The Philippine Star

SLEX lane closure paralyzes Muntinlupa

- By RALPH EDWIN VILLANUEVA

Muntinlupa City is facing the possibilit­y of shutting down as the traffic bottleneck along the South Luzon Expressway’s northbound lane has started to affect its roads, Rep. Ruffy Biazon said yesterday.

“The gridlock on northbound SLEX has spilled over to the National Road of Muntinlupa City. This is the main artery of the city,” he tweeted.

“We are under threat of shutting down,” Biazon added.

SLEX’s outermost lane after the Alabang viaduct was closed down at 10 p.m. on Tuesday to give way to the Skyway Extension project.

Netizens stuck in traffic the following day said it took them three hours to travel from Southwoods in Biñan, Laguna to Alabang, Muntinlupa alone.

Traffic was at a standstill as far as Santa Rosa, Laguna even as a stop-and-go traffic scheme was implemente­d along SLEX’s East Service Road. In an interview with The

STAR, Biazon said he has requested a briefing with Skyway management on the issue.

“It’s just my observatio­n that since the start of the roadworks last Sept. 24, traffic has been really bad along SLEX, compelling some motorists to seek alternate routes,” he said.

Biazon said one of these options is the four-lane National Road, “which is the one and only major artery cutting through the city.”

He said the people of Muntinlupa have no choice but to make adjustment­s in their schedules going to and from work.

“I understand that this is a necessary inconvenie­nce and there are limited choices to alleviate the suffering due to the traffic caused by the constructi­on,” Biazon said.

He hopes that “constructi­on will proceed without any delay and hastened if possible, that traffic management be consistent and the project managers monitor the implementa­tion closely.”

SMC Tollways president Manny Bonoan told The

STAR yesterday that the traffic bottleneck could ease by mid-November once the firm completes the constructi­on of posts and structures for the Skyway Extension project.

“We just need an area for equipment and boring machines, that’s why we closed that one lane. Soon after the structures are completed we will remove the machines, then perhaps traffic will become lighter,” he said.

Bonoan said the entire five-kilometer ramp will be completed by late next year.

“This is a constructi­on of a ramp from SLEX so those who want to use the elevated expressway do not need to go through the Alabang viaduct, which is for trucks and buses,” he said.

SMC Tollways earlier appealed for patience and understand­ing from motorists and commuters.

 ?? RUSSELL PALMA ?? Traffic on the northbound lane of the South Luzon Expressway is at a standstill at the Southwoods exit the other night following the closure of the outermost lane from the Alabang viaduct as part of the Skyway extension project.
RUSSELL PALMA Traffic on the northbound lane of the South Luzon Expressway is at a standstill at the Southwoods exit the other night following the closure of the outermost lane from the Alabang viaduct as part of the Skyway extension project.
 ?? BOY SANTOS ?? Philippine National Police chief Gen. Oscar Albayalde (seated on motorcycle) makes the Korean ‘finger heart’ gesture during the formal turnover of 142 motorcycle­s donated by the South Korean government at Camp Crame yesterday. With him are, from left, Korean National Police Agency Commission­er General Min Gab-Ryong, Interior and Local Government Secretary Eduardo Año and Korean Ambassador Han Dong-man.
BOY SANTOS Philippine National Police chief Gen. Oscar Albayalde (seated on motorcycle) makes the Korean ‘finger heart’ gesture during the formal turnover of 142 motorcycle­s donated by the South Korean government at Camp Crame yesterday. With him are, from left, Korean National Police Agency Commission­er General Min Gab-Ryong, Interior and Local Government Secretary Eduardo Año and Korean Ambassador Han Dong-man.

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