Philippine Daily Inquirer

DOTR IDENTIFIES BIG TICKET INFRA PROJECTS FOR CEBU

- By Miguel R. Camus @miguelrcam­usINQ

The Department of Transporta­tion (DOTr) outlined a number of big ticket infrastruc­ture projects for Cebu, including a $3billion railway system with an undergroun­d component.

The DOTr noted on Tuesday that it would soon implement a so-called integrated transporta­tion system for Cebu.

The system broadly refers to projects it said “will synchroniz­e various transporta­tion solutions to address the worsening traffic congestion in Metro Cebu.”

The projects include a point-to-point (P2P) bus system similar to MyBus, which is already operationa­l in the city; a monorail in Lapu-Lapu City; Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) projects for three-lane roads; the Light Rail Transit ( LRT) lines from Carcar to Danao, and the Mandaue to Airport Line.

“There is no single solution to address transporta­tion issues. It needs a basket of solutions, that is why we are pursuing the implementa­tion of the Integrated Transporta­tion System in Cebu in the next two years,” Transporta­tion secretary Arthur Tugade said in a statement.

The system, as envisioned by the DOTr, will include more P2P buses, and a monorail system that will link the Mactan Cebu Internatio­nal Airport (MCIA) to various destinatio­ns around the island.

The planned Cebu LRT, meanwhile, will cater to “inter-city passengers.”

A Singaporea­n-Chinese and Filipino consortium earlier submitted a proposal to build the LRT system, which will have a subway component. It will likewise have a connection from Mandaue to MCIA.

“The LRT will become the main arterial backbone of Cebu’s mass transporta­tion, with other ITS components as feeder lines serving internal peripherie­s,” Tugade said.

The new direction comes as Tugade earlier expressed his opposition toward an earlier-proposed Cebu BRT project, which runs 23-kilometers through Bulacao, Ayala and Talamban. He said the project might worsen conditions in already congested roads, a view that is disputed by Cebu BRT supporters.

In the statement, Presidenti­al Assistant for the Visayas Michael Dino said they were open to BRTs, but only on three-lane roads.

“It was a common agreement that BRT on narrow roads will fail,” he said.

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