Metro Manila is one of the most populated city centers in the world. From the moment the city wakes up, the density swells and swells until it creates a huge flow of people in and out of schools, business districts, and other places of trade. But it doesn’t stop once all the students and employees go to bed. The Philippine capital has become a 24-hour city, due in part to the thriving outsourcing business.
But with the novel coronavirus outbreak, this cycle has come to a grinding halt. People are told to stay indoors. Work has stopped. So to see its roads, particularly EDSA, emptied of cars at any time of day is a scene out of a post-apocalyptic movie. But this is exactly what photojournalist Jake Verzosa captures in these glimpses of Manila’s main thoroughfares.
The photos are taken from footbridges or flyovers which, for Verzosa, is the best vantage point to capture the city that’s usually in a constant state of flux. In the photos, usually crowded areas such as MRT stations, Ayala Center, or the major roads in and out of the city are stripped off of cars and pedestrians.Shaw MRT Station, Mandaluyong City. Photo by JAKE VERZOSAHillcrest Drive, Pasig City. Photo by JAKE VERZOSAOrtigas Ave., Mandaluyong City. Photo by JAKE VERZOSARamon Magsaysay Blvd.
This situation is as near as an apocalypse. Hope we can het over this soon. I’ll take traffic traffic anytime than having this pandemic. COVID19PH
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