For over four decades I have been a rail and bus photographer.
However, during this time I have aimed the lens at other subjects, be they different transportation, scenery, buildings and other bollocks.
Given these do not really fit the scope of my other sites, I felt compelled to set up a new site so as to inflict my other photographic garbage upon the world.
While primarily Philippine and Australian content, there will be the occasional forays into Fiji and Hong Kong. Perhaps other locations should the current pandemic ever allow it.
So sit back and enjoy, or hate, even be indifferent. That choice is purely up to you.

Official Home Of the 'Brad N Virls Adventure Series' - Images are copyright, so contact us if you would like to use any photos on your site/video! (We don't bite)


Wednesday, 11 February 2026

R.I.P: Philtranco


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Philtranco Website.

Ah yes, Philtranco — one of those transport companies with a history so long, dramatic, and slightly tragic that it could easily be adapted into a teleserye, complete with slow-motion shots of buses driving into the sunset while someone sings an emotional power ballad. Sadly, this particular story now comes with a confirmed final episode, with the company preparing to shut down operations on March 30, 2026, bringing the curtain down on more than a century of hauling Filipinos, balikbayan boxes, suspiciously large sacks of rice, and occasionally people who swore they’d “just nap for a bit” somewhere between Manila and Mindanao.

The story begins way back in 1914, when Philtranco first entered the world as the Pangasinan Transportation Company, or PANTRANCO. This was an era when roads were mostly optimistic sketches on maps, buses were essentially wooden furniture with wheels, and shock absorbers were largely theoretical concepts. PANTRANCO started modestly in Pangasinan, ferrying passengers between towns at a time when simply arriving at your destination within the same week was considered excellent service.

By the 1920s and 1930s, PANTRANCO began expanding like a transport company that had just discovered caffeine. Routes spread across Northern and Central Luzon, depots were built, workshops established, and the company started setting industry standards. While other operators were still figuring out which end of the bus went forward, PANTRANCO was busy building a network that would eventually become one of the largest in the country.

Naturally, World War II arrived and did what World War II tends to do — ruin absolutely everything. But PANTRANCO bounced back during the post-war boom with remarkable enthusiasm. By the 1950s through the 1970s, it had reached its golden age, becoming less of a bus company and more of a national institution. Its routes stretched vast distances, connecting Luzon with the Visayas and Mindanao through heroic combinations of buses and ferries. These were legendary journeys where passengers formed lifelong friendships, mild existential crises, and an intimate understanding of every pothole in the archipelago.

Then came the 1980s, when PANTRANCO discovered the thrilling adventure known as government ownership. This period brought mounting debt, ageing fleets, labour disputes, and increasing competition from younger operators with shiny new buses and the radical concept of reliable schedules. Service quality slipped, finances deteriorated, and the once-mighty transport giant began coughing and spluttering like an overworked engine climbing a mountain in second gear.

By the late 1980s and early 1990s, PANTRANCO was restructured and reborn as Philtranco, essentially the corporate version of changing your name, putting on a fresh uniform, and hoping creditors have short memories. Philtranco continued operating the famous long-haul routes, especially those marathon inter-island journeys that required equal parts endurance, patience, and snacks packed for what felt like a small expedition.

Unfortunately, the following decades were less kind. From the 1990s onward, competition intensified, newer bus companies rolled in with modern fleets and better marketing, and Philtranco gradually lost routes and market share. The company spent years battling financial difficulties, trying to keep its historic wheels turning while the transport landscape rapidly changed around it.

And now, after more than 111 years of service, the road has finally run out. In a memorandum released on February 2, 2026, Philtranco President and CEO Michael M. Sabban announced — with what can only be described as corporate heartbreak — that the company will permanently cease operations effective March 30, 2026. Management described the decision as being made with a “heavy heart and deep regret,” noting that the company had been fighting an “uphill battle” for years before staggering losses finally made continuing operations impossible. In other words, they tried everything short of attaching wings to the buses and starting an airline.

The closure marks the end of one of Southeast Asia’s oldest transport companies and a brand that helped pioneer nationwide bus travel in the Philippines. Long before budget airlines made island-hopping fashionable, Philtranco and its PANTRANCO predecessor were already linking regions, connecting families, and proving that with enough mechanical optimism and passenger resilience, you really could travel enormous distances by bus.

It’s the end of a remarkable chapter in Philippine transport history — a company that spent over a century proving that no journey was too long, no route too ambitious, and no timetable too optimistic. And somewhere out there, in the great depot in the sky, you can almost hear a conductor calling out one final boarding announcement while a slightly tired but proud bus prepares for its last run into history.

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Thank you.

Philtranco website where some of the photos (credited) came from for this article.

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Check out our free forum for people interested road, sea, and air, transport in the Philippines.
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Thank you for your 112 years of service to the Philippines.
A huge part of Filipino history, and your absence from the roads will be noticed.

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