.

During the rule of President Ferdinand Marcos, traffic jams along the avenue started to build up. Several interchanges were constructed to relieve congestion, including the Balintawak and Magallanes Interchanges. Later, with the implementation of the Metro Manila Arterial Road System in 1965, in order to complete the Circumferential Road 4 system, EDSA was extended from Taft Avenue to Roxas Boulevard, occupying parcels of land along the old F. Rein and Del Pan Streets in Pasay.[19] Until the mid-1980s, many parts of the highway still overlooked vast grassland and open fields.

The EDSA Revolution

By 1986, political opposition to the 20-year dictatorship of President Ferdinand Marcos mounted. In late February, high-ranking military officers including Defence Minister Juan Ponce Enrile and General Fidel Ramos, defected from the Marcos government and seized Camp Crame and Camp Aguinaldo, two military bases located across each other midway along EDSA. This triggered three days of peaceful demonstrations that became the People Power Revolution.

The majority of protesters were gathered at the gates of the two bases, along a stretch of EDSA between the commercial districts of Cubao in Quezon City and Ortigas Center in Mandaluyong. Over two million Filipino civilians, along with political, military, and religious groups led by Archbishop of Manila Cardinal Jaime Sin, succeeded in toppling President Marcos. Corazon Aquino, the widow of assassinated opposition senator Benigno Aquino Jr., was installed as president on the morning of February 25; by midnight, Marcos had escaped Malacañang Palace with his family, and was flying to exile in Hawaii.

Monuments

Several landmarks commemorate historical events that occurred along the avenue. At the intersection of EDSA and Ortigas Avenue is EDSA Shrine, a Catholic church capped by a bronze statue of the Blessed Virgin Mary as Our Lady of Peace. The shrine is dedicated to this Marian title in memory of the pious folk belief that in the 1986 Revolution, the Virgin Mary personally shielded the protesters – many of whom were peacefully praying and singing – as they faced government troops, tanks, and aircraft.

The People Power Monument (Tagalog: Monumento ng Lakás ng Bayan), consisting of a giant statue and esplanade, sits at the corner of EDSA and White Plains Avenue. Sculpted by Eduardo Castrillo and unveiled in 1993, the central sculpture depicts protesters standing upon a circular podium, all surrounding a woman (representing Ináng Bayan or the Motherland), reaching up to the heavens with her outstretched hands and broken shackles. A Philippine flag rises behind her, while a statue of Ninoy Aquino and an eternal flame stand on either side at its base. A huge, limestone-faced wall with grooves for ribbons in the national colors forms a backdrop to the scene. The surrounding pavement contains a row of flagstaffs, and is the center for protests and ceremonies held on the Revolution's anniversary of February 25.

Recent history

 
NLEX-bound EDSA as seen from Roosevelt Avenue overpass, prior to the extension of the LRT Line 1 (LRT-1) of the Manila Light Rail Transit System

After the People Power Revolution, the highway was commonly referred to as EDSA, and it was connected to its southern extensions.

In 1997, construction began on the Manila Metro Rail Transit System, which runs the length of EDSA from North Avenue to Taft Avenue. It was opened under the administration of Joseph Estrada, the thirteenth President of the Philippines.[20][21]

The Second EDSA Revolution, which also took place along the avenue, resulted in the peaceful ouster of President Estrada following his impeachment trial. He was succeeded by his Vice-President, Gloria Macapagal Arroyo. She was sworn in on the terrace of EDSA Shrine by then-Chief Justice Hilario Davide Jr. at noon on January 20, 2001, several hours before Estrada and his family fled Malacañang Palace.

The EDSA III, which also took place along the avenue from April 25 to May 1 of the same year, resulted in violence when the supporters of former President Estrada attempted to storm the presidential palace and the military and police were ordered to use their arms to drive them back. Arroyo declared a state of rebellion because of the violence and prominent political personalities affiliated with Estrada were charged and arrested.

In 2006, the avenue was further extended from Roxas Boulevard to the SM Mall of Asia on the Bay City Reclamation Project, where it now ends at the Globe Rotunda, a roundabout. That same year, the avenue was badly damaged in September, when Typhoon Milenyo hit Manila.

In 2010, the LRT Line 1 (LRT-1) of the Manila Light Rail Transit System was extended from Monumento to Roosevelt, ultimately transversing EDSA to end at the site of the current North Avenue MRT Station.

On September 9, 2015, the Philippine National Police (PNP) deployed the Highway Patrol Group to support MMDA traffic constables easing traffic on congested segments of EDSA.[22]

In September 2017, the construction of the North Triangle Common Station was started after numerous delays due to bureaucracy and location disputes. It will connect the LRT Line 1, MRT Line 3, MRT Line 7, and the Metro Manila Subway.[23]

Intersections

 
EDSA-Aurora Underpass in Quezon City
 
The bridge connecting LRT-1's EDSA and MRT-3's Taft Avenue stations.

Intersections are numbered by kilometer post, with Rizal Park in Manila designated as kilometer zero

