New bridge reconnects local communities in northern Negros Occidental

Aerial photo of 75-lineal meter bridge connecting barangays Nanca and Cudangdang in E.B. Magalona in Negros Occidental. (Photo courtesy of DPWH Negros Occidental 1st DEO)

Various communities in E.B. Magalona in northern Negros Occidental, which were ravaged and separated by typhoon Yolanda in 2013, are now reconnected with the construction of the Nanca-Cudangdang Bridge.

Undertaken by the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH), Negros Occidental 1st District Engineering Office, the project connects the barangays of Nanca and Cudangdang and the neighboring barangays of Tanza and Tabigue.

As reported by OIC-District Engineer Dene B. Baldonado Jr., DPWH 6 Regional Director Nerie D. Bueno said the reconstruction of the bridge is vital in the transport of products from local communities to the market, and providing linkage among communities.

“The reconstruction of this bridge provides direct access among sugarcane-hauling trucks from the barangays of Nanca, Cudangdang, Tanza and Tabigue to sugar mill in the neighboring city of Victorias, hence, improving the economy and livelihood of the people in local communities,” Director Bueno said.

“The new bridge will likewise provide approximately 11,000 residents with a safer and quicker mode of crossing the Malogo River instead of using a small barge as means of crossing, which posed danger during typhoons and rainy days.”

Funded under the District’s FY 2020 General Appropriations Act (GAA), the ₱50-million project involves the construction of a new 75-lineal meter Pre-Stressed Concrete Girder (PSCG) bridge with an area of 572 square meters with grouted riprap as slope protection and construction of 960-meter concrete approaches on both sides.

“Bridge is a vital transportation and economic infrastructure towards economic growth and transport linkage. With the reconstruction of the Nanca-Cudangdang Bridge, the once disturbed economic activities in the local communities in E.B. Magalona will be revitalized, which would hopefully open new economic opportunities for the whole town,” Director Bueno stressed. (DPWH-6)