Elliptical Road

Large roundabout in Quezon City, Philippines From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Elliptical Road is a 1.98-kilometer (1.23 mi) roundabout[1] in Quezon City, which circumscribes the Quezon Memorial Circle, a large park. It was named after its elliptical shape. The road is divided into eight lanes: three main lanes, four for exiting vehicles, and one for bicycles and pedicabs.[2]

Coordinates14.651489°N 121.049309°E / 14.651489; 121.049309
Roads at
junction
N170 (Commonwealth Avenue)
Visayas Avenue
N173 (North Avenue)
N170 (Quezon Avenue)
N174 (East Avenue)
Kalayaan Avenue
Maharlika Street
TypeRoundabout
Lanes8
Quick facts Location, Coordinates ...


Elliptical Road
The Elliptical Road in 2023, viewed from Visayas Avenue. The Philippine Coconut Authority headquarters is visible.
Interactive map of

Elliptical Road
Location
Quezon City, Metro Manila
Coordinates14.651489°N 121.049309°E / 14.651489; 121.049309
Roads at
junction
N170 (Commonwealth Avenue)
Visayas Avenue
N173 (North Avenue)
N170 (Quezon Avenue)
N174 (East Avenue)
Kalayaan Avenue
Maharlika Street
Construction
TypeRoundabout
Lanes8
Maintained byDepartment of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) - Quezon City 2nd District Engineering Office[1]
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This area of Quezon City is sometimes called "Philcoa" (Tagalog pronunciation: [ˈpilkɔwɐ]), after the Philippine Coconut Authority (PHILCOA), one of the government agencies headquartered there.

History

The earliest known plan involving the roundabout is seen on the first version of Frost Plan, the original urban plan for Quezon City, approved in 1941.[3][4] It is located northeast of the formerly proposed 400-hectare (990-acre) Diliman Quadrangle within the former Diliman Estate, also known as Hacienda de Tuason, purchased by the Philippine Commonwealth government in 1939 as the new capital to replace Manila.[5] It was originally planned to circumscribe the National Capitol grounds that would have housed the Philippine Legislature.[6] However, the capitol's construction was interrupted during World War II and would later be scrapped in favor of the Quezon Memorial Circle, built in honor of the late President Manuel L. Quezon.

Junctions

The entire route is located in Quezon City. 

More information km, mi ...
kmmiDestinationsNotes
N170 (Commonwealth Avenue)Access to Matandang Balara, Novaliches, Fairview, Lagro, San Mateo, and nearby areas.
Visayas AvenueAccess to Project 6 & 8, Tandang Sora, Congressional and Mindanao Avenues.
N173 (North Avenue)Access to Projects 6 to 8, Balintawak & Monumento via AH 26 (N1) (EDSA), Novaliches and North Caloocan via Mindanao Avenue.
N170 (Quezon Avenue)Access to AH 26 (N1) (EDSA), Manila, South and West Triangles, San Francisco del Monte, and nearby areas.
N174 (East Avenue)Access to Cubao, Kamuning and Kamias via AH 26 (N1) (EDSA), and South Triangle.
Kalayaan AvenueAccess to Cubao, Teachers' Village, Sikatuna, Kamias, and Projects 2 to 4.
Maharlika StreetAlternate access to UP Village and Teachers' Village.
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
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Landmarks

See also

References

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