ProvinceCity/Municipalitykm[a]miDestinationsNotes
Caloocan9.014–
9.209
5.601–
5.722
   N1 (MacArthur Highway) / N150 (Rizal Avenue) – Valenzuela, Manila, NavotasBonifacio Monument Circle (Monumento). Northern terminus.
5th Street (B. Serrano)Northbound access via U-turn slot
8th Street (A. De Jesus)Unsignalized intersection. Access to 5th Avenue.
Biglang Awa StreetNorthbound access via U-turn slot. Access to 10th Avenue.
Katipunan StreetNorthbound entry only from the West Service Road
Quezon City10.942–
11.270
6.799–
7.003
   N160 (A. Bonifacio Avenue) / AH 26 (E1) (NLEX) – Manila, BaguioBalintawak Cloverleaf
  N127 (Quirino Highway)[3]Northbound access only. Access to East Service Road running parallel to NLEX.
Kaingin Road / Howmart RoadAccess from opposite direction via U-turn slot
12.4257.721Dario Bridge I over Dario Creek
12.6807.879Culiat Bridge I over San Juan River
  N129 (Congressional Avenue) / Fernando Poe Jr. AvenueAccess from opposite directions via U-turn slot. Former traffic light intersection.
Corregidor Street / Bansalangin StreetAccess from opposite directions via U-turn slot
   N171 (West Avenue) / N173 (North Avenue)Access to North Avenue from southbound and access to West Avenue from northbound via U-turn slot. Access to SM North EDSA and TriNoma.
Trinoma Access Road/Mindanao Avenue ExtensionNorthbound access only. Access to TriNoma.
Vertis North Access RoadNorthbound access only. Access to Vertis North Complex.
North end of Quezon Avenue Flyover
15.432–
16.536
9.589–
10.275
  N170 (Quezon Avenue) – Manila, QMCTraffic light intersection.
Panay AvenueSouthbound access only.
Mother Ignacia AvenueSouthbound access only. Access to ABS-CBN Broadcasting Center and St. Mary's College of Quezon City.
South end of Quezon Avenue Flyover
Eugenio Lopez DriveSouthbound access only. Access to ABS-CBN Broadcasting Center.
GMA Network DriveSouthbound access only. Access to GMA Network Center.
North end of Kamuning Flyover
   N172 (Timog Avenue) / N174 (East Avenue)Traffic light intersection. Access to GMA Network Center and Land Transportation Office head office.
Kamias Road / Kamuning RoadTraffic light intersection. No left turn on both sides.
South end of Kamuning Flyover
17.65010.967Lagarian Bridge I over Diliman Creek
Ermin Garcia StreetNorthbound/southbound access only. Access from opposite directions via U-turn slots (northbound via Kamuning U-turn slot and southbound via Aurora Boulevard U-turn slot.) Southbound side access to Ramon Magsaysay High School
New York StreetNorthbound/southbound access only. Access from opposite direction via U-turn slots (northbound via Kamuning U-turn slot and southbound via Aurora Boulevard U-turn slot).
North end of Aurora Boulevard Underpass
   N180 / N59 (Aurora Boulevard)Traffic light intersection. Access to Araneta Center. No left turn from northbound.
General Roxas StreetNorthbound access only. Access to Araneta Center.
P.A. Bernardo AvenueSouthbound access only.
South end of Aurora Boulevard Underpass
North end of P. Tuazon Underpass
Mayor Ignacio Santos Diaz Street / General MacArthur StreetNorthbound/southbound access only. Access from opposite directions via U-turn slots (northbound via Aurora Boulevard U-turn slot and southbound via P. Tuazon U-turn slot). Access to Araneta Center from northbound.
P. Tuazon BoulevardTraffic light intersection. Access to Araneta Center.
South end of P. Tuazon Underpass
North end of Santolan Flyover
  N185 (Bonny Serrano Avenue)Traffic light intersection. Access to Camp Crame and Camp Aguinaldo.
South end of Santolan Flyover
San JuanQuezon City boundaryAnnapolis StreetSouthbound access only
San JuanMandaluyongQuezon City boundaryConnecticut StreetSouthbound access only. Access to Greenhills Shopping Center.
MandaluyongQuezon City boundary20.778–
21.659
12.911–
13.458
White Plains AvenueNorthbound access only
North end of Ortigas Flyover
  N60 (Ortigas Avenue) – Quezon City, PasigSouthbound ramp of EDSA–Ortigas Interchange. Access to Ortigas Center, Meralco Complex, and The Medical City.
   N60 / N184 (Ortigas Avenue) – Quezon City, MandaluyongTraffic light intersection under EDSA–Ortigas Interchange. Access to Robinsons Galleria and EDSA Shrine.
  N184 (Ortigas Avenue) – MandaluyongNorthbound ramp of EDSA–Ortigas Interchange. Access to La Salle Greenhills and Greenhills Shopping Center.
South end of Ortigas Flyover
MandaluyongGuadix DriveNorthbound access only. Access to Asian Development Bank.
Julia Vargas AvenueNorthbound access only. No right turn from Shaw Underpass. Access to SM Megamall.
North end of Shaw Underpass
  N141 (Shaw Boulevard) – Pasig, ManilaTraffic light intersection. Access to Shangri-la Plaza and Starmall EDSA-Shaw. No left turn from both sides of EDSA to Shaw Boulevard.
South end of Shaw Underpass
Reliance StreetNorthbound access only. Access to TV5 Media Center and United Laboratories (Unilab) head office.
Boni Avenue / Pioneer StreetNorthbound and southbound access only.
MandaluyongMakati boundary25.000–
25.163
15.534–
15.636
Guadalupe Bridge over the Pasig River
Makati25.163–
26.854
15.636–
16.686
J.P. Rizal AvenueGuadalupe Cloverleaf
Bernardino Street / P. Burgos StreetNorthbound and southbound access only.
Orense StreetNorthbound access only. Access to MMDA Metrobase.
Estrella StreetExit from northbound via flyover ramp. Access to Power Plant Mall. Connection with Estrella–Pantaleon Bridge.
27.13216.859  N190 (Kalayaan Avenue) – BGCSouthbound access via U-turn slot. Access to EDSA southbound via flyover ramp.
  N191 (Kalayaan Flyover)Southbound entrance only from the Bonifacio Global City.
  N191 (Kalayaan Flyover)Northbound entrance only from Gil Puyat Avenue.
  N190 (Gil Puyat Avenue) / Buendia Avenue ExtensionAccess from opposite direction via U-turn slot.
East end of Ayala Underpass
Ayala Avenue / McKinley RoadTraffic light intersection. Access from Ayala Avenue either through flyover ramp or traffic light intersection. Access to Makati Central Business District, Glorietta, Forbes Park, and Bonifacio Global City.
Arnaiz Avenue / Pasay Road ExtensionTraffic light intersection. Access to Dasmariñas Village.
West end of Ayala Underpass
Chino Roces AvenueConnects with U-turn to EDSA northbound, also route for vehicles which exceeds the height of the Chino Roces Avenue underpass.
   N145 (Osmeña Highway) / AH 26 (E2) (South Luzon Expressway) – Manila, AlabangMagallanes Interchange. Access from northbound via at-grade roads.
Evangelista StreetSouthbound only. Access via U-turn slot under Magallanes Interchange
Pasay31.83919.784Malibay Bridge over Malibay Creek
   N171 (Aurora Boulevard) – NAIASouthbound ramp, and northbound at-grade intersection. Access to EDSA southbound via U-turn slot under Magallanes Interchange.
  N170 (Taft Avenue) / Taft Avenue ExtensionPasay Rotunda. No left turn from EDSA southbound, no left turn to EDSA northbound from Taft Avenue. Access to EDSA southbound via u-turn slot under Magallanes interchange.
F.B. Harrison AvenueAccess to opposite direction provided by U-turn slot (northbound under Magallanes Interchange and southbound fronting The Heritage Hotel).
32.28520.061   AH 26 (N120) / N61 (Roxas Boulevard)Traffic light intersection. Access to opposite direction formerly provided by U-turn slot. Southern end of C-4 concurrency. Change from N127 to unnumbered highway. End of DPWH maintenance.[b]
Diosdado Macapagal BoulevardTraffic light intersection.
Sunrise DriveNo access to opposite directions.
Jose Diokno BoulevardRoundabout. Southern terminus. Serves SM Mall of Asia and surrounding areas.
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

Notes

  1. ^ Sources:[24][25][26][27][28][29]
  2. ^ The section of the avenue from Roxas Boulevard towards SM Mall of Asia is unnumbered, since it is not an original part of the avenue.

Future developments

Proposed interchanges

An overpass over the North Avenue-West Avenue Intersection and Mindanao Avenue Junction in the Triangle Park and a Flyover over Congressional Avenue and Roosevelt Avenue Intersection in Muñoz are already approved and may start construction in 2013.[30] As of 2020, the project is currently on hold.

Proposed renaming

In 2011, Bohol Representative Rene Relampagos filed House Bill (HB) No. 5422, proposing to rename Epifanio de los Santos Avenue as "Corazon Aquino Avenue." According to Relampagos, the idea to rename EDSA after Aquino, who led the 1986 People Power, was conceptualized in the aftermath of her death.[31]

Construction of EDSA-Taft flyover

On April 2, 2013, then-President Benigno Aquino III gave the green light for the construction of a flyover at the perennially traffic-choked corner of EDSA and Taft Avenue in Metro Manila.[32]

The project is estimated to cost ₱2.8 billion, with the flyover extending to about 1.4 kilometers (0.87 mi) each side and it will take one and a half years to complete the project.[32]

Barrier-separated bus lanes

After stricter implementation of bus lanes and barrier separation through plastic barriers, the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA) will start to replace the orange barriers with a concrete permanent barrier used to separate the bus lanes from private vehicle lanes.[33]

Proposed road pricing scheme

With support from Singapore, the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority proposed the implementation of road pricing, based on the Electronic Road Pricing scheme on Singapore, on EDSA to alleviate traffic congestion, along with providing alternate routes and opening some gated community roads. Implementation is set for 2018, but Rene Santiago, a transport engineer and planner, criticized the proposal because it may only worsen congestion, along with the numerous intersections and side streets along EDSA.[34]

Bus Rapid Transit

The Department of Transportation proposed to have at least two lines of the Metro Manila Bus Rapid Transit System in 2017. EDSA's proposed BRT line will be named "Line 2: Central Corridor". The line will have 48.6 kilometers (30.2 mi) of segregated busways covering the length of the road.[35] The agency planned to scrap the project by June 2018.[36] However, this appeal was rejected and the Line 1 which will be built on Quezon Avenue, which passes EDSA, was later approved by the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) on November 2.[37] In 2019, Senator Win Gatchalian called for the approval of the BRT system as an alternate to the PNR Metro Commuter Line.[38]

On March 16, 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Inter-Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases (IATF-EID) imposed a community quarantine or lockdown, which halted almost all public and private transportations plying in EDSA. This paved way for the immediate construction of the bus rapid transit (BRT) system called EDSA Busway. The interim operations of the BRT system began on July 1, 2020. Intended to be largely served by bus stops along median lanes, some stops are temporarily served by stations on the curbside. The system runs on a dedicated bus lane which is separated by concreted barriers and steel fences.

