How to commute to Pasong Tamo Makati from Camp Aguinaldo?

Last Updated on February 13, 2023

Get to Pasong Tamo Makati from Camp Aguinaldo via JEEP and MRT-3

Public Transport Guide

  1. Walk

    Distance 13 m

    1. DEPART on to Colonel Boni Serrano Avenue
  2. JEEP

    Ride T204: Crame-Q Mart via P Tuazon, E. Garcia

    From: Camp Aguinaldo

    To: EDSA–Santolan

    Fare: ₱12

    Provider: LTFRB Service Contracting (PUJ)

  3. Walk

    Distance 433 m

    1. DEPART on to Colonel Boni Serrano Avenue
    2. HARD RIGHT on to link
    3. SLIGHTLY LEFT on to EDSA
    4. RIGHT on to footbridge
  4. RAIL - MRT3

    Ride MRT-3: Taft Ave - North Ave

    From: Santolan MRT

    To: Magallanes MRT

    Fare: ₱20

    Provider: Manila Metro Rail Transit Corporation

  5. Walk

    Distance 214 m

    1. DEPART on to footbridge
    2. LEFT on to steps
    3. LEFT on to path
    4. LEFT on to service road
    5. SLIGHTLY LEFT on to ramp
  6. JEEP

    Ride T331: Kayamanan C-PRC via Pasong Tamo

    From: Mantrade Alphaland

    To: WalterMart Makati

    Fare: ₱12

    Provider: LTFRB Service Contracting (PUJ)

  7. Walk

    Distance 3 m

    1. DEPART on to Chino Roces Avenue

Camp Aguinaldo

About Camp Aguinaldo

Camp General Emilio Aguinaldo (CGEA), also known as Camp Aguinaldo, is the site of the general headquarters (GHQ) of the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP). It is located in Quezon City along EDSA, a major thoroughfare of the metropolis, to which it is across Camp Crame, the national headquarters (NHQ) of the Philippine National Police (PNP). The military installation is named after Philippine revolutionary leader Emilio Aguinaldo, who became the first Philippine president and fought in the...

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© Image from Wikipedia

Pasong Tamo Makati

About Pasong Tamo Makati

Chino Roces Avenue, formerly known as (and still commonly referred to as) Pasong Tamo, is a prominent north–south road in the cities of Makati and Taguig, Metro Manila, Philippines. It runs for 5.80 kilometers (3.60 miles) from Olympia and Tejeros to Fort Bonifacio. The avenue is named after the Filipino journalist Joaquin "Chino" Roces. The fact that the avenue is the location of various media establishments influenced the renaming.

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© Image from Wikipedia
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