As soon as the train rumbles past, the men heave their home-made pushcarts back onto the tracks and passengers hop aboard -- cheating death and beating Manila's notorious traffic.
Scores of commuters in the city of about 12 million are propelled to their destinations daily by so-called "trolley boys" pushing metal carts that ply a few segments of the sprawling capital's railroads.
Passengers save time and money -- paying just 10 pesos (20 US cents) a trip -- but must face the constant risk of being crushed by a passing locomotive if they or the trolley boys don't move fast enough.
"Our job here is very dangerous, you need to know what time the train will pass by," said 57-year-old Rene Vargas Almeria, who has been at it for nearly 20 years.
Commuter trains travel nearly two dozen times a day along this 1.2-kilometre (one-mile) stretch of rail in the Santa Mesa district, where authorities grudgingly tolerate the carts due to their popularity.
The trolley boys also ply a few other stretches of Manila's battered rail system, that carries an average of 45,000 passengers a day.
Incredibly, casualties are relatively rare. Police do not keep statistics, but said they couldn't remember the last time a fatality occurred.
The same cannot be said of close calls -- anyone who spends time pushing or riding the carts seems to have a hair-raising story to share.
Rodolfo Maurello's scariest near-miss in almost two decades as a trolley boy came when he failed to notice the train behind him as he was pushing a cart packed with passengers.
"The train was just metres away," the 60-year-old said, recalling how he turned around with only seconds to spare and waved it to a stop.
"The sound of its brakes screeching was very loud."
"I swung my head around and saw the train coming and yanked my trolley off the tracks," he added. "It was really close."
"There is no traffic," 46-year-old Noemi Nieves told AFP. "It is convenient for us and the fare is just right for our budget."
"At first it was scary," she said. "I don't know how to swim so if something happens while we are on the bridge I really don't know what would happen."
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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