In popular culture

EDSA is frequently used as a protest site. In August 2012, the Catholic Church assembled a mass rally on EDSA to oppose the Reproductive Health Bill.[39] On September 11, 2013, a prayer vigil called EDSA Tayo was held at the EDSA Shrine, where around 500–700 people were gathered to call for the abolition of the Priority Development Assistance Fund.[40] On February 25, 2015, various groups held a demonstration along EDSA to demand that President Benigno Aquino III stand down.[41][42] On August 27–31 of the same year, Iglesia ni Cristo adherents staged demonstrations along EDSA near SM Megamall, calling on then-Justice Secretary Leila De Lima to focus on issues such as the Mamasapano clash instead of a case filed by former INC minister Isaias Samson, Jr., against Church leaders.[43] On November 30, 2016, an anti-Marcos protest was held in the People Power Monument due to the burial of Ferdinand Marcos at the Libingan ng mga Bayani.[44][45] On November 5, 2017, critics of the Duterte administration attended a mass held in EDSA shrine to protest against extrajudicial killings in the country.[46][47] On February 22, 2018, groups gathered at People Power Monument to hold a prayer vigil to show their opposition against constitutional reform.[48] On February 22, 2020, demonstrators gathered at the People Power Monument to call on President Rodrigo Duterte to resign from office.[49]

The avenue is also used in political campaigns by several politicians, particularly those who had been involved in the EDSA Revolution such as Joseph Estrada and Benigno Aquino III.

EDSA was also featured in the film The Bourne Legacy. Portions of the road from Magallanes Interchange to Taft Avenue were featured in a car chase wherein Aaron Cross, played by Jeremy Renner, jumps from the Taft Avenue footbridge to a plying bus.[50][51]

Notes

  1. ^ The DPWH maintenance over EDSA excludes the extension in Pasay.

References

  1. ^ a b c d Peter Uckung (February 22, 2012). . Business world Online. Archived from the original on May 25, 2018. Retrieved August 20, 2012.
  2. ^ Lamentillo, Anna Mae (January 23, 2021). "21 things you need to know about the EDSA decongestion program". Manila Bulletin.
  3. ^ a b c "Road and Bridge Inventory". Department of Public Works and Highways. Retrieved June 18, 2020.
  4. ^ Philippine Daily Inquirer (July 7, 2009). "Inquirer Headlines: EDSA". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved July 9, 2012.
  5. ^ a b Jao-Grey, Margarte (December 27, 2007). . Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism. Archived from the original on February 8, 2012. Retrieved December 28, 2007.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on November 30, 2007. Retrieved December 28, 2007.
  7. ^ . Archived from the original on November 30, 2007. Retrieved December 28, 2007.
  8. ^ a b Zarzuela, Maricar B. (January 12, 2016). "Private cars can't enter Edsa bus lanes starting Jan. 18". Inquirer.net. Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved January 29, 2016.
  9. ^ Abad, Roderick (October 29, 2020). "Edsa Decongestion Program: Making travel a breeze for Filipinos | Roderick Abad". BusinessMirror. Retrieved March 12, 2021.
  10. ^ "EDSA Decongestion Masterplan on time for 2022 finish – The Manila Times". manilatimes.net. November 11, 2020. Retrieved March 12, 2021.
  11. ^ Villasanta, Art (December 4, 2011). "Edsa: Greatest Filipino genius after Rizal". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved October 19, 2021.
  12. ^ a b Manila, Philippines map (Map). American Red Cross Service Bureau. August 1945.
  13. ^ Executive Order No. 311, s. 1940 (December 17, 1940). Establishing the Classification of Roads. Retrieved September 30, 2021.
  14. ^ Executive Order No. 483, s. 1951 (November 6, 1951). Establishing the Classification of Roads. Retrieved September 30, 2021.
  15. ^ "Aerial view to the southwest overlooking Grace Park Airfield in northern Manila bordering Manila Bay". Pacific Wrecks. Retrieved May 16, 2021.
  16. ^ Ragodon, Richard Wilhelm (October 10, 2017). "This is what EDSA looked like in traffic-free times". TopGear Philippines. Retrieved May 16, 2021.
  17. ^ Executive Order No. 113, s. 1955 (May 2, 1955). Establishing the Classification of Roads. Retrieved September 30, 2021.
  18. ^ Republic Act No. 2140 (April 7, 1959). An Act Changing the Name of Highway 54 in the Province of Rizal to Epifanio De Los Santos Avenue in Honor of Don Epifanio De Los Santos, a Filipino Scholar, Jurist and Historian.
  19. ^ Batas Pambansa Blg. 340 (February 17, 1983). . Archived from the original on April 26, 2021. Retrieved April 26, 2021.
  20. ^ GMA Launches transit system June 29, 2009, at the Wayback Machine, Philippine Star, July 15, 2003
  21. ^ NUMBER OF MOTOR VEHICLES REGISTERED: Comparative, JAN.- DEC. 2003, 2004, 2005 October 23, 2009, at the Wayback Machine, Land Transportation Office, January 23, 2006
  22. ^ "Can the police fix EDSA traffic?". Rappler. Retrieved December 5, 2015.
  23. ^ Jiao, Claire (September 29, 2017). "LRT-MRT common station breaks ground". CNN Philippines. Retrieved April 10, 2018.
  24. ^ . 2016 DPWH Atlas. Department of Public Works and Highways. Archived from the original on July 9, 2018. Retrieved May 21, 2017.
  25. ^ . 2016 DPWH Atlas. Department of Public Works and Highways. Archived from the original on July 9, 2018. Retrieved May 21, 2017.
  26. ^ . 2016 DPWH Atlas. Department of Public Works and Highways. Archived from the original on February 12, 2018. Retrieved May 21, 2017.
  27. ^ . 2016 DPWH Atlas. Department of Public Works and Highways. Archived from the original on July 9, 2018. Retrieved May 21, 2017.
  28. ^ . 2016 DPWH Atlas. Department of Public Works and Highways. Archived from the original on July 9, 2018. Retrieved May 21, 2017.
  29. ^ . 2016 DPWH Atlas. Department of Public Works and Highways. Archived from the original on July 9, 2018. Retrieved May 21, 2017.
  30. ^ (PDF). Department of Public Works and Highways. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 10, 2017. Retrieved December 15, 2012.
  31. ^ Diaz, Jess. "Bill seeks to rename EDSA 'Cory Aquino Avenue'". Philstar.com. Retrieved April 26, 2023.
  32. ^ a b "Aquino approves construction of Edsa-Taft flyover". April 3, 2013.
  33. ^ Brizuela, Maricar B. (January 26, 2016). "Edsa lane rule: 130 fined: barriers to be 'permanent'". Motioncars at Inquirer.net. Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved February 5, 2016. Meanwhile, MMDA Traffic Engineering chief Neomie Recio also announced that the plastic barriers currently used to separate lanes would soon be replaced with more permanent, concrete separators to be provided by the DPWH.
  34. ^ "MMDA eyes congestion fee on EDSA to ease traffic". CNN Philippines. March 15, 2017. Retrieved March 22, 2017.
  35. ^ "Metro Manila Bus Rapid Transit - Line 2 (Central Corridor)". build.gov.ph. Retrieved May 1, 2020.
  36. ^ "DOTr to scrap bus rapid transit project". Rappler. June 9, 2018. Retrieved May 1, 2020.
  37. ^ "₱4.8-B Metro bus rapid transit a go". Philippine Daily Inquirer. November 2, 2018. Retrieved May 1, 2020.
  38. ^ "Gatchalian calls for fast-tracking of BBB's Metro Manila BRT projects". Senate of the Philippines. March 13, 2019. Retrieved May 1, 2020.
  39. ^ ABS-CBN (August 3, 2012). . Archived from the original on December 31, 2013. Retrieved August 20, 2012.
  40. ^ De Jesus, Julliane Love (September 11, 2013). "'EDSA Tayo' rally declared a 'success'". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved September 14, 2013.
  41. ^ "Thousands of people march along EDSA to call for the resignation of President Aquino on the 29th anniversary of the People Power Revolution". imgur. Retrieved February 25, 2015.
  42. ^ "FACE-OFF. Thousands of protesters face hundreds of cops blocking EDSA-Santolan". Retrieved February 25, 2015 – via Facebook.
  43. ^ "Why De Lima is target of Iglesia ni Cristo's anger". Rappler. Retrieved August 30, 2015.
  44. ^ "Thousands return to EDSA to protest Marcos hero's burial". GMA News.
  45. ^ "Anti-Marcos groups hold protests on Bonifacio Day". CNN Philippines.
  46. ^ "Cebu archbishop hits EJKs ahead of EDSA procession". Rappler.
  47. ^ "Church calls on public to join activities". Cebu Daily News.
  48. ^ "Groups gather at EDSA to oppose Cha-cha". GMA News.
  49. ^ "VIDEO: Panawagan nila ang pagbibitiw sa pwesto ni Pang. Rodrigo Duterte dahil sa pagpayag umano nito sa pagpasok ng China sa Pilipinas. | via @luisitosantos03". DZBB Super Radyo. Twitter.
  50. ^ "'Bourne Legacy' shoot at EDSA-Taft then Palawan". Retrieved August 25, 2012.
  51. ^ GMA News Online (January 27, 2012). "'Bourne Legacy' to shoot on EDSA in Pasay, some roads closed". GMA News. Retrieved August 25, 2012.

