Wazzup Pilipinas!?
The metallic screech of chainsaws slicing through decades of history has ignited a fierce debate in the heart of Manila. As towering, ancient trees are felled along Quirino Avenue to clear a path for a massive infrastructure expansion, local residents and environmental advocates are watching the canopy disappear with a mixture of grief, anger, and deep anxiety for the future.
What is being hailed by developers as a vital artery for urban progress is being mourned by the community as a devastating ecological tragedy.
The Toll of Urban Expansion: The SALEX Project
At the heart of the controversy is the construction of the Southern Access Link Expressway (SALEX), a 3.97-kilometer public-private partnership project backed by San Miguel Corporation (SMC) and the Department of Transportation. The proposed P152-billion elevated highway will feature four lanes traversing Quirino Avenue and San Marcelino Street, ultimately connecting the Metro Manila Skyway Stage 3 to Roxas Boulevard in an effort to curb the city’s choking traffic gridlock.
However, the path for this network requires clearing an estimated 617 trees along the historic avenue. The Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) National Capital Region confirmed that it issued Permit No. 2026-02-24-TCEBP-1609 to authorize the operation, noting that at least 225 trees have already been swiftly cut down.
Among the first casualties was a landmark 50-year-old Narra tree, a national symbol that had stood as a local icon for generations.
To compensate for the environmental loss, the project's proponents are legally mandated to fulfill a staggering replacement condition under the government's Seedling Replacement Uniform Ratio:
The Mitigation Mandate: SMC and project developers must plant 50,700 replacement seedlings within the City of Manila to offset the destruction of the mature trees. The Manila Parks Development Office has already designated specific sites, noting that bamboo will be planted along the Roxas Boulevard Service Road, while ornamental plants will fill the center islands of Roxas, Kalaw, and Padre Burgos Avenues.
Why Saplings Can’t Replace Giants
While a 50,700-to-617 ratio looks impressive on paper, environmentalists and urban planners argue that the math of nature doesn’t work like a corporate ledger.
The DENR has stated that over 100 qualified trees will undergo "earth-balling" (transplantation) rather than being chopped down. Yet, residents and experts question why more wasn't done to save the mature canopy, pointing out that a sapling in a nursery cannot immediately replicate the complex ecosystem services of a half-century-old tree.
Urban planner Louwie Gan warned that the casual removal of these public assets will trigger severe consequences for the local microclimate, including:
Loss of the Heat Shield: Decades-old trees feature massive, interlocking canopies that offer critical shade. Amid soaring Metro Manila temperatures, losing these trees strips away a vital natural defense against the urban heat island effect.
Deteriorating Air Quality: Mature root systems and expansive leaf surface areas filter out tons of urban air pollutants and vehicular emissions daily—a shield that small seedlings won't be able to provide for decades.
The Traffic Paradox: Trees naturally aid in traffic safety through a concept known as "visual narrowing," which subconsciously encourages drivers to slow down and drive more safely. Removing them increases the risk of speeding while eliminating barriers that absorb noise pollution.
"It takes decades for a seedling to grow the kind of canopy that actually fights urban heat and absorbs storm runoff," advocates argue. "We are trading an immediate, living shield for a promise that will take thirty years to mature."
The Digital Battleground: "Ecocide" vs. Infrastructure
The falling trees have sparked a massive digital outcry, turning social media platforms into a battleground over the philosophy of urban planning. The conversation has evolved beyond local grievances, with some environmental groups going as far as to call the sudden destruction an outright "ecocide"—the systematic slaughter of the environment.
On one side of the digital aisle, commuters and development enthusiasts argue that Manila’s economic survival depends on aggressive infrastructure solutions like the SALEX. On the other side, citizens question the true cost of this mobility.
Can a city truly be considered "developed" if its citizens must sacrifice the very air they breathe and the shade that protects them to achieve it?
A Familiar Crossroads
The clearing of Quirino Avenue highlights a recurring dilemma in modern urban planning. As the concrete continues to pour and the expressway networks expand across the Greater Capital Region, the green spaces that keep cities livable are increasingly pushed to the margins.
The ongoing debate serves as a stark reminder: progress that hollows out the environment leaves a community wealthy in roads, but impoverished in life.
For a closer look at the scale of the environmental changes occurring along this major Manila thoroughfare, you can watch the ANC updates on the Quirino Avenue tree clearing. This video report provides direct visual coverage of the ongoing construction site, showing the rows of trees that have been reduced to stumps to clear a path for the SALEX project.
https://youtu.be/K8OQlBbCGZU?si=BJqoEWjP6hi1vN3x