There are four modes of public transport in Metro
Manila and surprisingly, they are easy to use.
- LRT 1 is a fully elevated north-south route opened 1 Dec. 1984 (7 km) and June 1985 (8
km). It runs along Rizal and Taft Avenues (15 km, 18
stations). The capacity of the line was increased in
1998. The line runs on a precast concrete structure
7 m above the street, designed to withstand earthquakes.
It has 1435 mm gauge and 750 V overhead power supply.
Average station distance is 825 m, stations are only
accessible via stairs, there are no elevators or escalators. Central, Monumento (northern
terminal) and Baclaran (southern terminal) function
as transfer station to buses and jeepneys. Trains operate
in 2-4 car units (one unit 29.3 m long, 2.5 m wide),
which have roof ventilation. A 12 km southern extension
will be built by SNC-Lavalin (Canada) (Oct.2000).
- MRT 3 (popularly called METROSTAR) runs elevated
along EDSA (Epifanio de los Santos Ave.) ring road
(except Buendia station which is underground).
The central section opened on 16 Dec. 1999, the southern section,
which connects to LRT 1 followed on 20 July 2000. The total length is now
16.8 km, once the northern section is built the line
will be 24 km. After the first months of operation,
ridership was far below expectations, mainly due to
high fares compared to buses and long flights of stairs
to access the elevated stations. Metrostar trains are
air-conditioned.
- LRT 2 - Construction of this elevated line started
in 1998 between Doroteo JosĘ (LRT 1) to Cubao (MRT
3) in Quezon City, and further on to Santolan in
Pasig. It will run along Recto Ave, Magsaysay Blvd
and Aurora Blvd. The first phase from Santolan to Araneta
Center-Cubao is scheduled to open in April 2003,
the remaining stretch will follow in Dec. 2004. The
full length from Santolan to Recto Ave.
will be 13.8 km and have 11 stations (only Katipunan underground).
This line may later extended further east (4km) to
Masinag Junction in Antipolo, Rizal.
Manila's MRT 3 will be completed to Monumento Stn.
by 2004, with the stations being named (from North
Ave.) Roosevelt, Balintawak, and Monumento.
LRT 1 extension south (12km) will be completed by
2004. The first phase stations are named (from Baclaran)
Redemptorist, Manila International Airport (or MIA),
Asia World, Ninoy Aquino, Dr. Santos, Manuyo Uno, Las
Pi²as, Zapote, Talaba, and Niyog.
- MRT 4 running northeast from Doroteo JosĘ/Recto into
Quezon City connecting with North Ave. Stn. on line
3, with 20 stations will be completed by 2007.
Taxis: Air-conditioned taxis cost PhP25.00
on the meter and an additional PhP 2.00 is added for
every succeeding 200 meters. to the final cost. Non-airconditioned
taxis do not ply anymore. Taxis are always lined up
at the major hotels and tourist restaurants and can
be hailed on the street. If you take a taxi, make sure
the driver turns on the meter. If he gives you a story
that it is broken, get out and take another taxi. Unless
you are taking a long trip or the traffic is unusually
horrible, most taxi rides should be well under P100.
At least a 10% tip is expected.
Other Modes of Transport
Most of the major car rental agencies, including AVIS, Budget, and Hertz have
offices in Metro Manila and carry a full line of vehicles from jeeps to limousines.
All vehicles may be rented with or without a driver. If you wish to do your
own driving you must have a valid foreign or international license. Inter-island
transportation is provided by either airplane or ferry boat. Philippine Airlines
services 43 major provincial airports. Cebu Pacific, Asian Spirit, Air Philippines,
and Pacific Airways are smaller carriers servicing more remote tourist destinations.
For information about boat schedules, check with the Department of Tourism
on T.M. Kalaw Street, Manila (63-2-5267652, 5267653, 5267655).