I Love Tiaong Sign
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Updated April 16, 2024
## I Love Tiaong Sign (Guiguinto, Bulacan): what we can verify, and how to pin it down precisely
You’ve provided a Plus Code (RVXW+CGM) and GPS coordinates (14.8485861, 120.8962956) for a place labeled “I Love Tiaong Sign” and tagged as a Garden in/near Guiguinto. Here’s what can be stated with high confidence—and what cannot be confirmed from publicly accessible sources.
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## What’s verifiably true from reliable sources
### Guiguinto is a municipality in Bulacan (Central Luzon)
Guiguinto is a municipality in the province of Bulacan, Philippines.
### “Tiaong” is a barangay in Guiguinto
“Tiaong” is also the name of a barangay in Guiguinto, Bulacan.
### Plaridel Bypass Road runs through Guiguinto—and includes works at Barangay Tiaong
Plaridel Bypass Road is a national secondary road in Bulacan with its southern terminus in Guiguinto. A Wikipedia entry about the road also references a Guiguinto Flyover at Barangay Tiaong (completed/inaugurated dates are mentioned there).
Outdated-data flag: Wikipedia is generally useful for orientation but is not an authoritative government record. Treat project dates/details as “best available public summary,” not as definitive.
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## What we cannot claim as confirmed
### We cannot confirm (from accessible sources) that a specific landmark named “I Love Tiaong Sign” exists at that exact point
There is a public web snippet (from a restaurant listing page) that contains the text: “I Love Tiaong Signe Plaridel Bypass Road Barangay Tiaong…”—but that snippet appears to be user-entered delivery/location text, and the page itself wasn’t accessible due to a web restriction when opened directly. The only factual claim we can make is that this snippet exists in search results, not that it proves the landmark is real or currently in place.
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## The most practical way to locate it precisely (facts only)
### 1) Your coordinates are the most unambiguous locator
Latitude/longitude pairs identify a point on Earth directly. If those numbers are correct, they define the target location regardless of naming differences.
### 2) Your Plus Code is a standardized encoding of coordinates
“Plus Codes” are part of the Open Location Code system—created to encode locations into short strings that can be used like addresses, especially where formal addresses are incomplete.
Key facts about Plus Codes:
– They are derived from latitude/longitude and can be decoded/encoded offline.
– They can be shortened when combined with a locality (city/municipality), but shortened codes need context to resolve uniquely.
– Google Maps has supported Plus Codes in search for years (as described in public documentation summaries).
### 3) The name “Tiaong” can be confusing across provinces
There is a well-known Tiaong in Quezon province (separate from Bulacan), and public social posts often reference “I love Tiaong” in that Quezon context. Those references do not confirm your Bulacan landmark, but they do explain why name-based searching can produce irrelevant results.
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## How to write this as a publish-ready RealJourneyTravels.com post without overclaiming
Below is a structure that stays inside the “only what we can substantiate” constraint while still being useful to readers.
### Suggested on-page angles that remain factual
– A micro-guide to “I Love” roadside markers in Bulacan (your entry is one candidate, but you present it as “reported/locally referenced,” not definitively verified).
– A practical explainer on using Plus Codes in the Philippines (why they matter, how to search them, and how they relate to coordinates).
– Context on Guiguinto as a “garden” place-name identity (note: Wikipedia lists a “nickname,” but nicknames can be informal and should be treated cautiously).
### Two contextual internal links (only if they exist on your site)
Because I can’t verify RealJourneyTravels.com’s exact URL inventory, the safest way is to include conditional internal links like:
– If you have a province hub: Bulacan travel guide (internal)
– If you have a national hub: Philippines travel guide (internal)
These are link recommendations, not factual claims about your current site architecture.
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## What I would explicitly flag in the post (to protect accuracy)
– Naming ambiguity: “Tiaong” exists in multiple places; your coordinates/Plus Code are the canonical identifiers.
– Verification status: The “I Love Tiaong Sign” label appears in provided data and is echoed in a third-party snippet, but the landmark’s current on-the-ground presence can’t be confirmed from accessible sources.
– Road context: Plaridel Bypass Road connects through Guiguinto and has documented infrastructure references at Barangay Tiaong, which supports the plausibility of “Tiaong + bypass road” as a real location cluster.
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If you want, paste any one of these and I’ll turn it into a full 750–1,500 word post while still staying inside the “no unverified claims” rule:
– a screenshot of the Google Maps pin for 14.8485861, 120.8962956, or
– the Place URL, or
– a photo of the sign itself (even a quick phone shot)
That would let the article describe the landmark’s appearance, setting, and “garden” label as directly evidenced, rather than inferred.
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