Puneet Varma (Editor)

Manila Light Rail Transit System Line 1

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Locale
  
Manila, Philippines

Stations
  
20

Termini
  
Roosevelt Baclaran

Services
  
1

Manila Light Rail Transit System Line 1

Type
  
Rapid transit / Light rail

System
  
Manila Light Rail Transit System

The Manila Light Rail Transit System Line 1 is the first metro line of the Manila Light Rail Transit System. Presently, the line contains twenty stations and runs on 19.65 kilometers (12.21 mi) of fully elevated route. The line is colored yellow (old) and green (new) on all LRT maps.

Contents

The line runs in a general north-south direction from Baclaran to Monumento; then, it runs in an east-west direction from Monumento to North Avenue, linking the cities of Quezon City, Caloocan, Manila, Pasay, and Parañaque. Passengers can transfer to the Line 2 at Doroteo Jose station, while passengers can transfer to the Line 3 at EDSA and North Avenue stations.

The Line 1 was known for many names such as LRT Line 1, shortened to LRT-1, Yellow Line, Green Line (2012), or the Metrorail. However, the yellow color of the line dates back to its opening in 1984.

On September 12, 2015, Light Rail Manila Corporation (LRMC), a joint venture company of Metro Pacific's Metro Pacific Light Rail Corporation (MPLRC), Ayala Corporation’s AC Infrastructure Holdings Corporation (AC Infra), and the Philippine Investment Alliance for Infrastructure’s Macquarie Infrastructure Holdings (Philippines) PTE Ltd. (MIHPL), started a 32-year concession for the operation and maintenance of LRT Line 1 and the construction of a PhP 65 billion extension project to Bacoor, Cavite.

History

  • December 1, 1984: Baclaran to Central Terminal
  • May 12, 1985: Carriedo to Monumento
  • March 22, 2010: Balintawak
  • October 22, 2010: Roosevelt
  • Technical specifications

  • Name: Manila Light Rail Transit System Line 1
  • Concession holder: Light Rail Manila Corporation
  • Operator: Light Rail Manila Corporation
  • Length: 19.65 km + 11.7 km (Cavite Extension)
  • Concession starting date: 2014
  • Concession ending date: 2047
  • Stations: 20 + 8 (Cavite extension)
  • Route

    The Line 1 is predominantly aligned to the path of Taft Avenue (Radial Road 2), which was chosen largely due to its straight length. Later on, as Taft Avenue ends, it shifts to Rizal Avenue and Rizal Avenue Extension (Radial Road 9) then turning right at EDSA or Circumferential Road 4 (C-4 Road) before ending at the corner of North and West Avenues and EDSA.

    Stations

    Manila Light Rail Transit System Line 1 serves 20 stations along its route (a twenty-first station is planned):

  • North Avenue – Quezon City (not yet being constructed)
  • Roosevelt – Quezon City
  • Balintawak – Quezon City
  • Malvar – Caloocan City (not yet being constructed)
  • Monumento – Caloocan City
  • 5th Avenue – Caloocan City
  • R. Papa – Tondo, Manila
  • Abad Santos – Tondo and Santa Cruz, Manila
  • Blumentritt – Santa Cruz, Manila (interchange with PNR Southrail at Blumentritt)
  • Tayuman – Santa Cruz, Manila
  • Bambang – Santa Cruz, Manila
  • Doroteo Jose – Santa Cruz, Manila (interchange with Line 2 at Recto)
  • Carriedo – Quiapo and Santa Cruz, Manila
  • Central Terminal – Ermita, Manila (also known as Arroceros or City Hall)
  • United Nations – Ermita, Manila
  • Pedro Gil – Ermita, Manila (also known as Herran)
  • Quirino – Malate, Manila
  • Vito Cruz – Malate, Manila (also known as Pablo Ocampo or Ocampo)
  • Gil Puyat – Pasay City (also known as Buendia and gateway to Ayala Business District, Makati City)
  • Libertad – Pasay City (also known as Antonio Arnaiz or simply Arnaiz)
  • EDSA – Pasay City (interchange with Line 3 at Taft Avenue)
  • Baclaran – Pasay City (near the border of Baclaran, Parañaque City)
  • Rolling stock

