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Circumferential Road 5
Major road in Metro Manila, Philippines
Major road in Metro Manila, Philippines
| Field | Value | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| country | PHL | |||
| name | Circumferential Road 5 | |||
| alternate_name | C-5 Road | |||
| marker_image | ||||
| image | C5-Bonifacio Global City (Taguig)(2019-01-12).jpg | |||
| image_notes | C-5 Road in Taguig, with Bonifacio Global City in the background | |||
| allocation | {{plainlist | |||
| *{{jct | country | PHL | N | 11}} from Taguig to Quezon City |
| *{{jct | country | PHL | N | 141}} in Pasig |
| *{{jct | country | PHL | N | 129}} in Quezon City |
| *{{jct | country | PHL | N | 128}} in Quezon City and Valenzuela |
| *{{jct | country | PHL | E | 5}} in Valenzuela, Taguig, Pasay, Parañaque and Las Piñas}} |
| maint | the Department of Public Works and Highways, the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority, and Metro Pacific Tollways Corporation | |||
| direction_a | North | |||
| direction_b | South | |||
| beltway_city | Manila | |||
| regions | Metro Manila | |||
| cities | Las Piñas, Parañaque, Pasay, Pasig, Quezon City, Taguig, and Valenzuela | |||
| terminus_a | in Valenzuela | |||
| terminus_b | in Las Piñas | |||
| length_km | 43.87 | |||
| established | 1994 |
- from Taguig to Quezon City
- in Pasig
- in Quezon City
- in Quezon City and Valenzuela
- in Valenzuela, Taguig, Pasay, Parañaque and Las Piñas}} Circumferential Road 5 (C-5), informally known as the C-5 Road, is a network of roads and bridges which comprise the fifth beltway of Metro Manila in the Philippines. Spanning some 43.87 km, it connects the cities of Las Piñas, Parañaque, Pasay, Pasig, Quezon City, Taguig, and Valenzuela.
It runs parallel to the four other beltways around Metro Manila and is also known for being the second most important transportation corridor after Circumferential Road 4.
Originally planned to run from Navotas in the north, the route remains incomplete because of right of way controversies, but portions of the route are already open for public use. On July 23, 2019, the two segments of the route were connected with the completion of the CAVITEX C-5 Link through a 2.2 km flyover.
It is also known as Metro Manila's deadliest highway route, having 31 fatalities in 2019, 27 in 2018, and 23 in 2017. This is due to trucks and motorcycles along the narrow highway, as well as its road conditions.
Route description
C-5 lies parallel to other circumferential roads around Metro Manila, most notably EDSA of C-4. It passes through the cities of Valenzuela, Quezon City, Pasig, Taguig, Pasay, Parañaque, and Las Piñas, in addition to the Embo barangays that were part of Makati until their transfer to Taguig in 2023. The road is divided into several segments.
NLEX Harbor Link
Main article: NLEX Harbor Link
.jpg)
From MacArthur Highway in Karuhatan, Valenzuela to Harbor Link Interchange, a cloverleaf interchange with the main line of the North Luzon Expressway (NLEX), C-5 is a toll road known as NLEX Karuhatan Link or NLEX Segment 9. Measuring 2.4 km long, it is also the first segment of the NLEX Harbor Link project, which connects the NLEX with the Port of Manila.
From the Harbor Link Interchange to a 3-way signalized junction with Mindanao Avenue, C-5 is known as NLEX–Mindanao Avenue Link or NLEX Segment 8.1. The entire 2.7 km toll road is also designated as a part of C-5 Road.
Mindanao Avenue
Main article: Mindanao Avenue
.jpg)
At the eastern end of NLEX Segment 8.1, C-5 turns southeast and becomes Mindanao Avenue. It is a 10-lane divided carriageway that serves as the main transportation corridor of Barangays Talipapa and Tandang Sora in Quezon City. The 3.5 km portion of this 6.7 km road from NLEX Segment 8.1 to Congressional Avenue is designated as a portion of C-5.
