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Access to Brgy. Sto. Toribio and Lipa City proper. San Carlos Drive – Balete: N431 (B. Morada Avenue) – Lipa city proper, Padre Garcia, Rosario, San Juan: Western end of Ayala Highway. Tambo–Lodlod Road: E2 (STAR Tollway) – Manila, Batangas City, Batangas Port: M.P. Casanova Street – Mataasnakahoy: Alternate access to Mataasnakahoy.
Afterwards, it enters Lipa, and the road gradually curving before approaching Lipa Exit, which provides access to the city proper and to the nearby towns of Mataasnakahoy, Cuenca, and Alitagtag. The exit once served as the tollway's southern terminus until 2007, when STAR Tollway was extended southward towards Batangas City. STAR Tollway in Ibaan
The South Luzon Expressway (SLEX), [c] signed as E2 of the Philippine expressway network and R-3 of the Metro Manila arterial road network, is a controlled-access highway that connects Metro Manila to the provinces in the Calabarzon, Mimaropa and Bicol Region on the island of Luzon in the Philippines.
Lipa (), officially the City of Lipa (Filipino: Lungsod ng Lipa), is a component city in the province of Batangas, Philippines. According to the 2020 census, it has a population of 372,931 people. [3] It is the first city charter in the province and one of five cities in Batangas alongside Batangas City, Calaca, Santo Tomas, and Tanauan. [5]
Dela Rosa Transit is one of the city bus companies in the Philippines.It plies route from Pacita Complex, San Pedro, Laguna to Novaliches, Quezon City.It also offers provincial routes operated under its sister companies, Dela Rosa Express and N. Dela Rosa Liner, plying routes from Metro Manila to Batangas City, Batangas, and Lucena City, Quezon, respectively.
E6 (NAIA Expressway)/Route 61 (Roxas Boulevard)/Route 194 in Tambo, Parañaque: Route 62 (Tirona Highway)/Route 64 (Centennial Road) in Kawit, Cavite: Manila–Cavite Expressway: 1985 E3: 44.6 27.6 E3 in Kawit, Cavite: E2 (South Luzon Expressway) in Biñan, Laguna: Cavite–Laguna Expressway: 2019
The R21 is a major north–south provincial route (with a freeway portion designated as a National Road) in eastern Gauteng Province, South Africa. [1] [2] Built in the early 1970s, it remains one of two freeways (the other being the N1) linking Pretoria with Johannesburg, via the R24.
Tambo was named for the tiger grass used to make brooms (Filipino: walis tambo) that grew there in abundance during the Spanish colonial period. [3] It may have also been named for the lodging houses (Spanish: tambo o casa de hospedaje de viajeros) that stood in this former colonial beach strip which was one of the earliest barrios established in the Augustinian missionary town of Parañaque.