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Batangas City

Batangas City, officially the City of Batangas (Filipino: Lungsod ng Batangas), is a 1st class component city and capital of the province of Batangas, Philippines. According to the 2020 census, it has a population of 351,437 people. [3]

Batangas City
City of Batangas
From top to bottom: Batangas Capitol, Citimart Supermarket, Rizal Monument, Port of Batangas, Provincial Capitol
Nicknames: 
  • Industrial Port of Calabarzon
  • Eco Tourist City of the Past, Present and Future
  • Green City Batangas
Motto(s): 
All here So near
Eto Batangueño Disiplinado
Anthem: Batangas, Lungsod Kong Mahal (Batangas, My Beloved City)
Map of Batangas with Batangas City highlighted
OpenStreetMap
Batangas City
Location within the Philippines
Coordinates: 13°45′N 121°03′E / 13.75°N 121.05°E / 13.75; 121.05Coordinates: 13°45′N 121°03′E / 13.75°N 121.05°E / 13.75; 121.05
CountryPhilippines
RegionCalabarzon
ProvinceBatangas
District 5th district
FoundedMarch 10, 1917
CityhoodJuly 23, 1969
Barangays105 (see Barangays)
Government
[1]
 • TypeSangguniang Panlungsod
 • MayorBeverley Rose A. Dimacuha-Mariño
 • Vice MayorAlyssa Renee A. Cruz-Atienza
 • RepresentativeMario Vittorio A. Mariño
 • City Council
Members
 • Electorate220,199 voters (2022)
Area
 • Total282.96 km2 (109.25 sq mi)
Elevation
128 m (420 ft)
Highest elevation
965 m (3,166 ft)
Lowest elevation
0 m (0 ft)
Population
 (2020 census) [3]
 • Total351,437
 • Density1,200/km2 (3,200/sq mi)
 • Households
87,196
DemonymsBatangueño (male)
Batangueña (female)
Batanguenean
Economy
 • Income class1st city income class
 • Poverty incidence4.63% (2015)[4]
 • Revenue₱3,220,240,531.52 (2020)
 • Assets₱8,491,503,587.31 (2020)
 • Expenditure₱3,209,264,251.70 (2020)
 • Liabilities₱1,985,725,520.16 (2020)
Service provider
 • ElectricityManila Electric Company (Meralco)
Time zoneUTC+8 (PST)
ZIP code
4200
PSGC
041005000
IDD:area code+63 (0)43
Native languagesTagalog
Numbered highways
Feast dateJanuary 16
Websitewww.batangascity.gov.ph

Batangas City is classified as one of the fastest urbanizing cities of the Philippines, and is known as the "Industrial Port City of Calabarzon". It is home to the Batangas International Port, one of the busiest passenger and container terminals in the Philippines. It also hosts one of the largest oil refineries in the country, three natural gas power plants, and several other major industries. In addition, the city also serves as the educational, industrial and the transportation center of the province.

History

Foreign rule

 
Aerial view of Batangas, circa 1923

The first Spanish missionaries arrived in Batangas City in 1572 due to group migration. Finally, in 1581, Spanish authorities governing the Philippines created a pueblo in the area which included the hill (now Hilltop) where the present Provincial Capitol of Batangas stands after the formal end of the Coumintang Kingdom. The town was named "Batangan" because huge logs, locally called "batang", abounded in the place. The Spanish government appointed Don Agustin Casilao as Batangan's first gobernadorcillo. Said title of "little governor" as head of the pueblo or municipio was replaced in 1894 by "capital municipal". It is not clear who succeeded Casilao nor is it known whether there were subsequent appointments of capital municipal. Don Agustin Casilao is sometimes referred to as Agustino or Augustino in some sources. By 1870, its barangays were Balagtas, Bilogo, Bolbok, Bukal, Catandala, Konde, De La Paz, Kumintang Ibaba, Matuko, Mapagong, Paharang Kanluran, Pairang, Pinamucan, Patulo, Sampaga, San Agapito, San Isidro and Talahib.[5][6]

At the coming of the Americans in the early 1900s, local civil government of Batangas was set up. It took effect on July 4, 1901, with Jose Villanueva elected as "Municipal President." His term expired in 1903.[5]

Subsequent elections installed the following as municipal presidents: Juan Palacios, 1904–1905; Jose Arguelles, 1906; Marcelo Llana, 1907; Sisenando Ferriols, 1908–1909; Ventura Tolentino, 1910–1914; Julian Rosales, 1915; Juan Gutierrez, 1916–1919; Julian Rosales, 1920–1922; Juan Buenafe, 1923–1930; Perfecto Condez, 1931–1937; Juan Buenafe, 1938–1940. In 1941 the title "Municipal President" was changed to "Municipal Mayor." Pedro Berberabe was elected first municipal mayor.[5]

Batangas City was severely damaged due to the Japanese A6M Zero bombardment and on December 12, 1941, the Batangas Airport which is located in Barangay Alangilan is totally destroyed. On October 14, 1943, municipal councilor Roman L. Perez was appointed Mayor by the Japanese after the inauguration of the Second Republic of the Philippines. Liberation begun when 158th Regimental Combat Team (or 158th RCT) under the command of the US 6th Army reached Poblacion, Batangas City by March 11 during the Philippines Liberation Campaign of 1944–45. By the end of April the same that year, some elements of the 188th Glider Infantry Regiment of the 11th Airborne Division was left to clear the barangays east and mountains south of the city as the main Allied Force continued their drive towards the Quezon Province. Some of hundreds thousands local Filipino soldiers and officers of the 4th and 42nd Infantry Division of the Philippine Commonwealth Army and 4th Constabulary Regiment of the Philippine Constabulary was entering and re-invaded in Batangas City. Throughout the battle, recognized Filipino Guerrilla fighters played an important key role in the advancement of the combined American and Philippine Commonwealth troops, providing key roads and information for the Japanese location of defenses and movements. Hostilities ended as the war came closer to the end.[7][8]

Independence and onwards

After the Liberation, Pres. Manuel Roxas issued his reappointment. Mayor Perez ran and won in 1944, the first post-War elections in the country. In November 1949 he was killed by an unknown assassin. Vice Mayor Atilano Magadia succeeded then Mayor Perez. He served until 1951. Mayor Macario Chavez was elected in 1951. His four-year term ended in 1955.[5]

People voted Pedro S. Tolentino overwhelmingly as mayor in 1956. He was reelected three times.[5]

Cityhood

In 1965, Republic Act 4586 was signed by President Diosdado Macapagal, converting Batangas into a city. If is successful, it will be renamed as Laurel, after former president Jose P. Laurel, a native of Tanauan. However, the voters rejected the cityhood and renaming of Batangas in a plebiscite.

On July 23, 1969, Batangas became a city successfully by the virtue of Republic Act 5495. Unlike in 1965, the city used its same name. Pedro S. Tolentino became its first city mayor.

Contemporary history

The succeeding city mayors followed are Mayor Macario M. Mendoza, 1974–1979; Alfredo M. Borbon, 1979–1980, Conrado C. Berberabe, 1980–1986; Jose M. Atienza, 1986–1987; Mario M. Perez, 1987, Eduardo B. Dimacuha, 1988–1998, Angelito D. Dimacuha, 1998–2001 and again Eduardo B. Dimacuha, 2001–2010, Vilma A. Dimacuha, 2010–2013 and again Eduardo B. Dimacuha, 2013–2016, Beverley Rose A. Dimacuha, 2016–present.[9]

Meanwhile, on January 19, 2008, President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo opened Phase II project of the Batangas City International Container Port (with turn-over to the Philippine Ports Authority). She also inspected a major road project in Southern Tagalog. She then inspected the P1.5-billion Southern Tagalog Arterial Road (STAR), Stage II-Phase 1 connecting Lipa (19.74 kilometers and Batangas and the South Luzon Expressway (SLEX) road widening, expansion and the STAR toll way development projects in Batangas.[10]

Geography

Batangas City lies in the southernmost part of Batangas, facing Batangas Bay. It is bordered by San Jose to the north, Verde Island Passage to the south, Ibaan, Taysan, and Lobo to the east, and San Pascual to the west. The Calumpang River crosses the city from northeast to southwest. The area west of Calumpang River is generally plains while the eastern area is mostly foothills and mountains.

