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Average inter-station distance: 4.11 km (2.55 mi) Route map ... The Ferrocarril de Manila a Dagupan operated trains to and from Manila. ... Pampanga in March 2024.
Route 213 (Mabalacat–Magalang Road) in Santa Ines, Mabalacat, Pampanga: Route 1 /Route 160 (Andres Bonifacio Avenue) in Balintawak, Quezon City: North Luzon Expressway: 1968 Asian Highway 26 between Santa Rita, Guiguinto and Balintawak: E1: 132.5 82.3 Route 2 (Manila North Road) in Rosario, La Union: E1 (North Luzon Expressway) in Mabalacat ...
The North Luzon Expressway (NLEX), [a] signed as E1 of the Philippine expressway network, partially as N160 [b] of the Philippine highway network, and partially as R-8 [b] of the Metro Manila arterial road network, [c] is a controlled-access highway that connects Metro Manila to the provinces of the Central Luzon region in the Philippines.
The MacArthur Highway, officially the Manila North Road (MNR or MaNor), is a 685-kilometer (426 mi), two-to-six lane, national primary highway and tertiary highway in Luzon, Philippines, connecting Caloocan in Metro Manila to Aparri in Cagayan at the north. It is the second longest road in the Philippines, after the Pan-Philippine Highway.
Lying on the northern shore of Manila Bay, Pampanga is bordered by Tarlac to the north, Nueva Ecija to the northeast, Bulacan to the east, Manila Bay to the central-south, Bataan to the southwest and Zambales to the west. Its capital is the City of San Fernando, the regional center of Central Luzon.
It was first inaugurated as the Metro Manila Commuter Service in 1970, and originally served the North Main Line and the South Main Lines, as well as the defunct Carmona and Guadalupe branch lines. Since then, it adopted several names such as Metrotrak [ 4 ] and Metrotren , [ 5 ] before adopting its present name in the late 2000s.
Distance from Manila Manila-Bagbag March 24, 1891 44 km 44 km Bagbag-Mabalacat February 2, 1892 43 87 Mabalacat-Tarlac June 1, 1892 32 119 Tarlac-Dagupan November 24, 1892 76 195 Dagupan-San Fabian January 11, 1908 12 207 San Fabian-Rabon July 5, 1908 Rabon-Santo Tomas November 14, 1908 Santo Tomas-Agoo December 4, 1908 Agoo-South Aringay
Jose Abad Santos Avenue (JASA), also known as the Olongapo–Gapan Road and the Gapan–San Fernando–Olongapo Road, is a two-to-thirteen-lane 118-kilometer (73 mi) major highway spanning the provinces of Bataan, Nueva Ecija, Pampanga, and Zambales in Central Luzon, Philippines.