South Luzon Expressway
The South Luzon Expressway,'' signed as E2 of the Philippine expressway network and R-3 of the Metro Manila arterial road network, is a controlled-access highway that connects Metro Manila to the provinces in the Calabarzon, Mimaropa and Bicol Region on the island of Luzon in the Philippines. The expressway has a length of, traveling from its northern terminus at the Magallanes Interchange in Makati to its southern terminus at Santo Tomas, Batangas, connecting it to the Southern Tagalog Arterial Road. A portion of the expressway from the Magallanes Interchange to the Calamba Exit is part of Asian Highway 26 of the Asian highway network. It will be the longest expressway in the Philippines starting with the completion of Toll Road 4 surpassing the Subic–Clark–Tarlac Expressway as well as providing a gateway to Visayas upon the completion of Toll Road 5.
The expressway also serves as a major utility corridor, carrying various high voltage overhead power lines and an oil pipeline. Notable power lines using the expressway's right of way for most or part of their route are the Sucat–Paco–Araneta–Balintawak transmission line, and the Biñan–Calamba and Calamba–Bay lines. The Magallanes–Alabang section of the expressway was also used to carry the Batangas–Pandacan oil pipeline.
The expressway was built in 1969 to develop areas adjacent to Metro Manila, particularly the south. The original route spanning from Magallanes, Makati, to Alabang, Muntinlupa, was extended to Laguna in 1978. In 1995, the Magallanes–Alabang section became part of the Skyway System's at-grade section. Rehabilitation efforts on the expressway followed, lasting from 2006 to 2009. Additionally, it is connected to the Southern Tagalog Arterial Road in Batangas since 2009 when the Toll Road 3 project reached the said expressway, with the connection started construction in 2007, inaugurated on June 15, 2010, and opened to the traffic six months after its inauguration on December 15, 2010. Operations were transferred from Philippine National Construction Corporation to the South Luzon Tollways Corporation and Manila Toll Expressway Systems on May 2, 2010.
Route description
The South Luzon Expressway cuts southwards from Metro Manila up to the provinces in Calabarzon. The expressway consists of two sections: the Skyway At-Grade segment, which runs underneath the Skyway from Magallanes Interchange in Makati to Alabang Exit in Muntinlupa, and the South Luzon Tollway segment, also called the Alabang–Calamba–Santo Tomas Expressway, from Alabang to Santo Tomas, Batangas. Skyway At-Grade operations are held jointly by the Skyway Operations and Maintenance Corporation and SMC Skyway Corporation, while the South Luzon Tollway segment of SLEX is held by SMC SLEX, Inc., a concessionaire operated by Manila Toll Expressway Systems, Inc. and a joint venture of the Philippine National Construction Corporation and the San Miguel Corporation-backed PT Citra Marga Nusaphala Persada Tbk group of Indonesia. SLT/ACTEX is further divided into three phases:- SLEX Toll Road 1 : Alabang Viaduct in Muntinlupa
- SLEX Toll Road 2 : Filinvest Exit to Calamba Exit
- SLEX Toll Road 3 : Calamba Exit to Santo Tomas Exit
At the Alabang Exit, SLEX ascends to the Alabang Viaduct, a, eight-lane viaduct over the Manila South Road through Alabang, Muntinlupa. After its descent at Filinvest Exit, SLEX mostly parallels the Manila South Road in Muntinlupa and northwestern Laguna, passing through the Susana Heights Exit connecting it to the Muntinlupa–Cavite Expressway. It continues as a straight roadway lined with billboards and passing through residential and industrial areas. Past the San Pedro Exit, the expressway then curves and ascends past the Petron and Caltex service areas. Past Santa Rosa Exit, SLEX narrows with guard rails as the median divider. At the Calamba Exit, the Pan-Philippine Highway concurrency ends as it leaves the expressway towards the west as Maharlika Highway. Past such exit, the expressway further narrows without exits and with bridges built with wide shoulders to accommodate future widening. It follows a curved route paralleling the Pan-Philippine Highway from Calamba to Santo Tomas, Batangas. It then meets its future interchange with SLEX Toll Road 4, which will extend it up to Lucena and eventually to Matnog, Sorsogon, via SLEX Toll Road 5. It then curves as it enters Santo Tomas before it ends at kilometer 57.5, continuing towards Batangas City as the STAR Tollway.
History
Planning and construction
The South Luzon Expressway was originally built during the 1960s as the Manila South Diversion Road, South Superhighway, or Manila South Expressway as newer roads used to travel from and to Manila. Located then in the province of Rizal, the original stretch of the expressway, spanning approximately from EDSA in Magallanes, Makati to Alabang Exit in Muntinlupa, was constructed beginning in 1967 and was completed on December 16, 1969. It is the second roadway project completed by the Philippine National Construction Corporation, after North Luzon Expressway.Later, the expressway was extended by another from Alabang up to Calamba, Laguna through the Manila South Expressway Extension project. It included the Alabang Viaduct in Alabang. The extension was completed and inaugurated by President Ferdinand Marcos on May 4, 1978, which was opened to public use a few weeks later. The name of this highway, as it is now commonly referred to, significantly reduces travel time from Alabang in Metro Manila to Calamba, Laguna, by over 50 percent, decreasing the journey from one hour to approximately 20 minutes. The construction of this expressway incurred a cost of.
