Manila Water’s Ruhale-Bambang Line aims to serve 700K more customers

Manila Water aims to expand its services to more than 700,000 additional Taguig customers with the construction of the P577 million Long Term East 3 (LTE 3) Ruhale-Bambang Felix Line.

The 3.45-kilometer Ruhale-Bambang Felix Line pipelaying project will pass through the areas of Ruhale M. Natividad, Bambang Felix, DM Cruz, F. Manalo, Bantayan Extension, and Cayetano Boulevard. It will provide potable and continuous water supply to Taguig barangays, namely: Calzada, Hagonoy, Ibayo-Tipas, Napindan, Palingon, Sta. Ana, Tuktukan, Wawa, and Ligi Tipas.

It is projected to convey an additional 200 million liters per day of treated water coming from new water sources to Taguig, Pateros, Pasig, and portions of Paranaque as part of long-term supply augmentation.

FEATURED STORIES

For this project, the company is using a conventional open-cut pipelaying methodology with trenchless pipelaying for some segments to minimize its impact on daily road users. Currently, 180 pipes with 1400-millimeter diameters have already been laid along Ruhale to Natividad streets and along Cayetano to Bantayan streets.

READ: Manila Water buys 70% of Laguna utility operator

“This project in Taguig is a testament to Manila Water’s commitment to securing robust water service to our ever-growing customer base. The LTE3 Ruhale-Bambang Felix Line will be a vital part of Metro Manila’s water security,” Manila Water’s Corporate Communication Affairs Group Director Jeric Sevilla said.

Upon its completion in the first quarter of 2025, it will become part of the massive LTE3 Distribution Network System connected to new water sources, namely the East Bay Water Treatment Plant and Wawa-Calawis Water Supply System, as well as other long-term sources such as the Kaliwa Dam.

READ: Manila Water boosts maintenance of pumping stations

Subscribe to our daily newsletter

By providing an email address. I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy.

https://www.inquirer.net/fullfeed