Batangas City is 105 kilometres (65 mi) from Manila.

Barangays

Batangas City is politically subdivided into 107 barangays.[11] Pagkilatan was formerly a sitio of Matoco.[12] Malalim was formerly the "southern portion of the barrio of Sirang Lupa, the northern portion of the barrio Mahabang Dahilig, and the eastern portion of San Isidro" "together with the sitio of Malalim"; this territory became a barrio (barangay) in 1954.[13] In the same year, sitio Malitam, formerly part of barrio Libjo, was elevated as a barrio.[14] San Antonio was constituted from the sitios of Ilaya, Labac, Matalisay, Pajo and Cacawan, from the barrio of San Agapito.[15] In 1957, the barrio of Talumpok was divided into two. Sitios Romano, Poyesan, Bondeo and Latag were constituted into Talumpok Silangan, while sitios Ginto, Duhatan, Kulingkang, Piit and Cuaba were constituted into Talumpok Kanluran.[16]

Balagtas was formerly known as Patay, Kumintang Ilaya as Sambat Ilaya, and Kumintang Ibaba as Sambat Ibaba.[17]


PSGC Barangay Population ±% p.a.
2020[3] 2010[18]
041005001 Alangilan 4.5% 15,669 13,332 1.53%
041005002 Balagtas 2.9% 10,214 9,120 1.07%
041005003 Balete 3.0% 10,520 9,098 1.37%
041005004 Banaba Center 0.8% 2,808 1,984 3.31%
041005005 Banaba Ibaba 1.0% 3,408 2,023 5.01%
041005006 Banaba Kanluran 1.1% 3,949 3,413 1.38%
041005007 Banaba Silangan 0.7% 2,373 1,931 1.95%
041005008 Barangay 1 0.2% 771 706 0.83%
041005009 Barangay 2 0.1% 501 606 −1.77%
041005010 Barangay 3 0.1% 261 367 −3.14%
041005011 Barangay 4 0.5% 1,638 1,499 0.83%
041005012 Barangay 5 0.2% 569 634 −1.01%
041005013 Barangay 6 0.5% 1,810 2,009 −0.97%
041005014 Barangay 7 0.1% 451 715 −4.23%
041005015 Barangay 8 0.1% 478 577 −1.75%
041005016 Barangay 9 0.1% 257 283 −0.90%
041005017 Barangay 10 0.1% 263 353 −2.72%
041005018 Barangay 11 0.1% 348 768 −7.15%
041005019 Barangay 12 0.4% 1,393 1,377 0.11%
041005020 Barangay 13 0.1% 348 509 −3.50%
041005021 Barangay 14 0.1% 233 294 −2.16%
041005022 Barangay 15 0.1% 196 170 1.34%
041005023 Barangay 16 0.0% 101 197 −6.07%
041005024 Barangay 17 0.0% 116 104 1.03%
041005025 Barangay 18 0.1% 328 382 −1.42%
041005026 Barangay 19 0.1% 400 955 −7.83%
041005027 Barangay 20 0.1% 383 344 1.01%
041005028 Barangay 21 0.2% 680 664 0.22%
041005029 Barangay 22 0.0% 94 234 −8.19%
041005030 Barangay 23 0.2% 698 635 0.89%
041005031 Barangay 24 0.4% 1,411 2,877 −6.46%
041005032 Bilogo 0.6% 2,073 1,829 1.18%
041005033 Bolbok 3.6% 12,788 11,806 0.75%
041005034 Bukal 0.9% 3,129 2,460 2.28%
041005035 Calicanto 3.1% 10,769 10,315 0.40%
041005036 Catandala 0.2% 706 644 0.87%
041005037 Concepcion 1.1% 3,933 3,412 1.34%
041005038 Conde Itaas 0.4% 1,427 1,305 0.84%
041005039 Conde Labak 0.7% 2,355 1,763 2.75%
041005040 Cuta 4.0% 14,072 11,460 1.94%
041005041 Dalig 0.9% 3,220 2,248 3.43%
041005042 Dela Paz 0.8% 2,726 2,377 1.29%
041005043 Dela Paz Pulot Aplaya 0.2% 587 583 0.06%
041005044 Dela Paz Pulot Itaas 0.1% 429 419 0.22%
041005045 Domoclay 1.1% 3,908 3,246 1.75%
041005046 Dumantay 1.6% 5,753 3,685 4.26%
041005047 Gulod Itaas 1.7% 6,028 4,950 1.86%
041005048 Gulod Labak 0.7% 2,415 2,433 −0.07%
041005049 Haligue Kanluran 0.3% 1,210 1,112 0.79%
041005050 Haligue Silangan 0.6% 2,016 1,699 1.62%
041005051 Ilihan 1.3% 4,562 3,920 1.43%
041005052 Kumba 0.3% 1,013 914 0.97%
041005053 Kumintang Ibaba 2.6% 9,162 10,134 −0.94%
041005054 Kumintang Ilaya 3.1% 10,900 10,320 0.51%
041005055 Libjo 3.5% 12,256 10,964 1.05%
041005056 Liponpon Isla Verde 0.2% 664 746 −1.09%
041005057 Maapas 0.1% 202 208 −0.27%
041005058 Mabacong 0.6% 2,159 1,873 1.34%
041005059 Mahabang Dahilig 0.4% 1,568 1,430 0.87%
041005060 Mahabang Parang 1.0% 3,394 3,267 0.36%
041005061 Mahacot Kanluran 0.2% 695 600 1.39%
041005062 Mahacot Silangan 0.2% 772 680 1.20%
041005063 Malalim 0.4% 1,352 1,190 1.20%
041005064 Malibayo 0.1% 485 461 0.48%
041005065 Malitam 2.4% 8,563 6,686 2.35%
041005066 Maruclap 0.3% 1,049 957 0.86%
041005067 Pagkilatan 0.5% 1,603 1,321 1.83%
041005068 Paharang Kanluran 0.4% 1,310 1,314 −0.03%
041005069 Paharang Silangan 0.4% 1,395 1,222 1.25%
041005070 Pallocan Kanluran 2.0% 6,854 6,259 0.85%
041005071 Pallocan Silangan 0.9% 3,286 2,026 4.64%
041005072 Pinamucan 1.2% 4,295 3,607 1.65%
041005073 Pinamucan Ibaba 0.5% 1,822 1,410 2.43%
041005074 Pinamucan Silangan 0.3% 1,228 1,125 0.82%
041005075 Sampaga 1.3% 4,458 3,980 1.07%
041005076 San Agapito Isla Verde 0.3% 1,186 1,191 −0.04%
041005077 San Agustin Kanluran Isla Verde 0.2% 669 715 −0.62%
041005078 San Agustin Silangan Isla Verde 0.2% 720 775 −0.69%
041005079 San Andres Isla Verde 0.3% 893 972 −0.79%
041005080 San Antonio Isla Verde 0.3% 943 1,098 −1.42%
041005081 San Isidro 2.1% 7,378 6,887 0.65%
041005082 San Jose Sico 1.7% 5,815 4,627 2.17%
041005083 San Miguel 0.7% 2,351 2,247 0.42%
041005084 San Pedro 0.5% 1,910 1,510 2.23%
041005085 Santa Clara 3.7% 12,843 10,584 1.83%
041005086 Santa Rita Aplaya 0.5% 1,795 2,281 −2.22%
041005087 Santa Rita Karsada 5.8% 20,321 17,330 1.50%
041005088 Santo Domingo 0.5% 1,915 1,789 0.64%
041005089 Santo Niño 0.7% 2,468 2,520 −0.20%
041005090 Simlong 1.2% 4,188 3,800 0.92%
041005091 Sirang Lupa 0.5% 1,779 1,369 2.49%
041005092 Sorosoro Ibaba 0.9% 3,042 2,713 1.08%
041005093 Sorosoro Ilaya 2.2% 7,650 1,801 14.52%
041005094 Sorosoro Karsada 1.0% 3,581 1,764 6.86%
041005095 Tabangao Ambulong 1.7% 6,038 4,862 2.05%
041005096 Tabangao Aplaya 0.7% 2,508 3,216 −2.30%
041005097 Tabangao Dao 0.8% 2,978 2,625 1.19%
041005098 Talahib Pandayan 0.7% 2,299 2,301 −0.01%
041005099 Talahib Payapa 0.1% 519 575 −0.96%
041005100 Talumpok Kanluran 0.8% 2,900 2,867 0.11%
041005101 Talumpok Silangan 0.7% 2,301 1,845 2.09%
041005102 Tinga Itaas 0.9% 3,060 2,801 0.83%
041005103 Tinga Labak 2.0% 7,164 5,883 1.86%
041005104 Tulo 1.2% 4,359 3,684 1.59%
041005105 Wawa 2.4% 8,605 6,455 2.73%
Total 351,437 305,607 1.32%