External links

  •   Media related to EDSA at Wikimedia Commons

edsa, other, uses, disambiguation, epifanio, santos, avenue, commonly, referred, acronym, limited, access, circumferential, highway, around, manila, capital, city, philippines, passes, through, metro, manila, local, government, units, cities, namely, from, nor. For other uses see EDSA disambiguation Epifanio de los Santos Avenue commonly referred to by its acronym EDSA is a limited access circumferential highway around Manila the capital city of the Philippines It passes through 6 of Metro Manila s 17 local government units or cities namely from north to south Caloocan Quezon City San Juan Mandaluyong Makati and Pasay 1 C 4 Epifanio de los Santos AvenueEDSAMap of highways in Metro Manila with EDSA highlighted in red EDSA in Guadalupe Makati looking north towards the Pasig RiverRoute informationPart of AH26Maintained by the Department of Public Works and Highways note 1 and the Metropolitan Manila Development AuthorityLength23 8 km 14 8 mi Including extension to SM Mall of Asia includes extension in Bay City PasayExisted1940 presentComponenthighwaysC 4 C 4 AH 26 N1 from Monumento to Roxas BoulevardRestrictionsNo heavy trucks tricyclesMajor junctionsBeltway around ManilaNorth endBonifacio Monument Circle in CaloocanMajor intersectionsAH 26 E1 North Luzon Expressway N160 Andres Bonifacio Avenue at Balintawak Interchange in Quezon City N171 West Avenue N173 North Avenue in Quezon City N170 Quezon Avenue in Quezon City N172 Timog Avenue N174 East Avenue in Quezon City N180 N59 Aurora Boulevard in Quezon City N184 N60 Ortigas Avenue at Ortigas Interchange in Quezon City and Mandaluyong N141 Shaw Boulevard in Mandaluyong N190 Gil Puyat Avenue Kalayaan Avenue at Kalayaan Flyover in Makati N145 Osmena Highway AH 26 E2 South Luzon Expressway at Magallanes Interchange in Makati N170 Taft Avenue in Pasay AH 26 N120 N61 Roxas Boulevard in PasaySouth endSM Mall of Asia Globe Rotunda in Bay City PasayLocationCountryPhilippinesMajor citiesCaloocan Makati Mandaluyong Pasay Quezon City San JuanHighway systemRoads in the PhilippinesHighways Expressways ListNamed after academic Epifanio de los Santos the road links the North Luzon Expressway at the Balintawak Interchange in the north to the South Luzon Expressway at the Magallanes Interchange in the south as well as the major financial districts of Triangle Park Araneta City Ortigas Center Makati CBD and Bay City It is the longest and the most congested highway in the metropolis stretching some 23 8 kilometers 14 8 mi 2 Contents 1 Structure 2 Route description 2 1 Traffic management 2 1 1 Decongestion program 3 History 3 1 The EDSA Revolution 3 2 Monuments 3 3 Recent history 4 Intersections 5 Future developments 5 1 Proposed interchanges 5 2 Proposed renaming 5 3 Construction of EDSA Taft flyover 5 4 Barrier separated bus lanes 5 5 Proposed road pricing scheme 5 6 Bus Rapid Transit 6 In popular culture 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksStructure EditThe entire avenue forms part of Circumferential Road 4 C 4 of Metro Manila s arterial road network National Route 1 N1 of the Philippine highway network and Asian Highway 26 AH26 of the Asian Highway Network 3 The locations around the avenue were marked with great economic and industrial growth proven by the fact that all but two industrial centers in the Metropolis are directly accessible from the thoroughfare The decent economic growth of the areas around the avenue adds a significant volume of traffic on the avenue and in recent estimates 4 and an average of 2 34 million vehicles go through it every day 5 The avenue is a divided carriageway often consisting of 12 lanes 6 in either direction with the elevated railroads Manila Metro Rail Transit System Line 3 and Manila Light Rail Transit System Line 1 often serving as its median Although it is not an expressway traffic rules and speed limits are strictly implemented to the vehicles that pass along it It is operated by the Metro Manila Development Authority and is maintained and constantly being repaired by the Department of Public Works and Highways whose maintenance over EDSA excludes the extension at Bay City in Pasay 3 Route description EditMain article Circumferential Road 4 Quezon City PasayStreet signs used for EDSA The northern terminus of EDSA at the Bonifacio Monument in Caloocan EDSA starts from the Bonifacio Monument Monumento Circle in Caloocan its intersection with MacArthur Highway Rizal Avenue Extension and Samson Road the western side of the C 4 Road The roundabout is also the marker of the 1896 Revolution by Andres Bonifacio The 1 7 kilometers 1 1 mi of the road are in Caloocan The Avenue will then enter Quezon City through the Balintawak district after an intersection with the North Luzon Expressway NLEX and A Bonifacio Avenue at the Balintawak Interchange EDSA Aurora Underpass in Cubao Quezon City EDSA looking north to SM North EDSA EDSA crosses much of the northern part of Quezon City passing through the Balintawak Munoz and Project 7 districts It sharply curves southwards after crossing the North Avenue West Avenue Intersection in the Triangle Business Park On the north side of EDSA is the SM North EDSA In front of it are the TriNoma mall and the Eton Centris or Centris Walk ABS CBN Broadcasting Center and its transmitter can be easily seen from EDSA and continues southwards slightly turning westwards slowly until it leaves the Triangle Park after crossing the East Avenue Timog Avenue Intersection where the GMA Network Center is located It continues through the district of Cubao entering the Araneta Center after crossing the Aurora Boulevard Tunnel In Cubao several malls infrastructure and offices are located most notably the Smart Araneta Coliseum the biggest coliseum in Southeast Asia The Avenue curves southwards and crosses Santolan Road near Socorro where the twin bases of Camps Crame and Aguinaldo are located The Greenhills Shopping Center and the Eastwood City are also located nearby EDSA then continues on its route and serves as the boundary of the cities of San Juan and Quezon City The People Power Monument can be seen on the northbound side of EDSA at its junction with White Plains Avenue After 11 kilometers 6 8 mi in Quezon City the Avenue will eventually leave the city and enter the City of Mandaluyong EDSA enters Mandaluyong after crossing the borders of the Ortigas Center In the Ortigas Center some notable buildings around the area are the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration building Robinsons Galleria SM Megamall and the bronze EDSA Shrine a memorial church to the 1986 Revolution It then curves smoothly westwards after it crosses Boni Avenue and Pioneer Street and crosses the Pasig River via the Guadalupe Bridge leaving the city of Mandaluyong After crossing the Pasig River EDSA enters the city of Makati through Guadalupe where it provides access to the Rockwell Center a major mixed use business park in Makati through J P Rizal Avenue The highway also provides quick access to the city of Taguig and the Bonifacio Global City nearby After crossing Buendia Avenue the highway enters the Ayala Center an important commercial district in the Philippines where the Greenbelt and Glorietta shopping centers are located via Ayala Avenue The road then curves eastwards continues on a straight route to the city of Pasay and passing the Chino Roces Avenue Osmena Highway and South Luzon Expressway SLEX through Magallanes Interchange EDSA Extension looking west towards SM Mall of Asia EDSA enters