This facility features four lanes and traverses multiple municipalities in Cavite and Laguna before reaching Calamba. It includes four interchanges, two viaducts, eleven twin bridges, nineteen overpasses, and six underpasses, with a total bridge superstructure length of. The widths of the bridges range from two to six lanes. Notably, the Alabang Viaduct stands out as the most remarkable structure, boasting six traffic lanes along its entire length of, making it the longest six-lane viaduct in the country.
In 1982, South Superhighway from Magallanes to Calamba was renamed to Dr. Jose P. Rizal Highway, after the Philippine national hero Dr. José Rizal, who hailed from Laguna. This renaming was brought about by Batas Pambansa Blg. 264. In 1989, it was renamed to President Sergio Osmeña Sr. Highway, after the Commonwealth President Sergio Osmeña, by virtue of Republic Act No. 6760. The act was amended through Republic Act No. 7625 in 1992 to rename its portion in Laguna from kilometer 28.387 in San Pedro southwards to Dr. Jose P. Rizal Highway.
In 1995, the rehabilitation of the portion of SLEX from Magallanes to Alabang began as part of South Metro Manila Skyway Project Stage 1 that also includes the construction of the elevated Skyway above it up to Bicutan area. Thus, the Alabang Exit, which was also the expressway's former southern terminus, was designated as the concession boundary as PNCC decided to split SLEX into two concessions – the section from Magallanes to Alabang is made part of the Skyway System as the Skyway At-Grade, while the remaining section from Alabang southwards retains the South Luzon Expressway concession branding.
Expansion and rehabilitation
In 1996, PNCC entered into a joint venture with Hong Kong-based Hopewell Holdings to modernize and extend the expressway. The JV agreement also proposes the extension of the expressway by about from Calamba to Pagbilao, Quezon. However, Hopewell Crown Infrastructure Inc. would later back out of the undertaking in 2003, thus Hopewell's deal with PNCC was also terminated in 2005. The company was negotiating potential ventures with Egis of France, Leighton of Australia, Cise of Spain, MTD Capital of Malaysia, American company Transcore, and SNC Lavalin of Canada prior to Hopewell's departure.On February 1, 2006, a new agreement was signed between Malaysia-based MTD Berhad and PNCC to rehabilitate, extend, and operate the expressway. Rehabilitation work started in May of that year, with heavy traffic brought by construction work. Prior to its rehabilitation, the South Luzon Expressway section from Alabang to Calamba was mostly an expressway with a grass median and two lanes per direction. The widening of the Alabang Viaduct from three to four lanes per direction, a phase known as the SLEX Toll Road 1, was completed on November 11, 2008. During the construction of Skyway Stage 2 from 2009 to 2011, there were traffic disruptions on the Bicutan–Alabang section. The use of the sosrobahu method to build and position the bridge piers helped mitigate these disruptions. Rehabilitation work on SLEX Toll Road 2 was finished in June 2009, resulting in the expansion of the Alabang–Santa Rosa section to eight lanes, similar to an American Interstate Highway, and the Santa Rosa–Calamba section to six lanes.
One year and six months after the Alabang Viaduct was rehabilitated and widened and eleven months after the completion of rehabilitation and modernization of the expressway's Alabang–Calamba section, the operation and maintenance of the expressway was transferred from the government-owned Philippine National Construction Corporation to South Luzon Tollways Corporation and Manila Toll Expressway Systems on May 2, 2010.
The expressway became connected with STAR Tollway when construction works of Toll Road 3 project reached Santo Tomas Exit in 2009, making the exit the southern terminus of the expressway since then. The new Calamba Toll Plaza A and B and Ayala Greenfield Estate toll plazas were also commissioned in the same year. Toll Road 3, also known as the SLEX-STAR Tollway link, was then inaugurated on June 15, 2010, by President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo and opened to the public six months later on December 15, 2010, during the administration of her successor Benigno Aquino III, with the name Alabang–Calamba–Santo Tomas Expressway.
MTD relinquished its stake in operating and maintaining SLEX to San Miguel Corporation in January 2012. To decongest traffic, the SLEX Elevated Extension, originally known as Skyway Extension project, was constructed along the shoulder of the expressway in Muntinlupa from 2019 to 2021 and has connected the expressway's segment south of the Alabang Viaduct to Skyway Stage 2.
In December 2022, the implementation of the Seamless Southern Tollways project began on SLEX to simplify the toll collection process to a single payment upon exit. Additional toll plazas were built at interchanges from Canlubang to Santo Tomas, while the Calamba and Ayala Greenfield Estates toll plazas were eventually demolished in 2024. In 2023, an expansion project began to widen the expressway's segment south of the SLEX Elevated Extension ramps to six lanes per direction, necessitating the felling of 8,766 trees along the route. The project also involves the expansion of 20 bridges along SLEX, with completion targeted for mid-2025. It is expected to be complete by June 2025. In addition, the Ayala Greenfield Interchange in Calamba broke ground on October 14, 2024.