Congressional Avenue
Main article: Congressional Avenue
At the signaled junction with Mindanao Avenue, C-5 turns northeast as Congressional Avenue, a six-lane divided carriageway that serves as the main east-to-west transportation corridor of Barangays Bahay Toro, Culiat, Pasong Tamo, and Tandang Sora in Quezon City. It continues east for 3.9 km up to its eastern terminus at Luzon Avenue.
Luzon Avenue

At the end of Congressional Avenue Extension, C-5 turns south as Luzon Avenue, a 4-lane divided city road between Barangays Culiat and Matandang Balara in Quezon City, for 850 m up to Commonwealth Avenue. The 6-lane Luzon Avenue Flyover carries C-5 across Commonwealth Avenue to connect it with Tandang Sora Avenue.
Tandang Sora Avenue
Main article: Tandang Sora Avenue
Southeast of Commonwealth Avenue, C-5 is known as Tandang Sora Avenue. It runs for 1 km from Barangay Matandang Balara, going around the University of the Philippines Diliman campus, up to the junction with Magsaysay Avenue.
The original planned route of C-5 included the entire 9.6 km road; however, due to the road's incapacity to carry a large amount of vehicular traffic, only the 1 km portion from the Luzon Avenue Flyover to Magsaysay Avenue was designated as a portion of C-5 Road. Furthermore, Tandang Sora Avenue becomes a six-lane divided carriageway shortly after crossing Capitol Hills Drive, 350 m south of the flyover.
Katipunan Avenue
Main article: Katipunan Avenue
.jpg)
After crossing Magsaysay Avenue, C-5 turns south and becomes Katipunan Avenue, a ten-lane divided carriageway that serves as the main transportation corridor of Matandang Balara, Pansol, Loyola Heights, and Project 4 in Quezon City. It heads south for 4.8 km until its junction with Bonny Serrano Avenue. Shortly before crossing Bonny Serrano Avenue, a 4-lane divided underpass descends from Katipunan Avenue, traverses underneath Col. Bonny Serrano Avenue, and ascends into Libis Flyover, which immediately connects it to E. Rodriguez Jr. Avenue.
Colonel Bonny Serrano Avenue
Main article: Bonny Serrano Avenue}}<!-- {{convert, 2.2, km
C-5 passes through a section of Colonel Bonny Serrano Avenue, a four-lane undivided avenue, as a connecting corridor 500 m from Katipunan Avenue to Eulogio Rodriguez Jr. Avenue. The Libis Tunnel and Libis Flyover traverse between the avenue's westbound and eastbound lanes.
Eulogio S. Rodriguez Jr. Avenue
.jpg)
At its junction with Bonny Serrano Avenue and FVR Road at the Libis Tunnel and Libis Flyover, C-5 then turns south as Eulogio S. Rodriguez Jr. Avenue, a 6.7 km, 10-lane divided road that serves as the main thoroughfare between Quezon City and Pasig. The road ends at a junction with Pasig Boulevard and continues onto C.P. Garcia Bridge, which crosses the Pasig River and eventually becomes Carlos P. Garcia Avenue shortly afterwards. The avenue is named after Eulogio Rodriguez Jr., a former representative and governor of Rizal.
Carlos P. Garcia Avenue
.jpg)
Past the C.P. Garcia Bridge over the Pasig River, C-5 becomes Carlos P. Garcia Avenue. It is a 7.5 km, fourteen-lane divided road that serves as the main thoroughfare in western Taguig. It passes through a small portion of Embo (formerly part of Makati) and continuously passes Taguig, where it bypasses Bonifacio Global City and meets the exit ramps to the CAVITEX–C-5 Link and the South Luzon Expressway before ending at the intersection with East Service Road.
It is not to be mistaken with the legal name of the C-5 route.