Pasay shortly after crossing SLEX and Osmena Highway in Makati In Pasay the highway provides access to Ninoy Aquino International Airport via a flyover to Tramo Street EDSA would pass through Pasay Rotonda within Taft Avenue and continues on a straight route until it crosses to Roxas Boulevard After crossing Roxas Boulevard it becomes known as EDSA Extension and enters Central Business Park 1 A of the Bay City reclamation area where SM Mall of Asia is located EDSA s terminus is at the Globe Rotunda fronting SM Mall of Asia Traffic management Edit Heavy traffic on EDSA as seen from Boni station looking south towards Guadalupe The lead agency that manages the flow of traffic along EDSA is the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority MMDA a government agency under the Office of the President of the Philippines and is advised by the Metro Manila Mayors League One of the MMDA s traffic management schemes that is in effect on EDSA among other major thoroughfares in the metropolis is the Uniform Vehicular Volume Reduction Program Many by whom have observed that the cause of many traffic jams on EDSA is its change from being a highway to an avenue This resulted the erection of erring establishment buses and jeepneys Subsequently buses have been the target of other traffic management programs like the MMDA s Organized Bus Route Program 6 The MMDA is strictly implementing also the Motorcycle and Bus laning in EDSA making it the second highway in the Philippines ever to have such traffic rule to be enforced after Commonwealth Avenue 5 7 The average speed of vehicles in EDSA is 15 kilometers per hour 9 3 mph On January 18 2016 strict implementation on bus lanes started on the Shaw Guadalupe segment where plastic barriers are placed and prohibited entry of private vehicles and taxis on the bus lanes except when turning to EDSA s side streets 8 Despite the plastic barrier many private vehicles still enter the lanes 8 In June 2020 bus routes in the avenue were rationalized creating the EDSA Carousel line carried by the new EDSA Busway The EDSA Busway is separated from normal road traffic and now used only for buses and emergency vehicles The new bus lane spans from Monumento to PITX and is divided by concreted barriers and steel fences The old rightmost bus lanes was now opened for all vehicles with the avenue now having total of 4 5 public use lanes per direction instead of 3 excluding interchanges Decongestion program Edit A decongestion program under the Build Build Build Infrastructure Program is ongoing to help decongest EDSA which is under overcapacity carrying 402 000 vehicles daily while has the capacity of 288 000 9 This involves the construction of other roads and bridges that will divert traffic from the avenue The government aims to reduce travel time from Cubao to Makati to 5 6 minutes 10 History EditConstruction of what was then called the North and South Circumferential Road began in 1939 under President Manuel L Quezon 11 The construction team was led by engineers Florencio Moreno and Osmundo Monsod 1 The road starting from North Bay Boulevard in Navotas and ending at Taft Avenue formerly known as Taft Avenue Extension Manila South Road in Pasay then in the province of Rizal 12 was finished in 1940 shortly before the outbreak of World War II and the subsequent Japanese Occupation It was then known as the Manila Circumferential Road or simply as Circumferential Road 13 14 It was also renamed to Highway 54 and thus designated as Route 54 15 16 Due to the route number there was a common misconception on that time that the avenue is 54 kilometers 34 mi long 1 The present day North EDSA section in Caloocan and Quezon City was referred to as Calle Samson Samson Street 12 while its section in Pasay was also known as P Lovina Street After the independence of the Philippines from the United States in 1946 the road was renamed Avenida 19 de Junio June 19 Avenue after the birth date of national hero Jose Rizal 1 In the 1950s the northern end of the avenue was designated to its present terminus at Bonifacio Monument in Caloocan and its section west of it later became known as Samson Road General San Miguel Street and Letre Road respectively 17 In the same decade Rizalists wanted the avenue s name to remain 19 de Junio while President Ramon Magsaysay wanted the avenue named after Rizal Residents of Rizal province to which most parts of Metro Manila belonged until 1975 wanted the avenue to be named after a Rizaleno the historian jurist and scholar named Epifanio de los Santos y Cristobal The Philippine Historical Committee now the National Historical Commission of the Philippines the Philippine Historical Association the Philippine Library Association Association of university and College Professors the Philippine China Cultural Association and the Philippine National Historical Society led by fellow Rizalenos Eulogio Rodriguez Sr and Juan Sumulong supported the renaming of Highway 54 to Epifanio de los Santos Avenue On April 7 1959 De los Santos birth anniversary Republic Act No 2140 was passed renaming the avenue to honor him 18 Rapid urbanization in the 1960s and 1970s particularly after the annexation of several Rizal towns to the newly established National Capital Region marked the growth of the industrial centers along the road and several other roads connected to the avenue such as Ayala Avenue and McKinley Road in Makati During the rule of President Ferdinand Marcos traffic jams along the avenue started to build up Several interchanges were constructed to relieve congestion including the Balintawak and Magallanes Interchanges Later with the implementation of the Metro Manila Arterial Road System in 1965 in order to complete the Circumferential Road 4 system EDSA was extended from Taft Avenue to Roxas Boulevard occupying parcels of land along the old F Rein and Del Pan Streets in Pasay 19 Until the mid 1980s many parts of the highway still overlooked vast grassland and open fields The EDSA Revolution Edit Main article People Power Revolution By 1986 political opposition to the 20 year dictatorship of President Ferdinand Marcos mounted In late February high ranking military officers including Defence Minister Juan Ponce Enrile and General Fidel Ramos defected from the Marcos government and seized Camp Crame and Camp Aguinaldo two military bases located across each other midway along EDSA This triggered three days of peaceful demonstrations that became the People Power Revolution The majority of protesters were gathered at the gates of the two bases along a stretch of EDSA between the commercial districts of Cubao in Quezon City and Ortigas Center in Mandaluyong Over two million Filipino civilians along with political military and religious groups led by Archbishop of Manila Cardinal Jaime Sin succeeded in toppling President Marcos Corazon Aquino the widow of assassinated opposition senator Benigno Aquino Jr was installed as president on the morning of February 25 by midnight Marcos had escaped Malacanang Palace with his family and was flying to exile in Hawaii Monuments Edit Several landmarks commemorate historical events that occurred along the avenue At the intersection of EDSA and Ortigas Avenue is EDSA Shrine a Catholic church capped by a bronze statue of the Blessed Virgin Mary as Our Lady of Peace The shrine is dedicated to this Marian title in memory of the pious folk belief that in the 1986 Revolution the Virgin Mary personally shielded the protesters many of whom were peacefully praying and singing as they faced government troops