Climate

Climate data for Batangas City (Ambulong Weather Station, normals 1981–2012)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 30.4
(86.7)
31.6
(88.9)
33.2
(91.8)
34.5
(94.1)
33.9
(93.0)
32.5
(90.5)
31.4
(88.5)
31.0
(87.8)
31.4
(88.5)
31.6
(88.9)
31.4
(88.5)
30.2
(86.4)
31.9
(89.5)
Daily mean °C (°F) 26.3
(79.3)
26.9
(80.4)
28.1
(82.6)
29.2
(84.6)
29.2
(84.6)
28.9
(84.0)
27.8
(82.0)
27.6
(81.7)
27.8
(82.0)
27.7
(81.9)
27.5
(81.5)
26.5
(79.7)
27.8
(82.0)
Average low °C (°F) 22.2
(72.0)
22.1
(71.8)
22.9
(73.2)
23.9
(75.0)
24.6
(76.3)
24.6
(76.3)
24.1
(75.4)
24.3
(75.7)
24.1
(75.4)
23.9
(75.0)
23.6
(74.5)
22.8
(73.0)
23.6
(74.5)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 22.7
(0.89)
16.0
(0.63)
21.5
(0.85)
35.0
(1.38)
116.6
(4.59)
228.7
(9.00)
329.6
(12.98)
286.9
(11.30)
255.0
(10.04)
218.4
(8.60)
144.7
(5.70)
92.0
(3.62)
1,767.1
(69.58)
Average rainy days 5 3 3 4 10 16 19 18 17 15 13 9 132
Average relative humidity (%) 77 79 74 73 76 80 83 84 84 83 81 80 80
Source: PAGASA[19]

Batangas City has a tropical savanna climate (Köppen climate classification system type Aw/As), straddling on a bordering tropical monsoon climate (Köppen climate classification system type Am) to the east. The city is dry from January to April, with temperatures reaching up to 33.3 °C (91.9 °F) in April, and rainy for the rest of the year, with July being the rainiest month, with up to 288 millimetres (11.3 in) of rainfall. Humidity levels are high for most of the year.

Demographics

Population census of Batangas City
YearPop.±% p.a.
1903 33,131—    
1918 41,089+1.45%
1939 49,164+0.86%
1948 59,582+2.16%
1960 82,627+2.76%
YearPop.±% p.a.
1970 108,868+2.79%
1975 125,363+2.87%
1980 143,570+2.75%
1990 184,970+2.57%
1995 211,879+2.58%
YearPop.±% p.a.
2000 247,588+3.40%
2007 295,231+2.46%
2010 305,607+1.26%
2015 329,874+1.47%
2020 351,437+1.25%
Source: Philippine Statistics Authority[20][18][21][22]

In the 2020 census, the population of Batangas City was 351,437 people, [3] with a density of 1,200 inhabitants per square kilometre or 3,100 inhabitants per square mile.

Economy

 
Port of Batangas

With the expansion of Batangas Port, the operation of different heavy industries and the construction of Phase II of the STAR Tollway project and diversion roads, Batangas City has seen a gradual shift from an agricultural economy to an industrial economy.

The northwest of the city hosts different commercial establishments while the lowland areas surrounding Batangas Bay hosts the heavy industries of the city. However, despite its gradual shift in becoming a major commercial/industrial hub for CALABARZON, it still shares rural landscapes that is still preserved in the north part of the city. The Poblacion area is the major retail and commercial center of the city. It is filled with banks, restaurants, and local businesses.

Being a major port city, Batangas has seen an increase in migrants from nearby provinces, islands, and even nation states such as China, India, Indonesia and Malaysia.

Agriculture

Agriculture remains an important source of food and income for residents of rural barangays. Residents in rural areas practice subsidence farming, with some of their harvest sold to the lowland public wet markets. Major crops include coconut, corn, vegetables, and mangoes.

Industries

Industries in Batangas City are concentrated around Batangas Port, Tabangao and Pinamucan areas, and Sorosoro Karsada. Shell, through its Philippine subsidiary, Pilipinas Shell, owns large refineries in Tabangao, and provides most of the fuel supply sold in Shell gas stations in southern Luzon and Metro Manila. JG Summit Holdings operates a petrochemical facility in Pinamucan Ibaba, with expansions to accommodate a coal power plant, which raised controversy to locals and environmentalists. Other companies also set up refineries for distribution to the province and nearby areas.

Commerce

Batangas City hosts shopping malls such as SM City Batangas, operated by SM Supermalls, and Bay City Mall and Nuciti Central, owned by local retail companies. There is a sizeable number of supermarkets in the urbanized areas, some being part of malls while others being stand-alone neighborhood markets, fiercely competing with local public markets.

The Poblacion area hosts numerous shops, restaurants, banks, pawnshops, and other establishments. Two major public markets in the city proper serves produce from the rural barangays of the city as well as nearby municipalities.

The Diversion Road, constructed to divert traffic going to Batangas Port and Bauan from the city proper, is seeing a rise in retail stores in addition to industrial space. Numerous car dealerships are being constructed along the length of the road in barangays Alangilan and Balagtas. Fast food restaurants, like McDonald's and Shakey's Pizza are also rising near the Batangas Central Terminal.

Real estate

In response to population and economic growth, local or national real estate companies are developing subdivisions to accommodate the increasing populations. Large-scale developments are present, mostly of local developers, but major developers like Ayala Land and Vista Land (through Camella) also have presence in the city.

Culture

Cuisine

The city is famous for its nilupak. The art of making the dish is indigenous to the area and has been cited as having a great potential for inclusion in the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Lists.

Festivals

Batangas City host three major religious festivals, such as the Feast of the Santo Niño at every third Sunday of January, as well as religious processions during Good Friday and the Feast of the Immaculate Conception. The Sublian Festival, held every July 23, revives the old Batangueño tradition of subli. The Batangas City Founding Day celebrations are done alongside the Sublian Festival on the same day.

Infrastructure

Transportation

Batangas City's public transportation mainly include jeepneys and tricycles. Also, the city has transportation between barangays and other cities and municipalities. The city's central transportation is the Batangas Grand Terminal, found beside the Diversion Road in Alangilan.

Roads

 
P. Burgos Street, looking north

Batangas City serves as a terminus for major highways like the Southern Tagalog Arterial Road (STAR Tollway), Jose P. Laurel Highway (N4) and Batangas-Quezon Road (N435), and Bauan-Batangas Road (N436). In the early 2000s, a diversion road is built to provide travellers a bypass to the existing highway through the urban centers. Despite the construction of the diversion, traffic bottlenecks remained inside the city. The city government is constructing a bypass road in the east to provide better access to the fast-growing industrial areas in the south of the city.

