LarryTheMan Posted September 5, 2021 Share Posted September 5, 2021 15 hours ago, id6230 said: Our infrastructure of roads and highways are not enough to handle the demands.Cars are multiplying exponentially on the road plus the undisciplined drivers. The master planners have short visions. Agreed. That and commerce is heavily concentrated in NCR hence why it is soooo densely populated and congested. Ang daming mga taga probinsya ang pumupuntang Maynila kasi halos walang opportunity sa kinaroroonan nila. I'm not saying NCR is the only developed city. What I'm saying is the so called "development" and commerce is heavily concentrated here. I also don get yung tipong kelangan mo pang dumaang manila para lang makakuha ng permit na mag unload ng cargo sa Palawan (or other ports na di located sa NCR). The usual solutions that the current and previous administrations aren't long term(puro bandaid solutions).They're not exactly addressing the root cause or the reason why the problem persists. Quote Link to comment
francis_0170 Posted September 6, 2021 Share Posted September 6, 2021 Mabilis pa rin Edsa during Sundays. Marami kase kotse, bus, motorcycles during weekdays. Usually ang kotse, isa or dalawa sakay. Quote Link to comment
Rechsteiner Posted September 6, 2021 Share Posted September 6, 2021 Easily accessible, modern public transportation is the answer for the EDSA traffic problem. Quote Link to comment
supermario115 Posted September 8, 2021 Share Posted September 8, 2021 Business and offices are located & concentrated only in specific areas like Makati & Ortigas business districts. And with not enough infrastructures, congestion happens. Just look at whats goin on at Edsa during rush hour. Quote Link to comment
Anonymous Posted September 9, 2021 Share Posted September 9, 2021 On 3/15/2020 at 2:26 PM, lee sawyer said: Will the corona virus be the solution to the traffic that has been hounding us for decades? Haha seems like it dampened the road crisis. The country is certainly blessed. Great that government embarked on improving the road networks. It has helped tide the economy while the covid storm is lashing the world. By the time all these new programs and projects come online, then we would have cashed in on the new investments. To see is to believe. Quote Link to comment
redbomber Posted September 17, 2021 Share Posted September 17, 2021 On 9/9/2021 at 7:30 AM, supermario115 said: Business and offices are located & concentrated only in specific areas like Makati & Ortigas business districts. And with not enough infrastructures, congestion happens. Just look at whats goin on at Edsa during rush hour. Tama. Ilabas ang commerce and business from the Metro. Ang lawak-lawak ng other regions eh Quote Link to comment
Willie Stroker Posted September 24, 2021 Share Posted September 24, 2021 Limit urban sprawl.. Quote Link to comment
Madvillain Posted September 24, 2021 Share Posted September 24, 2021 well, traffic drastically improved nung natayo yung skyway, people like me from the NORTH go to the SKYWAY kung pupunta ng PARANAQUE, ALABANG, SLEX etc so na decongest yung EDSA plus very systematic na yung sakayan ng mga bus, wala ng mga barubal na bus driver kasi nga nasa gilid na sila di tulad dati ginagawang parking lot yung daan. also, nagka covid virus din kaya most people rather stay home than go out. I also hope ma disiplina yung mga commuter and maging strict sila sa mga batas trapiko. Quote Link to comment
amazingguy25 Posted September 24, 2021 Share Posted September 24, 2021 Skyway helped a lot pero sana pamurahin lang ng kaunti para sa mga dumadaan everyday Quote Link to comment
manishbombee Posted September 24, 2021 Share Posted September 24, 2021 SMC installs first batch of train sets for MRT-7 - BusinessWorld (bworldonline.com) SAN Miguel Corp. (SMC) announced on Sunday that the first train set of the Metro Rail Transit-7 (MRT-7) project in Quezon City had been installed. The second train set was also scheduled to arrive and be installed on Sunday. “The two train sets, consisting of three cars each,… were dispatched to the MRT-7 tracks between University Avenue and Tandang Sora, after clearing customs at the Port of Manila,” SMC said in an e-mailed statement. The train sets were ordered from South Korea’s Hyundai Rotem. Quote Link to comment
francis_0170 Posted September 24, 2021 Share Posted September 24, 2021 Improve mass transit/transport system. Give incentive sa mga business na mag-expand sa other regions. Pampanga, Clark area, Bulacan, ilo-ilo, Cebu, Davao. Marami pang maayos at matayo sa kalsada. Quote Link to comment
Keshigami Posted September 24, 2021 Share Posted September 24, 2021 I concur. Metro Manila is too congested. Infact, theres a bill thats been on since 2007 about the expansion of businesses to the provinces. Urban planning should be made before execution to avoid over populating each area. If this bill had become RA. Theres a big chance of a better economy and stabilized minumum wages that cope up to majority of the Filipinos like us. Quote Link to comment
Cidex Posted September 27, 2021 Share Posted September 27, 2021 I wish our city planners play the game: cities skylines para matuto sila magzone according sa daan and population. Quote Link to comment
manishbombee Posted September 29, 2021 Share Posted September 29, 2021 NSCR extension project commences construction | BusinessMirror NSCR extension project commences construction JAPANESE Ambassador Kazuhiro Koshikawa joined Transportation Undersecretary Timothy John R. Batan and Asian Development Bank (ADB) Director-General Ramesh Subramaniam at the site inspection of the ongoing Japan-funded North-South Commuter Railway Extension (NSCR-Ex) project, which will span from Malolos to Tutuban, Manila. The September 18 ceremony at the site of Clark International Airport Station in Mabalacat, Pampanga marked the start of construction for the NSCR-Ex. Jointly financed by the ADB and the government of Japan through the Japan International Cooperation Agency, there will be two extension lines to strengthen the Philippines’s mass-transport network and expand the economic sphere of Metro Manila, which is seen to alleviate traffic congestion, improve the investment environment, as well as mitigate effects of air pollution and climate change. The 51-kilometer North extension will run from Malolos in Bulacan to Clark International Airport in Pampanga, while the 55-km South augmentation will stretch from Solis, Manila to Calamba, Laguna. The project will utilize the Japanese railway system using energy-efficient and reliable trains. The technical aspects will also complement the ongoing NSCR Malolos to Tutuban Project adopting Japanese technology on flood-resilient and antiseismic design to withstand earthquakes. The official development assistance, or ODA, yen loan will be allocated for the procurement of rolling stock and railway system, as well as consulting services. The ADB loan funds, meanwhile, will be placed on civil works. The NSCR-Ex project is one of the key infrastructure projects supported by Japan under the Philippine government’s Build, Build, Build program. Its Japanese counterpart has been supporting the local railway sector for many years—including the expansion of Light Rail Transit Line 1 to Cavite, the recently completed extension of LRT Line 2 to Masinag, Antipolo under the Capacity Enhancement of Mass Transit Systems in Metro Manila project, the Metro Rail Transit Line 3 Rehabilitation projects, as well as the Metro Manila Subway. Quote Link to comment
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