Blumentritt Road

Blumentritt Road
Blumentritt Street
Blumentritt Road looking west towards Retiro Street or N.S. Amoranto Street
Former name(s)Calle Sangleyes (between Rizal Avenue and Dimasalang Street)
Part of
NamesakeFerdinand Blumentritt
Maintained byDepartment of Public Works and Highways - North Manila District Engineering Office[a]
Length3.5 km (2.2 mi)
LocationManila
West end N150 (Rizal Avenue) in Santa Cruz
Major
junctions
East endG. Tuazon Street in Sampaloc

Blumentritt Road is a major road in Manila, Philippines. It runs through the border of the City of Manila with Quezon City from Rizal Avenue in Santa Cruz district to G. Tuazon Street in Sampaloc district. The road also forms the southern boundary of the Manila North Cemetery. It is named after Bohemian professor and filipinologist, Ferdinand Blumentritt.

The road's original length from Rizal Avenue to Dimasalang Street in Santa Cruz was originally named Calle Sangleyes[3] (Spanish for "Chinese merchants street") in reference to its original residents. The length's portion up to the Manila North Cemetery was also a right-of-way of the tranvía that existed until 1945.[4] The road passes through the Chinese General Hospital and Medical Center and the Manila North Green Park before turning southeast in Sampaloc. The road intersects with Dimasalang Street, A. Bonifacio Avenue, N.S. Amoranto Sr. Avenue, Laon Laan Road, and España Boulevard before terminating at G. Tuazon Street in Sampaloc, near its boundary with San Isidro (Galas), Quezon City. It is served by the Blumentritt LRT station and Blumentritt PNR station at Rizal Avenue.

The section of the road between Rizal Avenue and A. Bonifacio Avenue is a component of National Route 160 (N160), while the section between A. Bonifacio Avenue and España Boulevard is designated as National Route 161 (N161); both routes are of the Philippine highway network. Its remaining section, considered as its extension, up to G. Tuazon Street is unnumbered.

A major flood control project in this road was completed in June 2016.[5]

  1. ^ "North Manila". Retrieved May 23, 2020.
  2. ^ "Road and Bridge Inventory". Department of Public Works and Highways. Retrieved March 1, 2021.
  3. ^ An act to incorporate the city of Manila, enacted by the United States Philippine Commission, July 31, 1901 published by Archive.org; accessed November 29, 2013.
  4. ^ John Bach (1920). City of Manila, Philippine Islands (Map). 1:11,000. Retrieved June 13, 2022.
  5. ^ "3 major flood control projects in Metro Manila completed — DPWH - UNTV News". UNTV News. June 6, 2018. Retrieved November 12, 2020.


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