The poblacion of the city features a road network based on a rough grid, typical of Spanish-era cities and towns. Streets in the area are mostly named from historical figures, such as Apolinario Mabini, Diego Silang, Juan B. Alegre, the Gomburza (Mariano Gomez, José Burgos, and Jacinto Zamora) and the ilustrados (José Rizal, Marcelo del Pilar, and Graciano López Jaena).

Railways

Batangas City, then a town, was served by a branch line of the Philippine National Railways until its closure.

As part of Rodrigo Duterte's infrastructure development program, DuterteNomics or "Build-Build-Build", a railway line from Calamba will be constructed to connect with the city. The railway line, the Calamba-Batangas Line, a part of the longer Manila-Matnog Railway, is approved by the National Economic Development Authority on September 12, 2017, and funding will be provided by the Chinese government. Start of construction of the railway, as part of the Manila-Matnog Railway, is not yet set.[30]

Utilities

Electricity services in Batangas City is provided by Meralco for most of its barangays. Some barangays in the eastern rural area near the boundary with Taysan are served by the Batangas II Electric Cooperative (BATELEC-II) . Power in off-grid Verde Island is provided by diesel generators and solar panels.

The water services in the urbanized areas are provided by the Batangas City Water District (BCWD). Rural areas are localized, and provided by the Rural Waterworks and Sewage Authority.

The city is also locations of two major power plants that supply power to the Luzon grid:

  • Ilijan Power Plant – a natural gas power plant owned and operated by the Korea Electric Power Company (KEPCO)
  • San Lorenzo – Santa Rita Power Plant – a combined cycle natural gas power plant owned and operated by Firstgen

Education

Among the higher education institutions in the city is the Batangas State University, Lyceum of the Philippines University–Batangas, University of Batangas, St. Bridget College,

The Department of Education also maintains a division in Batangas City.[31] For of the academic year of 2013–2014, there are 82 public elementary schools[32] and 18 public high schools.[33] For the academic year of 2016–2017, 50 private schools offering various levels of education from pre-school to college level have legal permit to operate in the city.[34]

Media

ABS-CBN (through regional channel, ABS-CBN Southern Tagalog) and GMA Network serve Batangas City through local channels. ABS-CBN Southern Tagalog (DZAD-TV, channel 10) have hosted its studios in Batangas City until they moved to Lipa in 2015. GMA serves Batangas City through channels 12 (D-12-ZB-TV) and GTV via channel 26 (DZDK-TV). Cable television is provided by Batangas MyCATV (formerly Batangas CATV).

Batangas City has local newspapers like the English-language Sun.Star People's Courier and the Tagalog-language Balikas. Newspapers marketed in Metro Manila, such as the major broadsheets Philippine Star, Philippine Daily Inquirer, and Manila Bulletin, and tabloids like Abante, Balita, People's Journal, Pilipino Mirror, and Pilipino Star Ngayon, are also sold in the city through local distributors.

The city is the center of the radio listening market in Batangas, and is served by local radio stations, as well as some radio stations from Lipa and other parts of the Mega Manila area. The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Lipa, through the Radyo Bayanihan System, hosts two local radio stations: ALFM 95.9 Radyo Totoo (DWAL), a religion, news, talk, and music-oriented station, and 99.1 Spirit FM (DWAM), a religion and music-oriented station. Other radio stations include 91.9 Air1 Radio Southern Tagalog (DWCH), an adult contemporary-oriented station, 99.9 GV FM (DZGV), a contemporary hit radio station, and 104.7 Brigada News FM (DWEY), an FM news radio station. Batangas State University hosts a college radio station, 107.3 BatStateU FM (DWPB-FM). Signals from other stations in Metro Manila are not clearly received because of the local topography.

Gallery

 
Panorama of Batangas City and Mount Pinamucan

Footnotes

  1. ^ City of Batangas | (DILG)
  2. ^ "2015 Census of Population, Report No. 3 – Population, Land Area, and Population Density" (PDF). Philippine Statistics Authority. Quezon City, Philippines. August 2016. ISSN 0117-1453. (PDF) from the original on May 25, 2021. Retrieved July 16, 2021.
  3. ^ a b c d Census of Population (2020). "Region IV-A (Calabarzon)". Total Population by Province, City, Municipality and Barangay. PSA. Retrieved July 8, 2021.
  4. ^ "PSA releases the 2015 Municipal and City Level Poverty Estimates". Quezon City, Philippines. Retrieved January 1, 2020.
  5. ^ a b c d e Local Government of Batangas City 1999, pp. 8
  6. ^ City Investment & Tourism Office 2006
  7. ^ . Archived from the original on July 26, 2010. Retrieved July 9, 2010.
  8. ^ "Ibiblio.org: Triumph in the Philippines, Chapter XXIII Securing the Visayan Passages, Southern Luzon". Retrieved July 9, 2010.
  9. ^ Local Government of Batangas City 1999, pp. 7, 8
  10. ^ "President Arroyo inaugurates Batangas Port project". ABS-CBN News. Archived from the original on July 9, 2007. Retrieved July 9, 2010.
  11. ^ Local Government of Batangas City 1999, pp. 13, 14
  12. ^ "An Act Creating the Barrio of Pagkilatan in the Municipality of Batangas, Province of Batangas". LawPH.com. Retrieved April 9, 2011.
  13. ^ "An Act to Convert the Sitio of Malalim in the Barrio of Mahabang Dahilig, Municipality of Batangas, Province of Batangas, into a Barrio". LawPH.com. Retrieved April 11, 2011.
  14. ^ "An Act to Convert the Sitio of Malitam, in the Barrio of Libjo, Municipality of Batangas, Province of Batangas, into a Barrio". LawPH.com. Retrieved April 11, 2011.
  15. ^ "An Act to Convert the Sitios of Ilaya Labac, Matalisay, Pajo and Cacawan in Isla Verde, in the Municipality of Batangas, Province of Batangas, to a Barrio to Be Known As Barrio San Antonio of the Same Municipality". LawPH.com. Retrieved April 11, 2011.
  16. ^ "An Act Dividing the Barrio of Talumpoc, Municipality of Batangas, Province of Batangas, into Two Barrios to Be Known As the Barrios of Talumpok Silangan and Talumpok Kanluran of Said Municipality". LawPH.com. Retrieved April 12, 2011.
  17. ^ "An Act Changing the Names of Certain Barrios in the Municipality of Batangas, Province of Batangas". LawPH.com. Retrieved April 12, 2011.
  18. ^ a b Census of Population and Housing (2010). "Region IV-A (Calabarzon)". Total Population by Province, City, Municipality and Barangay. NSO. Retrieved June 29, 2016.
  19. ^ "Ambulong, Batangas Climatological Normal Values". Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration. Retrieved December 7, 2018.
  20. ^ Census of Population (2015). "Region IV-A (Calabarzon)". Total Population by Province, City, Municipality and Barangay. PSA. Retrieved June 20, 2016.
  21. ^ Censuses of Population (1903–2007). "Region IV-A (Calabarzon)". Table 1. Population Enumerated in Various Censuses by Province/Highly Urbanized City: 1903 to 2007. NSO.
  22. ^ "Province of Batangas". Municipality Population Data. Local Water Utilities Administration Research Division. Retrieved December 17, 2016.
  23. ^ "Poverty incidence (PI):". Philippine Statistics Authority. Retrieved December 28, 2020.
  24. ^ https://psa.gov.ph/sites/default/files/NSCB_LocalPovertyPhilippines_0.pdf; publication date: 29 November 2005; publisher: Philippine Statistics Authority.
  25. ^ https://psa.gov.ph/sites/default/files/2003%20SAE%20of%20poverty%20%28Full%20Report%29_1.pdf; publication date: 23 March 2009; publisher: Philippine Statistics Authority.
  26. ^ https://psa.gov.ph/sites/default/files/2006%20and%202009%20City%20and%20Municipal%20Level%20Poverty%20Estimates_0_1.pdf; publication date: 3 August 2012; publisher: Philippine Statistics Authority.
  27. ^ https://psa.gov.ph/sites/default/files/2012%20Municipal%20and%20City%20Level%20Poverty%20Estima7tes%20Publication%20%281%29.pdf; publication date: 31 May 2016; publisher: Philippine Statistics Authority.
  28. ^ https://psa.gov.ph/sites/default/files/City%20and%20Municipal-level%20Small%20Area%20Poverty%20Estimates_%202009%2C%202012%20and%202015_0.xlsx; publication date: 10 July 2019; publisher: Philippine Statistics Authority.
  29. ^ "PSA Releases the 2018 Municipal and City Level Poverty Estimates". Philippine Statistics Authority. December 15, 2021. Retrieved January 22, 2022.
  30. ^ "NEDA Board approves Manila subway, PNR South Rail projects". GMA News. September 12, 2017. Retrieved September 15, 2017.
  31. ^ Bueno, Donato. . Division of Batangas City (Department of Education). Archived from the original on November 19, 2014. Retrieved April 26, 2016.
  32. ^ (PDF). Department of Education – Calarbarzon. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 30, 2016. Retrieved April 26, 2016.
  33. ^ (PDF). Department of Education – Calarbarzon. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 13, 2017. Retrieved April 26, 2016.
  34. ^ (PDF). Department of Education – Calarbarzon. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 1, 2017. Retrieved April 26, 2016.

