| Date | Sunrise | Sunset | Day length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 June 2026, Monday | 5:25 AM | 6:21 PM | 12h 56m |
| 2 June 2026, Tuesday | 5:25 AM | 6:22 PM | 12h 56m |
| 3 June 2026, Wednesday | 5:25 AM | 6:22 PM | 12h 56m |
| 4 June 2026, Thursday | 5:25 AM | 6:22 PM | 12h 57m |
| 5 June 2026, Friday | 5:25 AM | 6:22 PM | 12h 57m |
| 6 June 2026, Saturday | 5:25 AM | 6:23 PM | 12h 57m |
| 7 June 2026, Sunday | 5:25 AM | 6:23 PM | 12h 57m |
| 8 June 2026, Monday | 5:25 AM | 6:23 PM | 12h 58m |
| 9 June 2026, Tuesday | 5:25 AM | 6:24 PM | 12h 58m |
| 10 June 2026, Wednesday | 5:25 AM | 6:24 PM | 12h 58m |
| 11 June 2026, Thursday | 5:26 AM | 6:24 PM | 12h 58m |
| 12 June 2026, Friday | 5:26 AM | 6:25 PM | 12h 58m |
| 13 June 2026, Saturday | 5:26 AM | 6:25 PM | 12h 59m |
| 14 June 2026, Sunday | 5:26 AM | 6:25 PM | 12h 59m |
| 15 June 2026, Monday | 5:26 AM | 6:25 PM | 12h 59m |
| 16 June 2026, Tuesday | 5:26 AM | 6:26 PM | 12h 59m |
| 17 June 2026, Wednesday | 5:26 AM | 6:26 PM | 12h 59m |
| 18 June 2026, Thursday | 5:27 AM | 6:26 PM | 12h 59m |
| 19 June 2026, Friday | 5:27 AM | 6:26 PM | 12h 59m |
| 20 June 2026, Saturday | 5:27 AM | 6:27 PM | 12h 59m |
| 21 June 2026, Sunday | 5:27 AM | 6:27 PM | 12h 59m |
| 22 June 2026, Monday | 5:27 AM | 6:27 PM | 12h 59m |
| 23 June 2026, Tuesday | 5:28 AM | 6:27 PM | 12h 59m |
| 24 June 2026, Wednesday | 5:28 AM | 6:28 PM | 12h 59m |
| 25 June 2026, Thursday | 5:28 AM | 6:28 PM | 12h 59m |
| 26 June 2026, Friday | 5:28 AM | 6:28 PM | 12h 59m |
| 27 June 2026, Saturday | 5:29 AM | 6:28 PM | 12h 59m |
| 28 June 2026, Sunday | 5:29 AM | 6:28 PM | 12h 59m |
| 29 June 2026, Monday | 5:29 AM | 6:28 PM | 12h 59m |
| 30 June 2026, Tuesday | 5:29 AM | 6:28 PM | 12h 59m |
Quezon City is the most populous city in the Philippines, occupying the northern part of Metro Manila at elevations between 15 and 90 meters. Its large parks and university campuses are among the few places in this densely built metro where the sky stays open in multiple directions.
The 14-hectare circular park opens at 5:00 AM; the eastern section faces toward Marikina with a low horizon over the surrounding streets. Free entry, reachable from MRT-3 North Avenue station in about 10 minutes on foot.
The 3.2-kilometer oval road on the University of the Philippines Diliman campus has a broad eastward arc where the horizon stays low over the adjacent sports fields. The campus is freely accessible at all hours.
Situated at the southern edge of the La Mesa Watershed Reservation in northeastern Quezon City, the open meadow area faces east with a clear, unobstructed horizon. Entrance fee PHP 50; the park opens at 7:00 AM daily.
The football oval on the Loyola Heights campus faces east toward the Marikina Valley, giving a clean low horizon at dawn. Accessible by LRT-2 (Katipunan station); the campus is generally open on weekdays without a fee.
From the western side of the park near the Commonwealth Avenue main gate, the view opens toward the Metro Manila skyline as the sun drops. The park closes at 10:00 PM.
The western stretch of the oval between Melchor Hall and the College of Fine Arts faces the sunset with no tall structures blocking the view. Street parking is available along C.P. Garcia Avenue.
This 23-hectare park along North Avenue has west-facing open lawns with a low urban skyline on the horizon. Entrance is PHP 20; the park closes at 6:00 PM, so arrive at least 30 minutes before sunset.
The open plaza along the creek in Eastwood City faces west and southwest, with the horizon visible between tower gaps. Access is free at all hours; take the Libis exit off C-5 road.