Sales Interchange | |
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Nichols Interchange | |
The Sales Interchange in 2014, looking north from the South Luzon Expressway.
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Location | |
Pasay and Taguig, Metro Manila, Philippines | |
Coordinates: | 14°31′27.6″N 121°1′32.7″E / 14.524333°N 121.025750°ECoordinates: 14°31′27.6″N 121°1′32.7″E / 14.524333°N 121.025750°E |
Roads at junction: |
Lower interchange: South Luzon Expressway Andrews Avenue Upper interchange: Metro Manila Skyway NAIA Expressway |
Construction | |
Type: | Four-level hybrid partial cloverleaf (lower) and T-bone (upper) interchange |
Constructed: |
Upper interchange: 2004–2009 by the Department of Public Works and Highways |
Opened: |
Lower interchange: Early 1970s Upper interchange: May 30, 2009 |
Maintained by: |
Department of Public Works and Highways Skyway Operations and Maintenance Corporation |
The Sales Interchange, also known as the Nichols Interchange, is a hybrid interchange at the boundary of Pasay and Taguig in Metro Manila, the Philippines. It is composed of a lower partial cloverleaf interchange serving as the junction between the South Luzon Expressway and Andrews Avenue (formerly Sales Road), and an upper T-bone interchange serving as the junction between the Metro Manila Skyway and the NAIA Expressway.
The interchange was opened in two segments, with the lower interchange being built in the early 1970s. Rehabilitation work on the lower interchange was last undertaken in 2012 with the reconfiguration of an off ramp to improve access to the Ninoy Aquino International Airport and the strengthening of the Sales Bridge, brought about by the number of vehicles using the interchange. Although the rehabilitation was scheduled to be completed by August 13, 2012, it was ultimately finished in February 2013.
Construction of the upper interchange was recommended in the Metro Manila Urban Transportation Integration Study (MMUTIS), commissioned by the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) in 1999, as a solution to worsening traffic congestion into and out of the airport, although no provisions for its construction were made when the Metro Manila Skyway was being built. On July 17, 2001, President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo and her Cabinet approved the construction of the NAIA Expressway, which would be funded through a Japanese loan package, and construction of the upper interchange began on March 17, 2004. The ₱1 billion interchange, which was built in four parts, was inaugurated by President Arroyo and other officials on May 30, 2009.