Ayala Land begins road expansion to link Arca South to Skyway Stage 4
TCITX in Arca South (artist's render)
Zobel-led Ayala Land Inc. (ALI) reported that construction has begun along a portion of the East Service Road beside Arca South in Taguig City that will eventually connect the estate to the Southeast Metro Manila Expressway (SEMME)—also known as Skyway Stage 4—making the area more accessible and attractive.
In a statement, ALI said the construction works are part of preparatory infrastructure efforts for future transport projects, including the SEMME and the Taguig City Integrated Terminal Exchange (TCITX).
Work began last April and is scheduled to run until October 2026 to improve road capacity and traffic flow in the area. It covers the section of the East Service Road adjacent to Arca South in Barangay Western Bicutan, Taguig City.
The East Service Road works are linked to the SEMME, a planned 32.66-kilometer expressway that will connect Taguig City to Quezon City, providing an alternative route to EDSA and C-5. Once operational, the SEMME could accommodate up to 150,000 vehicles daily and potentially reduce travel time between Bicutan and parts of eastern Metro Manila.
The roadworks are also aligned with preparations for the planned TCITX, an intermodal transport facility intended to serve buses, public utility vehicles (PUVs), and commuters.
Arca South, located beside the affected section of the East Service Road, is expected to benefit from improved traffic flow and better access once the works are completed. Over the long term, these projects position Arca South as a strategic interchange and mobility gateway, anchored by expressway access, integrated public transport infrastructure, and multimodal connectivity.
For investors and businesses, this reinforces Arca South’s core fundamentals: improved connectivity to Makati, BGC, NAIA, and eastern Metro Manila; an expanded labor catchment; and increased attractiveness for office, residential, retail, and institutional developments. These infrastructure upgrades further strengthen the estate’s positioning as a mobility-anchored, mixed-use district.
Beyond Arca South, the East Service Road expansion—together with the SEMME and TCITX—reflects continued public-private collaboration aimed at easing congestion, supporting economic decentralization, and improving transport resilience across Metro Manila.
By enabling a more efficient north-south-east movement corridor, these projects are expected to unlock productivity gains for commuters, businesses, and logistics networks across the metropolis. (James A. Loyola)