References

  • City Investment & Tourism Office (2006), Parine na't Magsaya sa Lungsod ng Batangas (pamphlet), Batangas City, Philippines
  • Local Government of Batangas City (July 23, 1999), Batangas City Profile, vol. 1, Batangas City, Philippines, pp. 7, 8, 13, 14

External links

  • Official website
  • Philippine Standard Geographic Code

batangas, city, officially, city, batangas, filipino, lungsod, batangas, class, component, city, capital, province, batangas, philippines, according, 2020, census, population, people, component, citycity, batangasfrom, bottom, batangas, capitol, citimart, supe. Batangas City officially the City of Batangas Filipino Lungsod ng Batangas is a 1st class component city and capital of the province of Batangas Philippines According to the 2020 census it has a population of 351 437 people 3 Batangas CityComponent cityCity of BatangasFrom top to bottom Batangas Capitol Citimart Supermarket Rizal Monument Port of Batangas Provincial CapitolFlagSealNicknames Industrial Port of Calabarzon Eco Tourist City of the Past Present and Future Green City BatangasMotto s All here So nearEto Batangueno DisiplinadoAnthem Batangas Lungsod Kong Mahal Batangas My Beloved City Map of Batangas with Batangas City highlightedOpenStreetMapBatangas CityLocation within the PhilippinesCoordinates 13 45 N 121 03 E 13 75 N 121 05 E 13 75 121 05 Coordinates 13 45 N 121 03 E 13 75 N 121 05 E 13 75 121 05CountryPhilippinesRegionCalabarzonProvinceBatangasDistrict5th districtFoundedMarch 10 1917CityhoodJuly 23 1969Barangays105 see Barangays Government 1 TypeSangguniang Panlungsod MayorBeverley Rose A Dimacuha Marino Vice MayorAlyssa Renee A Cruz Atienza RepresentativeMario Vittorio A Marino City CouncilMembers Hamilton G BlancoKarlos Emmanuel A ButedAndrea Loise F MacaraigNestor E DimacuhaOliver Z MacatangayArmando C LazarteNelson J ChavezJose Jonash Luis F TolentinoZester Carlo M HernandezIsidra M AtienzaLorenzo A Gamboa Jr Michael C Villena Electorate220 199 voters 2022 Area 2 Total282 96 km2 109 25 sq mi Elevation128 m 420 ft Highest elevation965 m 3 166 ft Lowest elevation0 m 0 ft Population 2020 census 3 Total351 437 Density1 200 km2 3 200 sq mi Households87 196DemonymsBatangueno male Batanguena female BatangueneanEconomy Income class1st city income class Poverty incidence4 63 2015 4 Revenue 3 220 240 531 52 2020 Assets 8 491 503 587 31 2020 Expenditure 3 209 264 251 70 2020 Liabilities 1 985 725 520 16 2020 Service provider ElectricityManila Electric Company Meralco Time zoneUTC 8 PST ZIP code4200PSGC041005000IDD area code 63 0 43Native languagesTagalogNumbered highwaysE2 STAR Tollway N4 Jose P Laurel Highway N434 N436 N437 N438 Antonio Carpio Road N439Feast dateJanuary 16Websitewww wbr batangascity wbr gov wbr phBatangas City is classified as one of the fastest urbanizing cities of the Philippines and is known as the Industrial Port City of Calabarzon It is home to the Batangas International Port one of the busiest passenger and container terminals in the Philippines It also hosts one of the largest oil refineries in the country three natural gas power plants and several other major industries In addition the city also serves as the educational industrial and the transportation center of the province Contents 1 History 1 1 Foreign rule 1 2 Independence and onwards 1 3 Cityhood 1 4 Contemporary history 2 Geography 2 1 Barangays 2 2 Climate 3 Demographics 4 Economy 4 1 Agriculture 4 2 Industries 4 3 Commerce 4 4 Real estate 5 Culture 5 1 Cuisine 5 2 Festivals 6 Infrastructure 6 1 Transportation 6 1 1 Roads 6 1 2 Railways 6 2 Utilities 7 Education 8 Media 9 Gallery 10 Footnotes 11 References 12 External linksHistory EditForeign rule Edit Aerial view of Batangas circa 1923 The first Spanish missionaries arrived in Batangas City in 1572 due to group migration Finally in 1581 Spanish authorities governing the Philippines created a pueblo in the area which included the hill now Hilltop where the present Provincial Capitol of Batangas stands after the formal end of the Coumintang Kingdom The town was named Batangan because huge logs locally called batang abounded in the place The Spanish government appointed Don Agustin Casilao as Batangan s first gobernadorcillo Said title of little governor as head of the pueblo or municipio was replaced in 1894 by capital municipal It is not clear who succeeded Casilao nor is it known whether there were subsequent appointments of capital municipal Don Agustin Casilao is sometimes referred to as Agustino or Augustino in some sources By 1870 its barangays were Balagtas Bilogo Bolbok Bukal Catandala Konde De La Paz Kumintang Ibaba Matuko Mapagong Paharang Kanluran Pairang Pinamucan Patulo Sampaga San Agapito San Isidro and Talahib 5 6 At the coming of the Americans in the early 1900s local civil government of Batangas was set up It took effect on July 4 1901 with Jose Villanueva elected as Municipal President His term expired in 1903 5 Subsequent elections installed the following as municipal presidents Juan Palacios 1904 1905 Jose Arguelles 1906 Marcelo Llana 1907 Sisenando Ferriols 1908 1909 Ventura Tolentino 1910 1914 Julian Rosales 1915 Juan Gutierrez 1916 1919 Julian Rosales 1920 1922 Juan Buenafe 1923 1930 Perfecto Condez 1931 1937 Juan Buenafe 1938 1940 In 1941 the title Municipal President was changed to Municipal Mayor Pedro Berberabe was elected first municipal mayor 5 Batangas City was severely damaged due to the Japanese A6M Zero bombardment and on December 12 1941 the Batangas Airport which is located in Barangay Alangilan is totally destroyed On October 14 1943 municipal councilor Roman L Perez was appointed Mayor by the Japanese after the inauguration of the Second Republic of the Philippines Liberation begun when 158th Regimental Combat Team or 158th RCT under the command of the US 6th Army reached Poblacion Batangas City by March 11 during the Philippines Liberation Campaign of 1944 45 By the end of April the same that year some elements of the 188th Glider Infantry Regiment of the 11th Airborne Division was left to clear the barangays east and mountains south of the city as the main Allied Force continued their drive towards the Quezon Province Some of hundreds thousands local Filipino soldiers and officers of the 4th and 42nd Infantry Division of the Philippine Commonwealth Army and 4th Constabulary Regiment of the Philippine Constabulary was entering and re invaded in Batangas City Throughout the battle recognized Filipino Guerrilla fighters played an important key role in the advancement of the combined American and Philippine Commonwealth troops providing key roads and information for the Japanese location of defenses and movements Hostilities ended as the war came closer to the end 7 8 Independence and onwards Edit After the Liberation Pres Manuel Roxas issued his reappointment Mayor Perez ran and won in 1944 the first post War elections in the country In November 1949 he was killed by an unknown assassin Vice Mayor Atilano Magadia succeeded then Mayor Perez He served until 1951 Mayor Macario Chavez was elected in 1951 His four year term ended in 1955 5 People voted Pedro S Tolentino overwhelmingly