Amorsolo Street

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search
Amorsolo Street
File:Amorsolo Street.jpg
Length 3.4 km (2.1 mi)
Location Makati
North end Ayala Avenue in Legaspi Village
Major
junctions
De La Rosa Street
Rufino Street
Arnaiz Avenue
– – San Lorenzo Village – –
Epifanio de los Santos Avenue
– – Ecology Village – –
South end Tamarind Road in Dasmariñas Village

Amorsolo Street is a minor north-south roadway that runs parallel to Chino Roces Avenue in Makati, Metro Manila, Philippines. The street starts inside Barangay Dasmariñas, continues north to San Lorenzo Village with some discontinuities and into the western edge of the Makati Central Business District where it ends at the junction with Ayala Avenue. The street is named for renowned Filipino painter and national artist Fernando Amorsolo.

Route description

The southern end of Amorsolo Street is at Tamarind Road within Barangay Dasmariñas where it serves as the boundary between the gated Dasmariñas and Ecology Village. It is interrupted by the Magallanes Interchange and the MRT line at the intersection with Epifanio de los Santos Avenue (EDSA). On the other side of EDSA, the road picks up as a residential street within San Lorenzo Village where it forms the village's western border running next to a creek. At Arnaiz Avenue, the road leaves the gated village and widens to eight lanes from four with the opening of slightly elevated southbound lanes over the Amorsolo Creek to accommodate increased traffic from the Manila Skyway Makati exit that merges onto the road. The section between Arnaiz Avenue and De La Rosa Street is dominated by old low to mid rise buildings on the eastern side and the Makati Cinema Square and Mile Long complexes on the western side. North of De La Rosa, Amorsolo narrows back to four lanes carrying northbound traffic to its terminus at Ayala Avenue by the Makati Medical Center.

Amorsolo Creek

In 2000, Manila Skyway builder, Citra Metro Manila Tollways Corp., was fined P58.8 million for violating environmental regulations when it covered up the creek in Amorsolo Street and reclaimed the Palili creek in Bicutan. The Department of Environment and Natural Resources attributed the flooding in those areas to the construction of the Skyway on/off ramps on top of those esteros.[1]

Landmarks


References

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.