    The LRT Line 1 at various stages in its history has used a two-car, three-car, and four-car trainsets. The two-car trains are the original first-generation BN and ACEC trains (railway cars numbered from 1000). Most were transformed into three-car trains, although some two-car trains remain in service. The four-car trains are the more modern second-generation Hyundai Precision and Adtranz (numbered from 1100) and third-generation Kinki Sharyo / Nippon Sharyo (1200) trains. There are 139 railway cars grouped into 40 trains serving the line: 63 of these are first-generation cars, 28 second-generation, and 48 third-generation. One train car (1037) was severely damaged in the Rizal Day bombings and was subsequently decommissioned. The maximum speed of these cars is 80 kilometers per hour (50 mph).

    The LRT Line 1 fleet is being modernized to cope with increasing numbers of passengers. In the initial phase of its capacity expansion program completed in 1999, the line's seven four-car second-generation trains were commissioned providing an increased train capacity of 1,350 passengers while the original two-car trains capable of holding 748 passengers were transformed into three-car trains with room for 1,122.

    The acquisition marked the introduction of the first air-conditioned trains to the line. Earlier LRT Line 1 rolling stock was notorious for its lack of air conditioning, relying instead on forced-air roof ventilation for cooling. Unfortunately, this resulted in hot and stuffy rides. The problem was addressed more fully after a preparatory rehabilitation program completed in 2001 allowed the installation of air conditioners to the older rolling stock. By June 2004, all Yellow Line trains had air conditioning.

    As part of the second phase of expansion on the Yellow Line, 12 new trains made in Japan by Kinki Sharyo and provided by the Manila Tren Consortium were shipped in the third quarter of 2006 and went into service in the first quarter of 2007. The new air-conditioned trains have boosted the capacity of the line from 27,000 to 40,000 passengers per hour per direction.

    South Extension Phase 1 (LRT-1 Extension)

    A southern extension of Line 1, also known as the Southern Extension Project in the Metro Manila Rail Plans has been proposed and would aim to serve the areas of Parañaque to Cavite. Such an extension would take Quirino Avenue (Road from Parañaque to Bacoor), then would travel on the side of Seaside Drive to the Coastal Road, and from there would travel down the side of Kabihasnan street to Quirino Avenue (again) to its extension, General Emilio Aguinaldo Avenue from the Las Pinas-Bacoor Boundary of Zapote Bridge to Niog. The extension would add 10 stations over some 11.7 kilometers (7.3 mi) of new line and would be the second rail line extending outside the Metro Manila area (after the planned MRT-7 line).

    An unsolicited bid to conduct this work from Canada's SNC-Lavalin was rejected by the Philippine government in 2005. In 2006, the government worked with advisers (International Finance Corporation, White & Case, Halcrow and others) to conduct an open-market invitation to tender for the extension and for a 30-year concession to run the extended LRT-1 line. President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo subsequently withdrew the project.

    The following stations would proposed to compose the Southern Extension:

  • Redemptorist – Parañaque
  • Manila International Airport – Parañaque
  • Asia World – Parañaque
  • Ninoy Aquino – Parañaque
  • Dr. Santos – Parañaque
  • Manuyo Uno – Las Piñas
  • Las Piñas – Las Piñas
  • Zapote – along the boundaries of Bacoor and Las Piñas
  • Talaba – Bacoor
  • Niog – Bacoor
  • The line would be extended from Parañaque southwards, connecting Las Piñas and Bacoor to the LRT network.

    South Extension Phase 2 (LRT-6)

    Another extension of the LRT-1 in Cavite has been proposed. It will be extended by another 19 kilometres (12 mi) from Bacoor to Dasmariñas with a right-of-way alignment along Aguinaldo Highway. This public-private partnership project dubbed as LRT-6 would have 7 additional stations in Cavite.

    The 7 stations of the proposed South Extension Phase 2 are composed of:

  • Niog – Bacoor
  • Tirona – Bacoor
  • Imus – Imus
  • Daang Hari – Imus
  • Salitran – Dasmariñas
  • Congressional Avenue – Dasmariñas
  • Governor's Drive – Dasmariñas
  • References

    Manila Light Rail Transit System Line 1 Wikipedia