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English: Q-Plaza Cainta (San Isidro, Cainta, Rizal) Puregold Q-Plaza Cainta AMF-Puyat Bowling and Biliard Center Karangalan Village, Cainta, DepEd Office (Region IV-A CALABARZON - Karangalan Village, Cainta) Cainta Vista Verde Executive Village corner Felix Avenue (San Isidro, Cainta, Rizal) Barangay San Isidro 14°37'2"N 121°6'56"E Cainta, Rizal along Felix Avenue also known as Imelda Avenue ...
Cainta, officially the Municipality of Cainta (Filipino: Bayan ng Cainta, IPA: [kɐʔɪnˈtaʔ]), is a municipality in the province of Rizal, Philippines. According to the 2020 census, it has a population of 376,933 people.
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The highway on the Cainta–Marikina border during rush hour The highway in Infanta Section of Marilaque Highway near Cogeo Village, Antipolo. The Marikina–Infanta Highway begins as a physical continuation of Aurora Boulevard under the Katipunan Flyover in Quezon City.
It is one of the busiest roads in Cainta, Rizal, Philippines. The road is named after Francisco P. Felix, a former mayor of Cainta, served from 1935 until he died in 1980. It also serves as a boundary of Cainta and Pasig. Felix Avenue was highly accessible by jeepneys, taxis, UV express, tricycles, and private vehicles.
Ortigas Avenue is a 12.1 km (7.5 mi) highway connecting eastern Metro Manila and western Rizal in the Philippines.It is one of the busiest highways in Metro Manila, serving as the main thoroughfare of the metro's east–west corridor, catering mainly to traffic to and from Rizal.
English: Town hall of Cainta, Rizal (Rizal Technical Education and Skills Development Center (TESDA IV, Cainta, Rizal); MAY-AKDA Town Library (Santo Domingo, Cainta, Rizal); Halls of Justice (Santo Domingo, Cainta, Rizal); Jose Rizal monument (Municipal Compound, Cainta, Rizal); People's Center (Municipal Compound, Cainta, Rizal); Francisco Pagkatipunan Felix monument (Municipal Compound ...
The highway used to start in or near Manila and took the present-day alignment of J.P. Rizal Avenue in Makati (formerly part of Rizal), branching off from Santa Ana, Manila, [7] [8] and later the present-day alignments of P. Sanchez Street in Santa Mesa and Shaw Boulevard. [9]