Dike road in 2003, before the esplanade was constructed The road, formally known as
Senator Efrain Treñas Boulevard, was built in 2008 to help ease traffic congestion on congested
General Luna Street. The site was an existing dike road devoid of shade and also originally built chiefly as a flood control measure. Locals, on the other hand, used the road for recreation, such as jogging and biking. The Iloilo City Government realized and reconsidered it, and decided to build a linear park instead of a road.
Designing and river rehabilitation The city government gave in to public clamor and started work on developing the riverside stretch into a public park. Former Senate President
Franklin Drilon supported the project with funds from his
Priority Development Assistance Fund, along with former Iloilo City Mayor
Jed Patrick Mabilog and incumbent Iloilo City Mayor
Jerry P. Treñas (at the time, an Iloilo City congressman), and launched the esplanade project as a key component of their Iloilo River Improvement initiative. The Iloilo River Development Council was at the forefront of the campaign for rehabilitating the river, which also involved various sectors, including private business groups and educational institutions. Businesses made river cleanups part of their corporate social responsibility projects, while schools made them part of the national service training programs. The administration of former Mayor Jed Mabilog was also able to relocate about 1,000 informal settlers along the river into proper housing sites. Renowned Filipino architect and PGAA Creative Design founder Paulo Alcazaren, who also worked on the
Singapore Quay and
River Esplanade, was tapped to draw up layouts and designs for the public linear park.
Opening and extensions The transformation of the boulevard was the initial part of a larger project to provide both sides of the Iloilo River with esplanades catering primarily to pedestrians. On August 18, 2012, the first phase of the project was opened to the public and cost ₱58.7 million. The esplanade was between
Iloilo Diversion (Sen. Benigno Aquino Jr. Avenue) and
Carpenter bridges in Mandurriao district. The project was eventually expanded into the Esplanade 2 on the other side of the river in Molo district, creating a walk-friendly loop between the two bridges. In 2017, more phases of the project were funded and constructed by the
Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH), and they were completed in 2020, with a total length of and a total cost of
₱1.12 billion. The Iloilo River Esplanade became the longest linear park in the country with a total of thirteen phases and that traverses through five of the
seven Iloilo City districts: Molo, Mandurriao,
La Paz, Lapuz, and the City Proper. However, the city government announced in 2018 that it would no longer allow the extension of the Iloilo River Esplanade project towards the mouth of the river, citing the discovery that many corporations use the area and would be impacted if the project continued up to the Parola area in the City Proper. In April 2022, the DPWH began the construction of the initial ₱1.4-billion road project, which was designed as an alternate route from Iloilo City to towns in southern Iloilo province, connecting Barangay Tabucan in Mandurriao, Iloilo City to Barangay Cagbang in Oton. The project, later known as the
Iloilo Sunset Boulevard, also included a extension of the city's esplanade network. The boulevard, completed at a total cost of about ₱2.26 billion, was officially opened to the public in January 2025. A connectivity section from Esplanade 1 to the boulevard, which includes a proposed footbridge, was also introduced by the DPWH. However, as of September 2025, the project has been postponed due to permitting and environmental concerns. == Sections and phases ==