as mayor in 1956 He was reelected three times 5 Cityhood Edit Main article Cities of the Philippines In 1965 Republic Act 4586 was signed by President Diosdado Macapagal converting Batangas into a city If is successful it will be renamed as Laurel after former president Jose P Laurel a native of Tanauan However the voters rejected the cityhood and renaming of Batangas in a plebiscite On July 23 1969 Batangas became a city successfully by the virtue of Republic Act 5495 Unlike in 1965 the city used its same name Pedro S Tolentino became its first city mayor Contemporary history Edit The succeeding city mayors followed are Mayor Macario M Mendoza 1974 1979 Alfredo M Borbon 1979 1980 Conrado C Berberabe 1980 1986 Jose M Atienza 1986 1987 Mario M Perez 1987 Eduardo B Dimacuha 1988 1998 Angelito D Dimacuha 1998 2001 and again Eduardo B Dimacuha 2001 2010 Vilma A Dimacuha 2010 2013 and again Eduardo B Dimacuha 2013 2016 Beverley Rose A Dimacuha 2016 present 9 Meanwhile on January 19 2008 President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo opened Phase II project of the Batangas City International Container Port with turn over to the Philippine Ports Authority She also inspected a major road project in Southern Tagalog She then inspected the P1 5 billion Southern Tagalog Arterial Road STAR Stage II Phase 1 connecting Lipa 19 74 kilometers and Batangas and the South Luzon Expressway SLEX road widening expansion and the STAR toll way development projects in Batangas 10 Geography EditBatangas City lies in the southernmost part of Batangas facing Batangas Bay It is bordered by San Jose to the north Verde Island Passage to the south Ibaan Taysan and Lobo to the east and San Pascual to the west The Calumpang River crosses the city from northeast to southwest The area west of Calumpang River is generally plains while the eastern area is mostly foothills and mountains Batangas City is 105 kilometres 65 mi from Manila Barangays Edit Batangas City is politically subdivided into 107 barangays 11 Pagkilatan was formerly a sitio of Matoco 12 Malalim was formerly the southern portion of the barrio of Sirang Lupa the northern portion of the barrio Mahabang Dahilig and the eastern portion of San Isidro together with the sitio of Malalim this territory became a barrio barangay in 1954 13 In the same year sitio Malitam formerly part of barrio Libjo was elevated as a barrio 14 San Antonio was constituted from the sitios of Ilaya Labac Matalisay Pajo and Cacawan from the barrio of San Agapito 15 In 1957 the barrio of Talumpok was divided into two Sitios Romano Poyesan Bondeo and Latag were constituted into Talumpok Silangan while sitios Ginto Duhatan Kulingkang Piit and Cuaba were constituted into Talumpok Kanluran 16 Balagtas was formerly known as Patay Kumintang Ilaya as Sambat Ilaya and Kumintang Ibaba as Sambat Ibaba 17 PSGC Barangay Population p a 2020 3 2010 18 041005001Alangilan 4 5 15 669 13 332 1 53 041005002Balagtas 2 9 10 214 9 120 1 07 041005003Balete 3 0 10 520 9 098 1 37 041005004Banaba Center 0 8 2 808 1 984 3 31 041005005Banaba Ibaba 1 0 3 408 2 023 5 01 041005006Banaba Kanluran 1 1 3 949 3 413 1 38 041005007Banaba Silangan 0 7 2 373 1 931 1 95 041005008Barangay 1 0 2 771 706 0 83 041005009Barangay 2 0 1 501 606 1 77 041005010Barangay 3 0 1 261 367 3 14 041005011Barangay 4 0 5 1 638 1 499 0 83 041005012Barangay 5 0 2 569 634 1 01 041005013Barangay 6 0 5 1 810 2 009 0 97 041005014Barangay 7 0 1 451 715 4 23 041005015Barangay 8 0 1 478 577 1 75 041005016Barangay 9 0 1 257 283 0 90 041005017Barangay 10 0 1 263 353 2 72 041005018Barangay 11 0 1 348 768 7 15 041005019Barangay 12 0 4 1 393 1 377 0 11 041005020Barangay 13 0 1 348 509 3 50 041005021Barangay 14 0 1 233 294 2 16 041005022Barangay 15 0 1 196 170 1 34 041005023Barangay 16 0 0 101 197 6 07 041005024Barangay 17 0 0 116 104 1 03 041005025Barangay 18 0 1 328 382 1 42 041005026Barangay 19 0 1 400 955 7 83 041005027Barangay 20 0 1 383 344 1 01 041005028Barangay 21 0 2 680 664 0 22 041005029Barangay 22 0 0 94 234 8 19 041005030Barangay 23 0 2 698 635 0 89 041005031Barangay 24 0 4 1 411 2 877 6 46 041005032Bilogo 0 6 2 073 1 829 1 18 041005033Bolbok 3 6 12 788 11 806 0 75 041005034Bukal 0 9 3 129 2 460 2 28 041005035Calicanto 3 1 10 769 10 315 0 40 041005036Catandala 0 2 706 644 0 87 041005037Concepcion 1 1 3 933 3 412 1 34 041005038Conde Itaas 0 4 1 427 1 305 0 84 041005039Conde Labak 0 7 2 355 1 763 2 75 041005040Cuta 4 0 14 072 11 460 1 94 041005041Dalig 0 9 3 220 2 248 3 43 041005042Dela Paz 0 8 2 726 2 377 1 29 041005043Dela Paz Pulot Aplaya 0 2 587 583 0 06 041005044Dela Paz Pulot Itaas 0 1 429 419 0 22 041005045Domoclay 1 1 3 908 3 246 1 75 041005046Dumantay 1 6 5 753 3 685 4 26 041005047Gulod Itaas 1 7 6 028 4 950 1 86 041005048Gulod Labak 0 7 2 415 2 433 0 07 041005049Haligue Kanluran 0 3 1 210 1 112 0 79 041005050Haligue Silangan 0 6 2 016 1 699 1 62 041005051Ilihan 1 3 4 562 3 920 1 43 041005052Kumba 0 3 1 013 914 0 97 041005053Kumintang Ibaba 2 6 9 162 10 134 0 94 041005054Kumintang Ilaya 3 1 10 900 10 320 0 51 041005055Libjo 3 5 12 256 10 964 1 05 041005056Liponpon Isla Verde 0 2 664 746 1 09 041005057Maapas 0 1 202 208 0 27 041005058Mabacong 0 6 2 159 1 873 1 34 041005059Mahabang Dahilig 0 4 1 568 1 430 0 87 041005060Mahabang Parang 1 0 3 394 3 267 0 36 041005061Mahacot Kanluran 0 2 695 600 1 39 041005062Mahacot Silangan 0 2 772 680 1 20 041005063Malalim 0 4 1 352 1 190 1 20 041005064Malibayo 0 1 485 461 0 48 041005065Malitam 2 4 8 563 6 686 2 35 041005066Maruclap 0 3 1 049 957 0 86 041005067Pagkilatan 0 5 1 603 1 321 1 83 041005068Paharang Kanluran 0 4 1 310 1 314 0 03 041005069Paharang Silangan 0 4 1 395 1 222 1 25 041005070Pallocan Kanluran 2 0 6 854 6 259 0 85 041005071Pallocan Silangan 0 9 3 286 2 026 4 64 041005072Pinamucan 1 2 4 295 3 607 1 65 041005073Pinamucan Ibaba 0 5 1 822 1 410 2 43 041005074Pinamucan Silangan 0 3 1 228 1 125 0 82 041005075Sampaga 1 3 4 458 3 980 1 07 041005076San Agapito Isla Verde 0 3 1 186 1 191 0 04 041005077San Agustin Kanluran Isla Verde 0 2 669 715 0 62 041005078San Agustin Silangan Isla Verde 0 2 720 775 0 69 041005079San Andres Isla Verde 0 3 893 972 0 79 041005080San Antonio Isla Verde 0 3 943 1 098 1 42 041005081San Isidro 2 1 7 378 6 887 0 65 041005082San Jose Sico 1 7 5 815 4 627 2 17 041005083San Miguel 0 7 2 351 2 247 0 42 041005084San Pedro 0 5 1 910 1 510 2 23 041005085Santa Clara 3 7 12 843 10 584 1 83 041005086Santa Rita Aplaya 0 5 1 795 2 281 2 22 041005087Santa Rita Karsada 5 8 20 321 17 330 1 50 041005088Santo Domingo 0 5 1 915 1 789 0 64 041005089Santo Nino 0 7 2 468 2 520 0 20 041005090Simlong 1 2 4 188 3 800 0 92 041005091Sirang Lupa 0 5 1 779 1 369 2 49 041005092Sorosoro Ibaba 0 9 3 042 2 713 1 08 041005093Sorosoro Ilaya 2 2 7 650 1 801 14 52 041005094Sorosoro Karsada 1 0 3 581 1 764 6 86 041005095Tabangao Ambulong 1 7 6 038 4 862 2 05 041005096Tabangao Aplaya 0 7 2 508 3 216 2 30 041005097Tabangao Dao 0 8 2 978 2 625 1 19 041005098Talahib Pandayan 0 7 2 299 2 301 0 01 041005099Talahib Payapa 0 1 519 575 0 96 041005100Talumpok Kanluran 0 8 2 900 2 867 0 11 041005101Talumpok Silangan 0 7 2 301 1 845 2 09 041005102Tinga Itaas 0 9 3 060 2 801 