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San Andres Sports Complex

Sports complexes in the PhilippinesSports venues in Manila
Malate Remedios Area 12
Malate Remedios Area 12

The San Andres Sports Complex, also known as San Andres Gym and formerly as Mail and More Arena, is a sporting venue along San Andres Street in Malate, Manila, Philippines, owned by the local government of Manila.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article San Andres Sports Complex (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

San Andres Sports Complex
San Andres Street, Manila Malate (Fifth District)

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Wikipedia: San Andres Sports ComplexContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 14.569 ° E 120.9877 °
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Address

San Andres Gym

San Andres Street
1004 Manila, Malate (Fifth District)
Philippines
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Malate Remedios Area 12
Malate Remedios Area 12
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Nearby Places

Roxas Boulevard
Roxas Boulevard

Roxas Boulevard is a popular waterfront promenade in Metro Manila in the Philippines. The boulevard, which runs along the shores of Manila Bay, is well known for its sunsets and stretch of coconut trees. The divided roadway has become a trademark of Philippine tourism, famed for its yacht club, hotels, restaurants, commercial buildings and parks. The boulevard was completed in the 1910s. Originally called Cavite Boulevard, it was renamed Dewey Boulevard in honor of the American admiral George Dewey, whose forces defeated the Spanish navy in the Battle of Manila Bay in 1898, Heiwa Boulevard in late 1941 during the Japanese occupation, and finally Roxas Boulevard in the 1960s in honor of President Manuel Roxas, the fifth president of the Philippines. It was also designated as a new alignment of the Manila South Road that connects Manila to the southern provinces of Luzon.The boulevard is also an eight-lane major arterial road in Metro Manila designated as Radial Road 1 (R-1) of Manila's arterial road network, National Route 61 (N61), the shortest primary route in the Philippines, National Route 120 (N120) of the Philippine highway network and a spur of Asian Highway 26 (AH26). The arcing road runs in a north–south direction from Luneta in Manila and ends in Parañaque at the intersection of MIA Road and Seaside Drive, beneath the elevated NAIA Expressway. Beyond its southern terminus, starts the Manila–Cavite Expressway (E3), also known as the Coastal Road, or more recently, CAVITEX.