tanks and aircraft The People Power Monument Tagalog Monumento ng Lakas ng Bayan consisting of a giant statue and esplanade sits at the corner of EDSA and White Plains Avenue Sculpted by Eduardo Castrillo and unveiled in 1993 the central sculpture depicts protesters standing upon a circular podium all surrounding a woman representing Inang Bayan or the Motherland reaching up to the heavens with her outstretched hands and broken shackles A Philippine flag rises behind her while a statue of Ninoy Aquino and an eternal flame stand on either side at its base A huge limestone faced wall with grooves for ribbons in the national colors forms a backdrop to the scene The surrounding pavement contains a row of flagstaffs and is the center for protests and ceremonies held on the Revolution s anniversary of February 25 Recent history Edit NLEX bound EDSA as seen from Roosevelt Avenue overpass prior to the extension of the LRT Line 1 LRT 1 of the Manila Light Rail Transit System After the People Power Revolution the highway was commonly referred to as EDSA and it was connected to its southern extensions In 1997 construction began on the Manila Metro Rail Transit System which runs the length of EDSA from North Avenue to Taft Avenue It was opened under the administration of Joseph Estrada the thirteenth President of the Philippines 20 21 The Second EDSA Revolution which also took place along the avenue resulted in the peaceful ouster of President Estrada following his impeachment trial He was succeeded by his Vice President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo She was sworn in on the terrace of EDSA Shrine by then Chief Justice Hilario Davide Jr at noon on January 20 2001 several hours before Estrada and his family fled Malacanang Palace The EDSA III which also took place along the avenue from April 25 to May 1 of the same year resulted in violence when the supporters of former President Estrada attempted to storm the presidential palace and the military and police were ordered to use their arms to drive them back Arroyo declared a state of rebellion because of the violence and prominent political personalities affiliated with Estrada were charged and arrested In 2006 the avenue was further extended from Roxas Boulevard to the SM Mall of Asia on the Bay City Reclamation Project where it now ends at the Globe Rotunda a roundabout That same year the avenue was badly damaged in September when Typhoon Milenyo hit Manila In 2010 the LRT Line 1 LRT 1 of the Manila Light Rail Transit System was extended from Monumento to Roosevelt ultimately transversing EDSA to end at the site of the current North Avenue MRT Station On September 9 2015 the Philippine National Police PNP deployed the Highway Patrol Group to support MMDA traffic constables easing traffic on congested segments of EDSA 22 In September 2017 the construction of the North Triangle Common Station was started after numerous delays due to bureaucracy and location disputes It will connect the LRT Line 1 MRT Line 3 MRT Line 7 and the Metro Manila Subway 23 Intersections Edit EDSA Aurora Underpass in Quezon City The bridge connecting LRT 1 s EDSA and MRT 3 s Taft Avenue stations Intersections are numbered by kilometer post with Rizal Park in Manila designated as kilometer zero ProvinceCity Municipalitykm a miDestinationsNotesCaloocan9 014 9 2095 601 5 722 N1 MacArthur Highway N150 Rizal Avenue Valenzuela Manila NavotasBonifacio Monument Circle Monumento Northern terminus 5th Street B Serrano Northbound access via U turn slot8th Street A De Jesus Unsignalized intersection Access to 5th Avenue Biglang Awa StreetNorthbound access via U turn slot Access to 10th Avenue Katipunan StreetNorthbound entry only from the West Service RoadQuezon City10 942 11 2706 799 7 003 N160 A Bonifacio Avenue AH 26 E1 NLEX Manila BaguioBalintawak Cloverleaf N127 Quirino Highway 3 Northbound access only Access to East Service Road running parallel to NLEX Kaingin Road Howmart RoadAccess from opposite direction via U turn slot12 4257 721Dario Bridge I over Dario Creek12 6807 879Culiat Bridge I over San Juan River N129 Congressional Avenue Fernando Poe Jr AvenueAccess from opposite directions via U turn slot Former traffic light intersection Corregidor Street Bansalangin StreetAccess from opposite directions via U turn slot N171 West Avenue N173 North Avenue Access to North Avenue from southbound and access to West Avenue from northbound via U turn slot Access to SM North EDSA and TriNoma Trinoma Access Road Mindanao Avenue ExtensionNorthbound access only Access to TriNoma Vertis North Access RoadNorthbound access only Access to Vertis North Complex North end of Quezon Avenue Flyover15 432 16 5369 589 10 275 N170 Quezon Avenue Manila QMCTraffic light intersection Panay AvenueSouthbound access only Mother Ignacia AvenueSouthbound access only Access to ABS CBN Broadcasting Center and St Mary s College of Quezon City South end of Quezon Avenue FlyoverEugenio Lopez DriveSouthbound access only Access to ABS CBN Broadcasting Center GMA Network DriveSouthbound access only Access to GMA Network Center North end of Kamuning Flyover N172 Timog Avenue N174 East Avenue Traffic light intersection Access to GMA Network Center and Land Transportation Office head office Kamias Road Kamuning RoadTraffic light intersection No left turn on both sides South end of Kamuning Flyover17 65010 967Lagarian Bridge I over Diliman CreekErmin Garcia StreetNorthbound southbound access only Access from opposite directions via U turn slots northbound via Kamuning U turn slot and southbound via Aurora Boulevard U turn slot Southbound side access to Ramon Magsaysay High SchoolNew York StreetNorthbound southbound access only Access from opposite direction via U turn slots northbound via Kamuning U turn slot and southbound via Aurora Boulevard U turn slot North end of Aurora Boulevard Underpass N180 N59 Aurora Boulevard Traffic light intersection Access to Araneta Center No left turn from northbound General Roxas StreetNorthbound access only Access to Araneta Center P A Bernardo AvenueSouthbound access only South end of Aurora Boulevard UnderpassNorth end of P Tuazon UnderpassMayor Ignacio Santos Diaz Street General MacArthur StreetNorthbound southbound access only Access from opposite directions via U turn slots northbound via Aurora Boulevard U turn slot and southbound via P Tuazon U turn slot Access to Araneta Center from northbound P Tuazon BoulevardTraffic light intersection Access to Araneta Center South end of P Tuazon UnderpassNorth end of Santolan Flyover N185 Bonny Serrano Avenue Traffic light intersection Access to Camp Crame and Camp Aguinaldo South end of Santolan FlyoverSan Juan Quezon City boundaryAnnapolis StreetSouthbound access onlySan Juan Mandaluyong Quezon City boundaryConnecticut StreetSouthbound access only Access to Greenhills Shopping Center Mandaluyong Quezon City boundary20 778 21 65912 911 13 458White Plains AvenueNorthbound access onlyNorth end of Ortigas Flyover N60 Ortigas Avenue Quezon City PasigSouthbound ramp of EDSA Ortigas Interchange Access to Ortigas Center Meralco Complex and The Medical City N60 N184 Ortigas Avenue Quezon City MandaluyongTraffic light intersection under EDSA Ortigas Interchange Access to Robinsons Galleria and EDSA Shrine N184 Ortigas Avenue MandaluyongNorthbound ramp of EDSA Ortigas Interchange Access to La Salle Greenhills and Greenhills Shopping Center South end of Ortigas FlyoverMandaluyongGuadix DriveNorthbound access only Access to Asian Development Bank Julia Vargas AvenueNorthbound access only No right