Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Dasmariñas was originally composed of several barangays or barrios (neighborhoods). Among these, Salitran was considered the most important and notable during the Spanish regime due to its role as the site of the Recollect estate house. The name Salitran is derived from the Tagalog word sal-it, meaning "people from another town." Being part of ...
A few hundred meters west of Molino–Paliparan Road, Daang Hari enters Imus, passing through Barangay Pasong Buaya before terminating at the intersection with Aguinaldo Highway in Anabu near the boundary with Salitran, Dasmariñas where The District mall is located. A flyover is under construction to divert through traffic on the existing ...
The first mention of a separate LRT Line 6 in Cavite was when then-president Benigno Aquino III approved the construction of the LRT Line 6 in Cavite after a National Economic and Development Authority board meeting on September 6, 2015. [17] The project would have cost an estimated PHP64 billion or US$1.42 billion. [18]
The resettlement area was established by the Letter of Instruction No. 19 of the former President Ferdinand Marcos in 1975. Two hundred thirty-four hectares were bought by the Peoples Homesite Housing Corporation [1] located 8 kilometers from the City Center of Dasmariñas [broken anchor] in 1961.
Responding to the need to bring quality education to the rural areas, Saint Jude College established its first extension school at URC Avenue, Salitran IV, City of Dasmariñas Cavite. In October 23, 1999, Saint Jude College Dasmariñas Cavite Inc. inaugurated a two-storey building with 10 classrooms for pre-school, elementary and high school.
The Emilio Aguinaldo Highway [1] (often shortened as Aguinaldo Highway) 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.
Map of J.P. Rizal Street in Silang, part of N410. N410 starts at the boundary of Silang and Dasmariñas in Cavite as the physical continuation of N419 (Aguinaldo Highway). The route then shifts slightly to the east as J.P. Rizal Street, traversing the Silang town proper before returning to Aguinaldo Highway.
The Juanito R. Remulla Sr. Road, [a] formerly and still commonly referred to as Governor's Drive, is a two-to-nine lane, 58.3-kilometer (36.2 mi) network of primary, secondary and tertiary highways and bridges traversing through the central cities and municipalities of the province of Cavite, Philippines.