0 83 041005103Tinga Labak 2 0 7 164 5 883 1 86 041005104Tulo 1 2 4 359 3 684 1 59 041005105Wawa 2 4 8 605 6 455 2 73 Total 351 437 305 607 1 32 Climate Edit Climate data for Batangas City Ambulong Weather Station normals 1981 2012 Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage high C F 30 4 86 7 31 6 88 9 33 2 91 8 34 5 94 1 33 9 93 0 32 5 90 5 31 4 88 5 31 0 87 8 31 4 88 5 31 6 88 9 31 4 88 5 30 2 86 4 31 9 89 5 Daily mean C F 26 3 79 3 26 9 80 4 28 1 82 6 29 2 84 6 29 2 84 6 28 9 84 0 27 8 82 0 27 6 81 7 27 8 82 0 27 7 81 9 27 5 81 5 26 5 79 7 27 8 82 0 Average low C F 22 2 72 0 22 1 71 8 22 9 73 2 23 9 75 0 24 6 76 3 24 6 76 3 24 1 75 4 24 3 75 7 24 1 75 4 23 9 75 0 23 6 74 5 22 8 73 0 23 6 74 5 Average precipitation mm inches 22 7 0 89 16 0 0 63 21 5 0 85 35 0 1 38 116 6 4 59 228 7 9 00 329 6 12 98 286 9 11 30 255 0 10 04 218 4 8 60 144 7 5 70 92 0 3 62 1 767 1 69 58 Average rainy days 5 3 3 4 10 16 19 18 17 15 13 9 132Average relative humidity 77 79 74 73 76 80 83 84 84 83 81 80 80Source PAGASA 19 Batangas City has a tropical savanna climate Koppen climate classification system type Aw As straddling on a bordering tropical monsoon climate Koppen climate classification system type Am to the east The city is dry from January to April with temperatures reaching up to 33 3 C 91 9 F in April and rainy for the rest of the year with July being the rainiest month with up to 288 millimetres 11 3 in of rainfall Humidity levels are high for most of the year Demographics EditPopulation census of Batangas CityYearPop p a 190333 131 191841 089 1 45 193949 164 0 86 194859 582 2 16 196082 627 2 76 YearPop p a 1970108 868 2 79 1975125 363 2 87 1980143 570 2 75 1990184 970 2 57 1995211 879 2 58 YearPop p a 2000247 588 3 40 2007295 231 2 46 2010305 607 1 26 2015329 874 1 47 2020351 437 1 25 Source Philippine Statistics Authority 20 18 21 22 In the 2020 census the population of Batangas City was 351 437 people 3 with a density of 1 200 inhabitants per square kilometre or 3 100 inhabitants per square mile Economy Edit Port of Batangas Poverty Incidence of Batangas City Source Philippine Statistics Authority 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 With the expansion of Batangas Port the operation of different heavy industries and the construction of Phase II of the STAR Tollway project and diversion roads Batangas City has seen a gradual shift from an agricultural economy to an industrial economy The northwest of the city hosts different commercial establishments while the lowland areas surrounding Batangas Bay hosts the heavy industries of the city However despite its gradual shift in becoming a major commercial industrial hub for CALABARZON it still shares rural landscapes that is still preserved in the north part of the city The Poblacion area is the major retail and commercial center of the city It is filled with banks restaurants and local businesses Being a major port city Batangas has seen an increase in migrants from nearby provinces islands and even nation states such as China India Indonesia and Malaysia Agriculture Edit Agriculture remains an important source of food and income for residents of rural barangays Residents in rural areas practice subsidence farming with some of their harvest sold to the lowland public wet markets Major crops include coconut corn vegetables and mangoes Industries Edit Industries in Batangas City are concentrated around Batangas Port Tabangao and Pinamucan areas and Sorosoro Karsada Shell through its Philippine subsidiary Pilipinas Shell owns large refineries in Tabangao and provides most of the fuel supply sold in Shell gas stations in southern Luzon and Metro Manila JG Summit Holdings operates a petrochemical facility in Pinamucan Ibaba with expansions to accommodate a coal power plant which raised controversy to locals and environmentalists Other companies also set up refineries for distribution to the province and nearby areas Commerce Edit Batangas City hosts shopping malls such as SM City Batangas operated by SM Supermalls and Bay City Mall and Nuciti Central owned by local retail companies There is a sizeable number of supermarkets in the urbanized areas some being part of malls while others being stand alone neighborhood markets fiercely competing with local public markets The Poblacion area hosts numerous shops restaurants banks pawnshops and other establishments Two major public markets in the city proper serves produce from the rural barangays of the city as well as nearby municipalities The Diversion Road constructed to divert traffic going to Batangas Port and Bauan from the city proper is seeing a rise in retail stores in addition to industrial space Numerous car dealerships are being constructed along the length of the road in barangays Alangilan and Balagtas Fast food restaurants like McDonald s and Shakey s Pizza are also rising near the Batangas Central Terminal Real estate Edit In response to population and economic growth local or national real estate companies are developing subdivisions to accommodate the increasing populations Large scale developments are present mostly of local developers but major developers like Ayala Land and Vista Land through Camella also have presence in the city Culture EditCuisine Edit The city is famous for its nilupak The art of making the dish is indigenous to the area and has been cited as having a great potential for inclusion in the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Lists Festivals Edit Batangas City host three major religious festivals such as the Feast of the Santo Nino at every third Sunday of January as well as religious processions during Good Friday and the Feast of the Immaculate Conception The Sublian Festival held every July 23 revives the old Batangueno tradition of subli The Batangas City Founding Day celebrations are done alongside the Sublian Festival on the same day Infrastructure EditTransportation Edit Batangas City s public transportation mainly include jeepneys and tricycles Also the city has transportation between barangays and other cities and municipalities The city s central transportation is the Batangas Grand Terminal found beside the Diversion Road in Alangilan Roads Edit P Burgos Street looking north Batangas City serves as a terminus for major highways like the Southern Tagalog Arterial Road STAR Tollway Jose P Laurel Highway N4 and Batangas Quezon Road N435 and Bauan Batangas Road N436 In the early 2000s a diversion road is built to provide travellers a bypass to the existing highway through the urban centers Despite the construction of the diversion traffic bottlenecks remained inside the city The city government is constructing a bypass road in the east to provide better access to the fast growing industrial areas in the south of the city The poblacion of the city features a road network based on a rough grid typical of Spanish era cities and towns Streets in the area are mostly named from historical figures such as Apolinario Mabini Diego Silang Juan B Alegre the Gomburza Mariano Gomez Jose Burgos and Jacinto Zamora and the ilustrados Jose Rizal Marcelo del Pilar and Graciano Lopez Jaena Railways Edit Batangas