Aguinaldo Highway
Aguinaldo Highway | |
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Cavite–Batangas Road Cavite-Manila South Road | |
Route information | |
Maintained by the Department of Public Works and Highways | |
Length | 41.4 km (25.7 mi) |
Component highways | |
Major junctions | |
North end | Zapote Bridge at Las Piñas–Bacoor boundary |
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South end | N410 (Tagaytay–Nasugbu Highway) / N421 (Tagaytay–Calamba Road) / Tagaytay–Talisay Road in Tagaytay |
Location | |
Country | Philippines |
Provinces | Cavite |
Major cities | Bacoor, Imus, Dasmariñas, Tagaytay |
Towns | Silang |
Highway system | |
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The Emilio Aguinaldo Highway,[1] (often shortened as Aguinaldo Highway), alternatively known as Cavite–Batangas Road and Cavite-Manila South Road, is a four-to-six lane, 41.4-kilometer (25.7 mi), network of primary and secondary highways passing through the busiest towns and cities of Cavite, Philippines.[2][3][4][5] It is the busiest and most congested of the three major highways located in the province, the others are Governor's Drive and Antero Soriano Highway.
The highway is named in the honor of General Emilio Aguinaldo, the country's first president and a native of Cavite.
The northern terminus of the highway is located at the Zapote Bridge at the province's boundary with Las Piñas in Metro Manila. It then traverses Bacoor, Imus, Dasmariñas, Silang, and ends at Tagaytay in Cavite. The highway forms part of National Routes 62, 419, and 410 of the Philippine highway network. The highway has several official names, like Manila–Cavite South Road, Cavite–Batangas Road, and Tagaytay-Manila via Silang Road. The west alignment of the poblacion area of Silang, is unnumbered as a newer bypass named Silang Bypass Road (or Silang Diversion Road) and is designated as a tertiary road. The section that connects with Manila–Cavite Expressway (then Coastal Road), called the Aguinaldo Boulevard, is also designated as National Route 62 (N62) of the Philippine highway network.
Route description
Aguinaldo Highway passes through many establishments such as malls, shops, and government offices. Various high voltage power lines, most notably the Dasmariñas-Las Piñas transmission line of National Grid Corporation of the Philippines (NGCP), utilize the highway right of way from its intersection with Aguinaldo Boulevard and Bacoor Boulevard to Barangay San Agustin II, Dasmariñas for accessibility to work vehicles and also due to scarcity of land for the acquisition of right of way and lands where the steel poles stand.
Originally with four lanes, it starts as a continuation of Diego Cera Avenue at Zapote Bridge. It crosses and becomes a six-lane road past Bacoor Boulevard which leads to Molino, Bacoor, and Aguinaldo Boulevard, which connects with Manila–Cavite Expressway. It then intersects with Tirona Highway that leads to Kawit and Cavite City. It then passes Imus and enters Dasmariñas, where it reduces to a four-lane road and becoming a divided highway in most portions. Afterwards, it then intersects with Governor's Drive and Pala-Pala Road in Dasmariñas.
Past Pala-Pala Road, it begins its climb to Tagaytay, passing Silang and ends at Tagaytay Rotonda. The highway continues as Tagaytay–Nasugbu Highway as it passes the rest of Tagaytay and Alfonso in Cavite before entering the province of Batangas.
History
The present road originated from an old road that enters Cavite from Las Piñas. The old roads that predated the Aguinaldo Highway used a different alignment on Bacoor and Imus, that exist until today as a mixture of city-maintained roads and national roads. Portions of the road have been sites of battles of the Philippine Revolution.
During the American colonial era, the road reached as far as Silang. From 1933 to 1935, the section of the highway from Silang to Tagaytay was constructed using prisoners as construction workers. In 1938, the highway was made into concrete by President Manuel L. Quezon.[6] The old roads that passed on the western barangays of Bacoor and Imus are bypassed by a new alignment that existed until today. The road formed part of Highway 17 that linked Imus with Batangas.[7][8][9] It was also part of the Cavite-Manila South Road, which was renamed to Mexico Road in 1964, the year designated as "The Year of Philippine-Mexican Friendship."[10][11]
On May 27, 1998, the traffic jam happened in southern side of the highway. It was caused by National Power Corporation (NAPOCOR/NPC) transmission line construction of the billion peso Dasmariñas–Las Piñas Transmission Line, with the line finished construction on July 15, 1999.[citation needed]
Intersections
The entire route is located in Cavite. Intersections are numbered by kilometer posts, with Rizal Park in Manila designated as kilometer zero.