turn from Shaw Underpass Access to SM Megamall North end of Shaw Underpass N141 Shaw Boulevard Pasig ManilaTraffic light intersection Access to Shangri la Plaza and Starmall EDSA Shaw No left turn from both sides of EDSA to Shaw Boulevard South end of Shaw UnderpassReliance StreetNorthbound access only Access to TV5 Media Center and United Laboratories Unilab head office Boni Avenue Pioneer StreetNorthbound and southbound access only Mandaluyong Makati boundary25 000 25 16315 534 15 636Guadalupe Bridge over the Pasig RiverMakati25 163 26 85415 636 16 686J P Rizal AvenueGuadalupe CloverleafBernardino Street P Burgos StreetNorthbound and southbound access only Orense StreetNorthbound access only Access to MMDA Metrobase Estrella StreetExit from northbound via flyover ramp Access to Power Plant Mall Connection with Estrella Pantaleon Bridge 27 13216 859 N190 Kalayaan Avenue BGCSouthbound access via U turn slot Access to EDSA southbound via flyover ramp N191 Kalayaan Flyover Southbound entrance only from the Bonifacio Global City N191 Kalayaan Flyover Northbound entrance only from Gil Puyat Avenue N190 Gil Puyat Avenue Buendia Avenue ExtensionAccess from opposite direction via U turn slot East end of Ayala UnderpassAyala Avenue McKinley RoadTraffic light intersection Access from Ayala Avenue either through flyover ramp or traffic light intersection Access to Makati Central Business District Glorietta Forbes Park and Bonifacio Global City Arnaiz Avenue Pasay Road ExtensionTraffic light intersection Access to Dasmarinas Village West end of Ayala UnderpassChino Roces AvenueConnects with U turn to EDSA northbound also route for vehicles which exceeds the height of the Chino Roces Avenue underpass N145 Osmena Highway AH 26 E2 South Luzon Expressway Manila AlabangMagallanes Interchange Access from northbound via at grade roads Evangelista StreetSouthbound only Access via U turn slot under Magallanes InterchangePasay31 83919 784Malibay Bridge over Malibay Creek N171 Aurora Boulevard NAIASouthbound ramp and northbound at grade intersection Access to EDSA southbound via U turn slot under Magallanes Interchange N170 Taft Avenue Taft Avenue ExtensionPasay Rotunda No left turn from EDSA southbound no left turn to EDSA northbound from Taft Avenue Access to EDSA southbound via u turn slot under Magallanes interchange F B Harrison AvenueAccess to opposite direction provided by U turn slot northbound under Magallanes Interchange and southbound fronting The Heritage Hotel 32 28520 061 AH 26 N120 N61 Roxas Boulevard Traffic light intersection Access to opposite direction formerly provided by U turn slot Southern end of C 4 concurrency Change from N127 to unnumbered highway End of DPWH maintenance b Diosdado Macapagal BoulevardTraffic light intersection Sunrise DriveNo access to opposite directions Jose Diokno BoulevardRoundabout Southern terminus Serves SM Mall of Asia and surrounding areas 1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 mi Incomplete access Route transitionNotes Sources 24 25 26 27 28 29 The section of the avenue from Roxas Boulevard towards SM Mall of Asia is unnumbered since it is not an original part of the avenue Future developments EditProposed interchanges Edit An overpass over the North Avenue West Avenue Intersection and Mindanao Avenue Junction in the Triangle Park and a Flyover over Congressional Avenue and Roosevelt Avenue Intersection in Munoz are already approved and may start construction in 2013 30 As of 2020 the project is currently on hold Proposed renaming Edit In 2011 Bohol Representative Rene Relampagos filed House Bill HB No 5422 proposing to rename Epifanio de los Santos Avenue as Corazon Aquino Avenue According to Relampagos the idea to rename EDSA after Aquino who led the 1986 People Power was conceptualized in the aftermath of her death 31 Construction of EDSA Taft flyover Edit On April 2 2013 then President Benigno Aquino III gave the green light for the construction of a flyover at the perennially traffic choked corner of EDSA and Taft Avenue in Metro Manila 32 The project is estimated to cost 2 8 billion with the flyover extending to about 1 4 kilometers 0 87 mi each side and it will take one and a half years to complete the project 32 Barrier separated bus lanes Edit After stricter implementation of bus lanes and barrier separation through plastic barriers the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority MMDA will start to replace the orange barriers with a concrete permanent barrier used to separate the bus lanes from private vehicle lanes 33 Proposed road pricing scheme Edit With support from Singapore the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority proposed the implementation of road pricing based on the Electronic Road Pricing scheme on Singapore on EDSA to alleviate traffic congestion along with providing alternate routes and opening some gated community roads Implementation is set for 2018 but Rene Santiago a transport engineer and planner criticized the proposal because it may only worsen congestion along with the numerous intersections and side streets along EDSA 34 Bus Rapid Transit Edit Main article EDSA Carousel The Department of Transportation proposed to have at least two lines of the Metro Manila Bus Rapid Transit System in 2017 EDSA s proposed BRT line will be named Line 2 Central Corridor The line will have 48 6 kilometers 30 2 mi of segregated busways covering the length of the road 35 The agency planned to scrap the project by June 2018 36 However this appeal was rejected and the Line 1 which will be built on Quezon Avenue which passes EDSA was later approved by the National Economic and Development Authority NEDA on November 2 37 In 2019 Senator Win Gatchalian called for the approval of the BRT system as an alternate to the PNR Metro Commuter Line 38 On March 16 2020 due to the COVID 19 pandemic the Inter Agency Task Force for the Management of Emerging Infectious Diseases IATF EID imposed a community quarantine or lockdown which halted almost all public and private transportations plying in EDSA This paved way for the immediate construction of the bus rapid transit BRT system called EDSA Busway The interim operations of the BRT system began on July 1 2020 Intended to be largely served by bus stops along median lanes some stops are temporarily served by stations on the curbside The system runs on a dedicated bus lane which is separated by concreted barriers and steel fences In popular culture EditEDSA is frequently used as a protest site In August 2012 the Catholic Church assembled a mass rally on EDSA to oppose the Reproductive Health Bill 39 On September 11 2013 a prayer vigil called EDSA Tayo was held at the EDSA Shrine where around 500 700 people were gathered to call for the abolition of the Priority Development Assistance Fund 40 On February 25 2015 various groups held a demonstration along EDSA to demand that President Benigno Aquino III stand down 41 42 On August 27 31 of the same year Iglesia ni Cristo adherents staged demonstrations along EDSA near SM Megamall calling on then Justice Secretary Leila De Lima to focus on issues such as the Mamasapano clash instead of a case filed by former INC minister Isaias Samson Jr against Church leaders 43 On November 30 2016 an anti Marcos protest was held in the People Power Monument due to the burial of Ferdinand Marcos at the Libingan ng mga Bayani 44 45 On November 5 2017 critics of the Duterte administration attended a mass held in EDSA shrine to protest against extrajudicial killings in the country 46 47 On February 22 