CAVITEX-C5 Southlink Expressway
_2024-06-22.jpg)
The CAVITEX–C-5 Southlink Expressway starts at Carlos P. Garcia Avenue (C-5) in Taguig near its interchange with the South Luzon Expressway (SLEX). It then ascends as the existing flyover that crosses Skyway, the PNR Metro Commuter Line, SLEX and the at-grade expressway's service roads before descending along C-5 Extension, which serves as its frontage roads, in Pasay. It then continues its course south of Ninoy Aquino International Airport until it meets its current terminus at C-5 Road Extension in Parañaque, near Moonwalk and a Shell station. As of 2025, The expressway's section towards the Manila–Cavite Expressway (CAVITEX) is partially operational with a missing link (Section 3b) said to complete the gap. It will continue its course south of the airport. It will then pass by the Global Airport Business Park and Amvel City, where it connects to another partially operational segment starting at an interchange towards Dr. Santos Avenue plus toll plaza located past the interchange. A flyover crosses Dr. Santos, the LRT-1 Cavite Extension, and Diego Cera Avenue. It ends at a trumpet interchange with CAVITEX near the latter's Parañaque toll plaza at the border between Parañaque and Las Piñas
C-5 Road Extension

Across the South Luzon Expressway, C-5 continues as C-5 Road Extension from West Service Road near Merville Exit of SLEX in Pasay. It also serves as the two frontage roads of CAVITEX–C-5 Link's section in Pasay. It traverses along the southern perimeter fence of the Ninoy Aquino International Airport, where westbound and eastbound traffic split into separate frontage roads between the West Service Road and Radar Technical Village in Pasay. Its segment from the West Service Road to the vicinity of Neil Armstrong Avenue, which leads to Moonwalk, Parañaque, is alternatively known as Moonwalk Access Road. It then enters Parañaque and curves around Amvel City, crosses Dr. A. Santos Avenue and Diego Cera Avenue, and ends at the Manila–Cavite Expressway (CAVITEX) in Las Piñas. The future LRT Line 1 Extension will run along most of the Las Piñas segment of C-5 Road Extension.
Location on the West Valley Fault
Studies conducted by the PHIVOLCS revealed that a large portion of C-5 is built on top of the West Valley Fault. A map of the fault line released on May 18, 2015, shows C-5 in Taguig beside the fault line. The C-5 road is prone to liquefaction.
History

The proposal for the Metro Manila Arterial Road System was made in the late 1960s. The proposal mentions building ten radial roads and six circumferential roads to support Metro Manila's growing vehicular population. Circumferential Road 5's original alignment was to begin at a proposed coastal road near Manila Bay in Navotas at the north and traverse around Manila up to Radial Road 1 (now comprises the Manila–Cavite Expressway) at the south. In the 1970s, its proposed southern alignment included a route through Bicutan and the area what is now the Better Living Subdivision in Parañaque. From 1978 to 1983, various feasibility studies by the Japan International Cooperation Agency were conducted; segments included a bridge along the Pasig River between the planned Radial Road 4 (now Kalayaan Avenue; later designated to J. P. Rizal Avenue) and Pasig Boulevard and the Santolan (now Bonny Serrano Avenue) to Aurora Boulevard. The next study would link the Manila North Expressway (MNE), now known as the North Luzon Expressway (NLEX) and Navotas, linking with the future extension of Radial Road 10, as the Manila-Bataan Coastal Road. Another study that would pass from the MNE to Aurora Boulevard via Republic and Katipunan Avenues. Some proposals were never materialized; however, in 1998, the Manila North Tollways Corporation (MNTC, later NLEX Corporation) and the Philippine National Construction Corporation (PNCC) handled the proposal of the planned northern segment, which is now partially operational as of 2025.