City/Municipality | km[12] | mi | Destinations | Notes | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Las Piñas–Bacoor boundary | 14.846 | 9.225 | Zapote Bridge over Zapote River Las Piñas-Muntinlupa District Engineering Office–Cavite Sub District Engineering Office highway boundary | ||||
Bacoor | N62 (Aguinaldo Boulevard) / Bacoor Boulevard – Paliparan, Dasmariñas | Traffic light intersection | |||||
17.456 | 10.847 | N62 (Tirona Highway) – Kawit | Traffic light intersection. Route number change from N62 to N419. | ||||
Bacoor–Imus boundary | 18.943 | 11.771 | Cavite Sub District Engineering Office–Cavite 1st District Engineering Office highway boundary | ||||
Imus | NOMO Avenue (Imus-Bacoor Diversion Road) | ||||||
Buhay na Tubig Road | Traffic light intersection | ||||||
Palico Daanan Road | |||||||
20.050 | 12.458 | Imus Bridge over Imus River | |||||
Nueno Avenue | Traffic light intersection | ||||||
Patindig Araw Road | |||||||
NIA Road | |||||||
Daang Hari / Open Canal Road | At-grade interchange; traffic light intersection | ||||||
Imus–Dasmariñas boundary | 26.998 | 16.776 | Cavite 1st District Engineering Office–Cavite Sub District Engineering Office highway boundary | ||||
Dasmariñas | J.T. Paterno Boulevard – Imus | Southbound access only | |||||
Jose Abad Santos Avenue (Salitran Road) | Traffic light intersection | ||||||
Guevarra Street | Traffic light intersection | ||||||
Camerino Avenue | Traffic light intersection | ||||||
Congressional Avenue | Traffic light intersection. Serves De La Salle University - Dasmariñas Campus. | ||||||
Central Market Avenue | Traffic light intersection | ||||||
Don Placido Campos Avenue | Unsignalized intersection | ||||||
Ramon Tirona Avenue | |||||||
N65 (Juanito Remulla Avenue/ Governor's Drive) – Trece Martires, Biñan | Traffic light intersection | ||||||
N65 (Pala-Pala Road) | Traffic light intersection | ||||||
UTS Boulevard | Traffic light intersection | ||||||
Dasmariñas–Silang boundary | 38.985 | 24.224 | Route number change from N419 to N410 | ||||
Silang | E3 (CALAX) | Silang (Aguinaldo) Exit of CALAX | |||||
N410 (J.P. Rizal Street) | Change from N410 to unnumbered route | ||||||
Silang–Banaybanay Road | Traffic light intersection | ||||||
N410 (J.P. Rizal Street) | Changed from unnumbered route to N410 | ||||||
East–West Lateral Road | |||||||
Buho–Amadeo Road | |||||||
Silang–Tagaytay boundary | 53.763 | 33.407 | Cavite Sub District Engineering Office–Cavite 2nd District Engineering Office highway boundary | ||||
Tagaytay | Tagaytay Bypass Road | ||||||
56.894 | 35.352 | N410 (Tagaytay–Nasugbu Highway) / N421 (Tagaytay–Calamba Road) / Tagaytay–Talisay Road | Roundabout. Southern Terminus. | ||||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
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References
- ^ "Emilio Aguinaldo Highway". bacoor.gov.ph. Retrieved August 21, 2018.
- ^ "Las Piñas-Munti". www.dpwh.gov.ph. Archived from the original on January 9, 2018. Retrieved January 9, 2018.
- ^ "Cavite Sub". www.dpwh.gov.ph. Archived from the original on January 9, 2018. Retrieved January 9, 2018.
- ^ "Cavite 2nd". www.dpwh.gov.ph. Archived from the original on January 8, 2018. Retrieved January 9, 2018.
- ^ "Cavite". www.dpwh.gov.ph. Archived from the original on January 9, 2018. Retrieved January 9, 2018.
- ^ "History". Silang, Cavite. Retrieved May 4, 2021.
- ^ Southern Luzon Western Sheet (Map). 1:200000. Washington D.C.: US Geodetic Survey. 1941.
- ^ 1944 Army Map Service Road Map of Northern Luzon, Philippines (Map) (1-AMS ed.). 1:1000000. Washington D.C.: Army Map Service, Corps of Engineers. 1944. Retrieved September 5, 2021.
- ^ ND 51-5 Manila (Map). 1:250,000. Washington D.C.: Army Map Service, Corps of Engineers. 1954. Retrieved November 20, 2021.
- ^ Presidential Decree No. 320 (1964), Naming the Cavite-Manila South Road as Mexico Road, retrieved May 11, 2021
- ^ "Rebirth of Taft Avenue". Manila Bulletin. January 26, 2013. Archived from the original on May 25, 2022. Retrieved May 4, 2021 – via Yahoo! News.
- ^ "Road and Bridge Inventory". www.dpwh.gov.ph. Retrieved January 20, 2018.