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LRT-2

 LRT2  LRT Line 2
MRT-2 Train Santolan 1.jpg
Santolan station platform area
Overview
Type Rapid transit / Heavy rail
System Manila Light Rail Transit System
Locale Manila, Philippines
Termini Santolan
Recto
Stations 11
Services 1
Daily ridership 195,700 (2013 average)
269,271 (2012 record)
Website www.lrta.gov.ph
Operation
Opened April 5, 2003
Owner Light Rail Transit Authority
Operator(s) Light Rail Transit Authority
Rolling stock 72 Toshiba/Hyundai Rotem EMUs
Technical
Track length 13.8 km (8.6 mi)
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) standard gauge
Electrification Overhead line
Operating speed 60–80 km/h (37–50 mph)
Route map
Masinag
under
construction
Antipolo
Pasig
Emerald
Pasig
Marikina
Santolan
Depot
Marikina River
Marikina
Quezon City
Katipunan
Anonas
Araneta Center–Cubao  MRT3 
Betty Go-Belmonte
Gilmore
Quezon City
San Juan
J. Ruiz
San Juan River
San Juan
Manila
V. Mapa
Pureza  PNR 
Legarda
Recto  LRT1 
Tutuban
approved
extension
Divisoria
Pier 4

The Manila Light Rail Transit System Line 2, also known as LRT Line 2, LRT-2, or Megatren, is a rapid transit line in Metro Manila in the Philippines, generally running in an east-west direction along the Radial Road 6 and a portion of the Circumferential Road 1. Although operated by the Light Rail Transit Authority, resulting in its being called "LRT-2", it is actually a heavy rail, rapid transit system owing to its use of electric multiple units instead of the light rail vehicles used in earlier lines and is the only line utilizing such type of system in the country. Envisioned in the 1970s as part of the Metropolitan Manila Strategic Mass Rail Transit Development Plan, the eleven-station, 13.8-kilometer (8.6 mi) line was the third rapid transit line to be built in Metro Manila when it started operations in 2003. It is operated by the Light Rail Transit Authority (LRTA), a government-owned and controlled corporation under the Department of Transportation (DOTr) under an official development assistance scheme.

Serving close to 200,000 passengers daily, LRT-2 is the least busy among Metro Manila's three rapid transit lines, and was built with standards such as barrier-free access and the use of magnetic card tickets to facilitate passenger access in mind. Total ridership however is significantly below the line's built maximum capacity, with various solutions being proposed or implemented to increase ridership in addition to the planned extensions to the line. However, the short-term solutions have had a minimal effect on ridership, and experts have insisted that the extensions be built immediately, despite pronouncements that the system is steadily increasing ridership each year.

LRT-2 is integrated with the public transit system in Metro Manila, and passengers also take various forms of road-based public transport, such as buses and jeepneys, to and from a station to reach their intended destination. Although the line aimed to reduce traffic congestion and travel times along R-6 and portions of C-1, the transportation system has only been partially successful due to the rising number of motor vehicles and rapid urbanization. Expanding the network's revenue line to accommodate more passengers is set on tackling this problem.


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Wikipedia

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