Construction of Circumferential Road 5 began in 1986. The project also involved building new alignments that would combine with old existing roads, including Eulogio Rodriguez Jr. Avenue, built in the 1960s. The first phase of the C-5 Road from the South Luzon Expressway at the Pasay–Taguig boundary to Ortigas Avenue, Pasig, was officially inaugurated by President Fidel V. Ramos on December 30, 1994. The project, which costs approximately to construct, also included the existing segment of Eulogio Rodriguez Jr. Avenue between Ortigas Avenue and Pasig Boulevard. The project was funded by Japan's Overseas Economic Cooperation Fund (OECF, subsequently Japan Bank for International Cooperation, and currently JICA). Under the power of Republic Act No. 8224, which was passed on November 6, 1996, the C-5 road was legally known as President Carlos P. Garcia Avenue after the eighth President of the Philippines, Carlos P. Garcia.
On July 23, 2007, President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo announced in her State of the Nation Address that C-5 Road will be extended to northern Metro Manila up to the North Luzon Expressway in Valenzuela. On December 1, 2007, C-5 Extension's segment between Dr. Santos Avenue in Parañaque and South Luzon Expressway's West Service Road in Pasay was opened to the public. The Moonwalk Access Road in Pasay has been integrated as part of the extension. From April 2009 to June 2010, the NLEX–Mindanao Avenue Link (Harbor Link Segment 8.1) in Valenzuela and Congressional Avenue Extension from Tandang Sora to Luzon Avenues in Quezon City were constructed. Carlos P. Garcia Avenue Extension in the South Extension in Parañaque was also opened. In March 2015, the NLEX–Karuhatan Link (Harbor Link Segment 9) was opened to all motorists. The opening of Segment 9 from NLEx to MacArthur Highway in Karuhatan, Valenzuela served as a preparation for the Holy Week season. Presently, the Luzon Avenue Flyover connecting Tandang Sora and Luzon Avenues across Commonwealth Avenue is open to all motorists. Before the flyover's opening, the Congressional Avenue Extension from Visayas to Luzon Avenue was opened in 2010 to decongest heavy traffic in the Visayas–Tandang Sora Avenue Intersection.
From September 2022 to April 2024, the C-5 Quirino Flyover, which crosses Diego Cera and Fruto Santos Avenues in Las Piñas, was constructed on the C-5 Extension. It opened on April 24, 2024.
On November 19, 2024, Kaingin Service Road, which bypasses the Kaingin Road alignment in Santo Niño, Parañaque, was completed and was turned over by CAVITEX Infrastructure Corporation to the Parañaque City Government. It later officially became part of C-5 Extension's alignment, replacing Kaingin Road, which was later dismantled during the construction of CAVITEX–C-5 Link Segment 3B.
Controversies
In 2010, the Senate of the Philippines investigated the south extension project, which would pass several of Manny Villar's properties, such as Camella. The Senate concluded that Villar, as Senate president, intervened in the project to benefit his business interests. It also ordered Villar to return P6.22 billion to the government. The original extension, called the Manila–Cavite Toll Expressway Project (MCTEP), was already approved by the Senate and would have been made as a toll expressway. The project eventually resurrected as C-5 Southlink Expressway (now known as CAVITEX–C-5 Link).
C-5 Expressway
In 1993, the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) studied the proposed urban expressway system in Metro Manila. The master plan for the planned network, meant to have 150 km of expressways, included the proposed Expressway Route C-5 that would follow the old C-5 alignment from Navotas to Parañaque with a total length of about 45.8 km. In the 1999 Metro Manila Urban Transport Integrated Study, the plan for the 30.9 km elevated expressway was also planned, spanning from the Manila–Cavite Expressway to South Fairview. This was also mentioned again in the 2003 study.
