11th World Scout Jamboree Memorial Rotonda | |
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Boy Scout Circle | |
![]() The roundabout looking west on Timog Avenue | |
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Location | |
Quezon City, Metro Manila, Philippines | |
Coordinates | 14°38′5.5″N 121°2′7.97″E / 14.634861°N 121.0355472°E |
Roads at junction | ![]() Tomas Morato Avenue |
Construction | |
Type | Roundabout |
Opened | 1965 |
Maintained by | Department of Public Works and Highways |
The 11th World Scout Jamboree Memorial Rotonda, also known as the Boy Scout Circle, is a roundabout in Quezon City, Metro Manila, the Philippines. Located at the intersection between Timog and Tomas Morato Avenues, it serves as the boundary between Barangays South Triangle, Laging Handa and Sacred Heart.
A monument stands in the middle of the roundabout which commemorates the members of the ill-fated Philippine contingent to the 11th World Scout Jamboree that was among the casualties of the United Arab Airlines Flight 869 crash of 1963.[1] The monument consists of a circular pedestal with bronze statues in the likenesses of the 24 members of the Philippine delegation (22 Boy Scouts, two veteran Scouters, and two chaperons) positioned around the structure.[1][2]
The statues were sculpted by Florante Beltran Caedo and the monument was unveiled to the public in 1965 by then Mayor Norberto S. Amoranto at the intersections of Sampaloc and South avenues (now Tomas Morato and Timog avenues, respectively). In 2007, the Quezon City government performed a ₱20 million renovation on the monument that included the addition of an obelisk on top of the structure honoring Tomás Morató, the first mayor of Quezon City and after whom the Tomas Morato Avenue is named.[1][2]