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The Sumulong Highway (formally known as Antipolo-Victoria Valley-Marikina Road) is a highway in the Philippines connecting Marikina in Metro Manila [2] with Antipolo and Cainta in the province of Rizal. Constructed in 1960, [3] it is named after Don Juan Sumulong, an Antipolo native who served as the country's senator and founder of the ...
The highway from Evangelista Avenue and Old J.P. Rizal Road to Sumulong Highway has one-way Class I bicycle lanes with a length of 4.57 kilometers (2.84 mi) and a width of 1.1 to 1.2 meters (3.6 to 3.9 ft), [1] which were established by the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA) in 2012. [2]
Sumulong Highway in Barangay Mambugan, Antipolo N59 begins at Antipolo in Rizal at the endpoint of L. Sumulong Memorial Circle Road (N600) in front of Robinsons Place Antipolo. The highway passes through different key locations at Antipolo, which is known for its scenic views of Metro Manila, given its mountainous terrain.
Located along the eastern border of Metro Manila, Marikina is the main gateway of Metro Manila to Rizal and Quezon provinces through Marikina–Infanta Highway. It is bordered on the west by Quezon City, to the south by Pasig and Cainta, to the north by San Mateo, and to the east by Antipolo, the capital of Rizal province.
The highway used to start in or near Manila and took the present-day alignment of J.P. Rizal Avenue in Makati (formerly part of Rizal), branching off from Santa Ana, Manila, [7] [8] and later the present-day alignments of P. Sanchez Street in Santa Mesa and Shaw Boulevard. [9]
Church of Cainta Building House of Worship Stone church built by Jesuit Fr. Gaspar Marco in 1707. Offered to the Nuestra Señora de la Luz in 1727. Cainta Church façade, Cainta Filipino 2007 Simbahan ng Lumang Bosoboso: Old Boso-Boso Church First church built by Franciscans to evangelize the Dumagats of Tanay in 1669. Restored in 1995. Boso ...
Antipolo, officially the City of Antipolo (Filipino: Lungsod ng Antipolo), is a component city and capital of the province of Rizal, Philippines. [5] According to the 2020 census, it has a population of 887,399 people. [3] It is the most populous city in Rizal Province and in Calabarzon region, and the seventh most-populous city in the ...
Morong was an administrative division of the Philippines that existed as a politico-military district created out of parts of the provinces of Tondo and Laguna on February 23, 1853, by a decree of the Superior Gobierno, composing Morong, Pililla, Tanay, Baras, Binangonan, Jalajala, Angono and Cardona from Laguna; and Antipolo, Boso-Boso, Cainta and Taytay from Tondo. [1]