In 2014, under the Roadmap for Transport Infrastructure Development for Metro Manila and Its Surrounding Areas (Region III & Region IV-A; also known as the Metro Manila Dream Plan), the JICA study proposes a 46.7 km expressway from the Manila–Cavite Expressway to San Jose Del Monte in Bulacan to pass above the existing C-5. This was mentioned again in the 2019 follow-up report. In the late 2010s, NLEX Corporation (formerly Manila North Tollways Corporation) and CAVITEX Infrastructure Inc. submitted a proposal for C-5 Expressway, a 19 km fully elevated expressway that would further decongest the existing C-5 and provide a fully controlled-access route between CAVITEX C-5 Link and NLEX Segment 8.2 (C-5 Link). The proposed expressway would utilize portions of the existing C-5's right of way between SLEX and Pasig Boulevard and run above Marikina River from Pasig Boulevard to Luzon Avenue.
Events
- May 23, 2019, supporters of Taguig–Pateros 1st district Representative Arnel Cerafica held a protest along C-5 near Ususan, Taguig, to contest Cerafica's loss in the Taguig mayoral race to former Taguig 2nd district Representative Lino Cayetano, alleging irregularities such as malfunctioning vote-counting machines and vote-buying. The rally caused heavy traffic along C-5 between South Luzon Expressway and Julia Vargas Avenue in Pasig.
- Since March 16, 2025, the segment of C-5's service road between Dalanghita Street and Taguig Eco Park (near Bayani Road) in Pinagsama, Taguig, is a venue of the weekly Car-Free Sundays initiative by the Taguig City Government. The segment is thus closed to vehicular traffic early every Sunday morning.
Exits and intersections



(2018-08-26).jpg)
(Route number on at-grade changes from N141 to N11.)
NLEX Mindanao Avenue & Karuhatan Link
Main article: NLEX Harbor Link
CAVITEX–C-5 Link
Main article: CAVITEX–C-5 Link
C-5 Extension
Landmarks
This is from South Luzon Expressway in Taguig to General Luis Street in Valenzuela:
Taguig
- Libingan ng mga Bayani
- Heritage Memorial Park
- McKinley Hill
- Bonifacio Global City
- SM Aura
- Market! Market!
- Hotel 101 the Fort
- Circumferential Road 5–Kalayaan Avenue Interchange
- C.P. Garcia Bridge (Pasig River)
Pasig
- Universal Robina
- Bagong Ilog flyover
- Valle Verde
- Arcovia City
- SM Center Pasig
- Tiendesitas
- The Grove by Rockwell
- Christ's Commission Fellowship
- Circumferential Road 5–Ortigas Avenue Interchange
Quezon City
- Bridgetowne
- Opus Mall
- Parklinks
- Eastwood City
- MDC 100 Building
- Mercury Drug main office
- Quirino Memorial Medical Center
- Philippine School of Business Administration
- Real Monasterio de Santa Clara de Manila
- Ateneo de Manila University
- Blue Eagle Gym
- Ateneo Art Gallery
- Miriam College
- U.P. Town Center
- University of the Philippines Diliman
- Balara Fillers Park
- Congressional Town Center
- Quirino Highway–Mindanao Avenue interchange
- Metro Manila subway depot
Notes
References
References
- "Metro Manila Infrastructure Development". [[University of the Philippines Diliman]].
- Flores, Asti. (February 7, 2013). "MMDA, DPWH name C5 Road as alternate route for EDSA overhaul". GMA News.
- (July 23, 2019). "Section of CAVITEX- C5 Southlink opens".
- "Taguig-Parañaque section of C5 South Link Expressway opens to motorists July 23". GMA News Online.
- Cayabyab, Marc Jayson. "C-5 Metro Manila’s deadliest road – MMDA".
- "Concessions".
- (1955). "Official Directory of the House of Representatives (1954-1957)". Philippines. Congress (1940-1973). House of Representatives.
- Ranada, Pia. (May 18, 2015). "High resolution West Valley Fault maps launched".
- See, Aie. (March 25, 2011). "C-5 Road, 3 Taguig barangays prone to liquefaction". Philstar.