2018 groups gathered at People Power Monument to hold a prayer vigil to show their opposition against constitutional reform 48 On February 22 2020 demonstrators gathered at the People Power Monument to call on President Rodrigo Duterte to resign from office 49 The avenue is also used in political campaigns by several politicians particularly those who had been involved in the EDSA Revolution such as Joseph Estrada and Benigno Aquino III EDSA was also featured in the film The Bourne Legacy Portions of the road from Magallanes Interchange to Taft Avenue were featured in a car chase wherein Aaron Cross played by Jeremy Renner jumps from the Taft Avenue footbridge to a plying bus 50 51 Notes Edit The DPWH maintenance over EDSA excludes the extension in Pasay References Edit a b c d Peter Uckung February 22 2012 History in Asphalt Business world Online Archived from the original on May 25 2018 Retrieved August 20 2012 Lamentillo Anna Mae January 23 2021 21 things you need to know about the EDSA decongestion program Manila Bulletin a b c Road and Bridge Inventory Department of Public Works and Highways Retrieved June 18 2020 Philippine Daily Inquirer July 7 2009 Inquirer Headlines EDSA Philippine Daily Inquirer Retrieved July 9 2012 a b Jao Grey Margarte December 27 2007 Too Many Buses Too Many Agencies Clog Edsa Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism Archived from the original on February 8 2012 Retrieved December 28 2007 MMDA Resolution No 03 28 Archived from the original on November 30 2007 Retrieved December 28 2007 MMDA Resolution No 04 01 Archived from the original on November 30 2007 Retrieved December 28 2007 a b Zarzuela Maricar B January 12 2016 Private cars can t enter Edsa bus lanes starting Jan 18 Inquirer net Philippine Daily Inquirer Retrieved January 29 2016 Abad Roderick October 29 2020 Edsa Decongestion Program Making travel a breeze for Filipinos Roderick Abad BusinessMirror Retrieved March 12 2021 EDSA Decongestion Masterplan on time for 2022 finish The Manila Times manilatimes net November 11 2020 Retrieved March 12 2021 Villasanta Art December 4 2011 Edsa Greatest Filipino genius after Rizal Philippine Daily Inquirer Retrieved October 19 2021 a b Manila Philippines map Map American Red Cross Service Bureau August 1945 Executive Order No 311 s 1940 December 17 1940 Establishing the Classification of Roads Retrieved September 30 2021 Executive Order No 483 s 1951 November 6 1951 Establishing the Classification of Roads Retrieved September 30 2021 Aerial view to the southwest overlooking Grace Park Airfield in northern Manila bordering Manila Bay Pacific Wrecks Retrieved May 16 2021 Ragodon Richard Wilhelm October 10 2017 This is what EDSA looked like in traffic free times TopGear Philippines Retrieved May 16 2021 Executive Order No 113 s 1955 May 2 1955 Establishing the Classification of Roads Retrieved September 30 2021 Republic Act No 2140 April 7 1959 An Act Changing the Name of Highway 54 in the Province of Rizal to Epifanio De Los Santos Avenue in Honor of Don Epifanio De Los Santos a Filipino Scholar Jurist and Historian Batas Pambansa Blg 340 February 17 1983 An Act Expropriating Specified Parcels of Private Land Located Along F Rein Del Pan Streets from Taft Avenue to Roxas Boulevard in the City of Pasay Metropolitan Manila for the Construction of the Epifanio De Los Santos Avenue Edsa Extension the Edsa Outfall of the Manila and Suburb Flood Control and Drainage Project and the Cut Off of Estero Tripa De Gallina and for Other Purposes Archived from the original on April 26 2021 Retrieved April 26 2021 GMA Launches transit system Archived June 29 2009 at the Wayback Machine Philippine Star July 15 2003 NUMBER OF MOTOR VEHICLES REGISTERED Comparative JAN DEC 2003 2004 2005 Archived October 23 2009 at the Wayback Machine Land Transportation Office January 23 2006 Can the police fix EDSA traffic Rappler Retrieved December 5 2015 Jiao Claire September 29 2017 LRT MRT common station breaks ground CNN Philippines Retrieved April 10 2018 Metro Manila 3rd 2016 DPWH Atlas Department of Public Works and Highways Archived from the original on July 9 2018 Retrieved May 21 2017 Quezon City 1st 2016 DPWH Atlas Department of Public Works and Highways Archived from the original on July 9 2018 Retrieved May 21 2017 Quezon City 2nd 2016 DPWH Atlas Department of Public Works and Highways Archived from the original on February 12 2018 Retrieved May 21 2017 Metro Manila 1st 2016 DPWH Atlas Department of Public Works and Highways Archived from the original on July 9 2018 Retrieved May 21 2017 Metro Manila 2nd 2016 DPWH Atlas Department of Public Works and Highways Archived from the original on July 9 2018 Retrieved May 21 2017 South Manila 2016 DPWH Atlas Department of Public Works and Highways Archived from the original on July 9 2018 Retrieved May 21 2017 DPWH Future PP Projects PDF Department of Public Works and Highways Archived from the original PDF on August 10 2017 Retrieved December 15 2012 Diaz Jess Bill seeks to rename EDSA Cory Aquino Avenue Philstar com Retrieved April 26 2023 a b Aquino approves construction of Edsa Taft flyover April 3 2013 Brizuela Maricar B January 26 2016 Edsa lane rule 130 fined barriers to be permanent Motioncars at Inquirer net Philippine Daily Inquirer Retrieved February 5 2016 Meanwhile MMDA Traffic Engineering chief Neomie Recio also announced that the plastic barriers currently used to separate lanes would soon be replaced with more permanent concrete separators to be provided by the DPWH MMDA eyes congestion fee on EDSA to ease traffic CNN Philippines March 15 2017 Retrieved March 22 2017 Metro Manila Bus Rapid Transit Line 2 Central Corridor build gov ph Retrieved May 1 2020 DOTr to scrap bus rapid transit project Rappler June 9 2018 Retrieved May 1 2020 4 8 B Metro bus rapid transit a go Philippine Daily Inquirer November 2 2018 Retrieved May 1 2020 Gatchalian calls for fast tracking of BBB s Metro Manila BRT projects Senate of the Philippines March 13 2019 Retrieved May 1 2020 ABS CBN August 3 2012 Church eyes red revolution vs RH Bill Archived from the original on December 31 2013 Retrieved August 20 2012 De Jesus Julliane Love September 11 2013 EDSA Tayo rally declared a success Philippine Daily Inquirer Retrieved September 14 2013 Thousands of people march along EDSA to call for the resignation of President Aquino on the 29th anniversary of the People Power Revolution imgur Retrieved February 25 2015 FACE OFF Thousands of protesters face hundreds of cops blocking EDSA Santolan Retrieved February 25 2015 via Facebook Why De Lima is target of Iglesia ni Cristo s anger Rappler Retrieved August 30 2015 Thousands return to EDSA to protest Marcos hero s burial GMA News Anti Marcos groups hold protests on Bonifacio Day CNN Philippines Cebu archbishop hits EJKs ahead of EDSA procession Rappler Church calls on public to join activities Cebu Daily News Groups gather at EDSA to oppose Cha cha GMA News VIDEO Panawagan nila ang pagbibitiw sa pwesto ni Pang Rodrigo Duterte dahil sa pagpayag umano nito sa pagpasok ng China sa Pilipinas via luisitosantos03 DZBB Super Radyo Twitter Bourne Legacy shoot at EDSA Taft then Palawan Retrieved August 25 2012 GMA News Online January 27 2012 Bourne Legacy to shoot on EDSA in Pasay some roads closed GMA News Retrieved August 25 2012 External links Edit Media related to EDSA at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title EDSA amp oldid 1154912392, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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