Tambo, Parañaque


Tambo is an administrative division in southern Metro Manila, the Philippines. It is a coastal barangay in the city of Parañaque situated just south of Baclaran adjoining the Ninoy Aquino International Airport complex to the east.
The approximate boundaries are Alonzo Street and Asean Avenue in Baclaran to the north and McDonough Road and Coastal Terminal Road in Don Galo to the south, with the Estero de Tripa de Gallina and Manila Bay to the east and west. Across the stream in the east, Tambo is bordered by the Pasay district of Maricaban and the Parañaque barangay of Santo Niño, where the international airport is located. It also administers most of Entertainment City situated in the Manila Bay reclamation area called Bay City. As of the 2015 census, it had a population of 25,699.

History

The village of Tambo was named for the tiger grass used to make brooms that grew there in abundance during the Spanish colonial period. It may have also been named for the lodging houses that stood in this former colonial beach strip which was one of the earliest barrios established in the Augustinian missionary town of Parañaque. Prior to the reclamation of Roxas Boulevard during the American colonial period, Tambo was a popular beach destination for Manila residents with resorts such as Aroma and El Faro lining the Manila Bay coast.
On July 15, 1898, the First California Volunteers established Camp Dewey in a coastal forest in Tambo just north of Don Galo at the height of the Spanish–American War. This military camp in Tambo would remain under U.S. Army possession throughout the Philippine–American War and until 1937 when it was converted into a Philippine Army camp named Camp Claudio by President Manuel Luis Quezon.
In the early 1900s, the village was the location of several seaside mansions and became an elite enclave by the latter part of the American colonial period. One such mansion is the Colonial Revival style Palacio de Memoria built in the 1930s beside the Los Tamaraos Polo Club, a sports and social club founded by Joaquín Miguel Elizalde and his brothers which was housed in a Georgian style building built in 1937. The mansion is now used as an auction house owned by Philippe Jones Lhuillier.
The beach that used to stretch from Pasay in the north, where the original Manila Polo Club was located, to Las Piñas in the south, where the Jale Beach once stood, was gradually replaced by Dewey Boulevard between the 1940s and 1960s.
In 1985, the Manila–Cavite Expressway was opened on another reclaimed area in the southern section of Tambo as an extension of Roxas Boulevard. The village was enlarged again with the creation of Bay City west of Roxas Boulevard by the Philippine Reclamation Authority in the 1970s and 1980s as part of the South Reclamation Project under Boulevard 2000. It added of land area to Parañaque and which it now shares with neighboring Don Galo. Tambo's shoreline is now approximately west of its original coast.
In 2003, the former American military camp known as Camp Claudio was transformed into a housing and urban development site by the national government. In 2013, Solaire Resort & Casino, the first integrated resort of Entertainment City, was opened in the reclaimed portion west of Tambo.

Education

The village is home to the following educational institutions:
Tambo is a major transportation hub in southwest Metro Manila. It is located along the busy Baclaran-Bay City traffic corridor south of EDSA where several major thoroughfares are routed through. The main north–south highways servicing Tambo are Roxas Boulevard in the north and the Manila–Cavite Expressway in the south, with NAIA Road and the elevated NAIA Expressway separating them and providing access to the Ninoy Aquino International Airport and Entertainment City on either ends. Macapagal Boulevard is the main street in the village's Bay City section which runs parallel to Jose Diokno Boulevard further west linking these mixed-use developments and gaming hubs in Manila's new tourist belt. On the village's old eastern section runs the north–south Elpidio Quirino Avenue connecting Tambo to Don Galo and La Huerta to the south. It is also linked to Roxas Boulevard through the narrow Old Airport Road and to the airport complex through Andrews Avenue.
The Parañaque Integrated Terminal Exchange is located at the Asia World subdistrict of Bay City by the village's border with Don Galo. It is a major bus terminal with local, intercity and provincial connections. The village is also served by the Manila Light Rail Transit System Line 1 through jeepney connections from the Baclaran station located just from the village. When the Line 1 extension to Cavite is completed, it will have its own station on the Manila International Airport Road at its junction with Roxas Boulevard.