Banaybanay–Mojon–Cuenca Road
Banaybanay–Mojon–Cuenca Road | ||||
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Route information | ||||
Maintained by the Department of Public Works and Highways | ||||
Length | 17.180 km[1] (10.675 mi) | |||
Major junctions | ||||
From | N4 (Jose P. Laurel Highway) in Lipa | |||
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To | N436 (Palico–Balayan–Batangas Road) in Alitagtag and San Luis | |||
Location | ||||
Country | Philippines | |||
Provinces | Batangas | |||
Major cities | Lipa | |||
Towns | ||||
Highway system | ||||
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National Route 433 (N433) or the Banaybanay–Mojon–Cuenca Road is a 17.180-kilometer (10.675 mi) secondary highway that forms part of the Philippine highway network. It is a two-to-four lane road serving as an important thoroughfare to settlements around the southern shore of Taal Lake and to the towns around Balayan Bay, connecting them to Batangas' largest settlement, Lipa.
The road is especially notorious due to seemingly unending roadworks, particularly the Lipa and San Jose segments, to the point that frequent motorists mentioned it as one of the worst roads in the country.[2]
Route description
[edit]The highway starts at Jose P. Laurel Highway in Barangay Banaybanay, Lipa City, briefly passing through the municipality of San Jose in Barangay Pinagtung-ulan and into the town of Cuenca, where the road turns windy while providing a scenic view of nearby Mount Maculot and into Cuenca town proper. The road then passes through Alitagtag municipality, through a major crossroad leading to San Jose town proper, San Pascual and Bauan, then heads toward Alitagtag town proper, then takes a sharp turn at the border with the town of Santa Teresita and terminates at Muzon junction between Alitagtag and San Luis.
Intersections
[edit]The entire route is located in Batangas. Intersections are numbered by kilometer posts, with Rizal Park in Manila designated as kilometer zero.
City/Municipality | km[3] | mi | Destinations | Notes | |
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Lipa | N4 (Jose P. Laurel Highway) – Manila, Tanauan, Santo Tomas | Banaybanay Crossing. Northbound goes to Lipa city proper, Tanauan & Metro Manila; southbound goes to San Jose town proper, Ibaan and Batangas City. | |||
San Jose | Pinagtung-ulan–Galamay-Amo–Taysan Road | Leads to N4 (Jose P. Laurel Highway) in Brgy. Taysan, San Jose. | |||
Palanca–Balagtasin–Pinagtung-ulan Road | Leads to Makalintal Avenue in Brgy. Palanca, San Jose. | ||||
Cuenca | Labac Road | Leads to Brgy. Sabang & Bagong Pook in San Jose. | |||
B. Laqui Street / Cuenca–Natunuan Road — Batangas City | Road leading to Balagtas Rotunda and Batangas City–San Pascual–Bauan Diversion Road. | ||||
Alitagtag | Pinagkurusan–Dalipit–Bungahan Road / Bauan–Alitagtag Road — San Jose, San Pascual, Bauan | The former road leads to Makalintal Avenue in Brgy. Lalayat, San Jose; the latter road leads to Bauan town proper. | |||
Alitagtag–Santa Teresita boundary | N656 (Santa Teresita–Alitagtag Diversion Road) – Taal, Lemery, Balayan | Diversion road bypassing Muzon junction. Terminates at N436 (Palico–Balayan–Batangas Road). | |||
San Luis–Alitagtag boundary | N436 (Palico–Balayan–Batangas Road) – Bauan, Batangas City, Taal | Route terminus at Muzon junction. Northwest-bound goes to Taal, Lemery, Calaca, and nearby towns; southeast-bound goes to Batangas City, Mabini, and Bauan. | |||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi |
References
[edit]- ^ "Road and Bridge Inventory". Department of Public Works and Highways. Retrieved September 19, 2024.
- ^ Laurel, Drei (2018-08-19). "Readers send us photos of the worst roads in the country". Top Gear Philippines. Retrieved 2024-09-19.
- ^ "Road and Bridge Inventory". www.dpwh.gov.ph. Retrieved September 19, 2024.