- "Overview of the Metro Manila Arterial Road System". [[Department of Public Works and Highways]].
- (March 1980). "Feasibility Study for Manila-Bataan Coastal Road and Its Related Roads (C-5 & C-6) Project". [[Japan International Cooperation Agency]] : [[Government of the Philippines]], Counterpart Study Team.
- (September 1973). "Urban Transport Study in Manila Metropolitan Area". Overseas Technical Cooperation Agency.
- "Feasibility Study on C-3 and R-4 and Related Roads Project".
- "10457760.pdf".
- "Feasibility study for Manila-Bataan coastal road and its related roads (C-5 & C-6) project : final report; Vol. 1, 2. -Contents: Vol. 1: Main report -- Vol. 2: General study of Manila-Bataan coastal road (Phase II)".
- "Feasibility Study for the Metro Manila Outer Major Roads Project (Northern Package)".
- "The Circumferential Road 5". scribd.com.
- Maragay, Fel. (December 31, 1994). "First phase of C-5 project completed". Kamahalan Publishing Corp..
- (July 12, 1994). "DPWH cancels P50-M Quezon City project". Manila Standard.
- (November 6, 1996). "An Act Renaming the Circumferential Route No. 5 or C-5 in Metro Manila, as the President Garcia Avenue, and for Other Purposes".
- (July 23, 2007). "State of the Nation Address, July 23, 2007".
- (December 1, 2007). "C-5 to Merville access road opens today".
- Untalan, Sherylin. (April 24, 2024). "C5 Quirino Flyover extension is now open". GMA Integrated News.
- (November 20, 2024). "CAVITEX opens new Kaingin Service Road in Parañaque".
- Legaspi, Amita. (January 25, 2010). "Villar intervened in C-5 project for his own benefit". GMA News.
- Katahira & Engineers International. (October 29, 1993). "Metro Manila Urban Expressway System Study".
- "MMUTIS Appendices".
- (March 2003). "The Development of The Public-private Partnership Technique for The Metro Manila Urban Expressway Network". Almec Corporation.
- (March 2014). "Roadmap Projects Profile".
- (August 2019). "Follow-Up Survey on Roadmap for Transport Infrastructure Development for Greater Capital Region (GCR): Final Report – Summary".
- "C-5 Expressway". Department of Public Works and Highways.
- (May 23, 2019). "Cerafica supporters rally on C5, as traffic stalls in key Taguig intersection". ABS-CBN News.
- Guiao, Micah Avry. (March 18, 2025). "Two Major Roads in Taguig Are Now Car-Free Every Sunday Morning".
- "Metro Manila 1st". [[Department of Public Works and Highways]].
- "Metro Manila 2nd". [[Department of Public Works and Highways]].
- "Quezon City 2nd". [[Department of Public Works and Highways]].
- Department of Public Works and Highways. (2016). "Atlas 2016 Road Surface Type and Condition: Metro Manila 1st". 2016 Road Data.
- Department of Public Works and Highways. (2016). "Atlas 2016 Road Surface Type and Condition: Metro Manila 2nd". 2016 Road Data.
- Department of Public Works and Highways. (2016). "Atlas 2016 Road Surface Type and Condition: Quezon City 2nd". 2016 Road Data.
- "Road and Bridge Inventory".
- "C-5 South Link Project". Department of Public Works and Highways.
- Dumlao-Abadilla, Doris. (June 26, 2015). "MPIC unit set to start work on P9-B tollroad". [[Philippine Daily Inquirer]].
- (February 23, 2021). "New Segments of Cavitex-C5 Link Underway".
- (October 25, 2022). "CAVITEX C5 Link Merville exit ramp now open".
- (April 15, 2024). "Manila Cavite Toll Expressway Project (MCTEP)". CAVITEX.
- Cordero, Ted. (July 7, 2022). "CAVITEX C5 Link Flyover extension to open on July 16, 2022". GMA News.
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