City then a town was served by a branch line of the Philippine National Railways until its closure As part of Rodrigo Duterte s infrastructure development program DuterteNomics or Build Build Build a railway line from Calamba will be constructed to connect with the city The railway line the Calamba Batangas Line a part of the longer Manila Matnog Railway is approved by the National Economic Development Authority on September 12 2017 and funding will be provided by the Chinese government Start of construction of the railway as part of the Manila Matnog Railway is not yet set 30 Utilities Edit Electricity services in Batangas City is provided by Meralco for most of its barangays Some barangays in the eastern rural area near the boundary with Taysan are served by the Batangas II Electric Cooperative BATELEC II Power in off grid Verde Island is provided by diesel generators and solar panels The water services in the urbanized areas are provided by the Batangas City Water District BCWD Rural areas are localized and provided by the Rural Waterworks and Sewage Authority The city is also locations of two major power plants that supply power to the Luzon grid Ilijan Power Plant a natural gas power plant owned and operated by the Korea Electric Power Company KEPCO San Lorenzo Santa Rita Power Plant a combined cycle natural gas power plant owned and operated by FirstgenEducation EditAmong the higher education institutions in the city is the Batangas State University Lyceum of the Philippines University Batangas University of Batangas St Bridget College The Department of Education also maintains a division in Batangas City 31 For of the academic year of 2013 2014 there are 82 public elementary schools 32 and 18 public high schools 33 For the academic year of 2016 2017 50 private schools offering various levels of education from pre school to college level have legal permit to operate in the city 34 Media EditABS CBN through regional channel ABS CBN Southern Tagalog and GMA Network serve Batangas City through local channels ABS CBN Southern Tagalog DZAD TV channel 10 have hosted its studios in Batangas City until they moved to Lipa in 2015 GMA serves Batangas City through channels 12 D 12 ZB TV and GTV via channel 26 DZDK TV Cable television is provided by Batangas MyCATV formerly Batangas CATV Batangas City has local newspapers like the English language Sun Star People s Courier and the Tagalog language Balikas Newspapers marketed in Metro Manila such as the major broadsheets Philippine Star Philippine Daily Inquirer and Manila Bulletin and tabloids like Abante Balita People s Journal Pilipino Mirror and Pilipino Star Ngayon are also sold in the city through local distributors The city is the center of the radio listening market in Batangas and is served by local radio stations as well as some radio stations from Lipa and other parts of the Mega Manila area The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Lipa through the Radyo Bayanihan System hosts two local radio stations ALFM 95 9 Radyo Totoo DWAL a religion news talk and music oriented station and 99 1 Spirit FM DWAM a religion and music oriented station Other radio stations include 91 9 Air1 Radio Southern Tagalog DWCH an adult contemporary oriented station 99 9 GV FM DZGV a contemporary hit radio station and 104 7 Brigada News FM DWEY an FM news radio station Batangas State University hosts a college radio station 107 3 BatStateU FM DWPB FM Signals from other stations in Metro Manila are not clearly received because of the local topography Gallery Edit Panorama of Batangas City and Mount Pinamucan Basilica Immaculate Conception Parish Plaza Mabini Mount Banoy Batangas City HallFootnotes Edit City of Batangas DILG 2015 Census of Population Report No 3 Population Land Area and Population Density PDF Philippine Statistics Authority Quezon City Philippines August 2016 ISSN 0117 1453 Archived PDF from the original on May 25 2021 Retrieved July 16 2021 a b c d Census of Population 2020 Region IV A Calabarzon Total Population by Province City Municipality and Barangay PSA Retrieved July 8 2021 PSA releases the 2015 Municipal and City Level Poverty Estimates Quezon City Philippines Retrieved January 1 2020 a b c d e Local Government of Batangas City 1999 pp 8 City Investment amp Tourism Office 2006 Official Website Historical Background Archived from the original on July 26 2010 Retrieved July 9 2010 Ibiblio org Triumph in the Philippines Chapter XXIII Securing the Visayan Passages Southern Luzon Retrieved July 9 2010 Local Government of Batangas City 1999 pp 7 8 President Arroyo inaugurates Batangas Port project ABS CBN News Archived from the original on July 9 2007 Retrieved July 9 2010 Local Government of Batangas City 1999 pp 13 14 An Act Creating the Barrio of Pagkilatan in the Municipality of Batangas Province of Batangas LawPH com Retrieved April 9 2011 An Act to Convert the Sitio of Malalim in the Barrio of Mahabang Dahilig Municipality of Batangas Province of Batangas into a Barrio LawPH com Retrieved April 11 2011 An Act to Convert the Sitio of Malitam in the Barrio of Libjo Municipality of Batangas Province of Batangas into a Barrio LawPH com Retrieved April 11 2011 An Act to Convert the Sitios of Ilaya Labac Matalisay Pajo and Cacawan in Isla Verde in the Municipality of Batangas Province of Batangas to a Barrio to Be Known As Barrio San Antonio of the Same Municipality LawPH com Retrieved April 11 2011 An Act Dividing the Barrio of Talumpoc Municipality of Batangas Province of Batangas into Two Barrios to Be Known As the Barrios of Talumpok Silangan and Talumpok Kanluran of Said Municipality LawPH com Retrieved April 12 2011 An Act Changing the Names of Certain Barrios in the Municipality of Batangas Province of Batangas LawPH com Retrieved April 12 2011 a b Census of Population and Housing 2010 Region IV A Calabarzon Total Population by Province City Municipality and Barangay NSO Retrieved June 29 2016 Ambulong Batangas Climatological Normal Values Philippine Atmospheric Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration Retrieved December 7 2018 Census of Population 2015 Region IV A Calabarzon Total Population by Province City Municipality and Barangay PSA Retrieved June 20 2016 Censuses of Population 1903 2007 Region IV A Calabarzon Table 1 Population Enumerated in Various Censuses by Province Highly Urbanized City 1903 to 2007 NSO Province of Batangas Municipality Population Data Local Water Utilities Administration Research Division Retrieved December 17 2016 Poverty incidence PI Philippine Statistics Authority Retrieved December 28 2020 https psa gov ph sites default files NSCB LocalPovertyPhilippines 0 pdf publication date 29 November 2005 publisher Philippine Statistics Authority https psa gov ph sites default files 2003 20SAE 20of 20poverty 20 28Full 20Report 29 1 pdf publication date 23 March 2009 publisher Philippine Statistics Authority https psa gov ph sites default files 2006 20and 202009 20City 20and 20Municipal 20Level 20Poverty 20Estimates 0 1 pdf publication date 3 August 2012 publisher Philippine Statistics Authority https psa gov ph sites default files 2012 20Municipal 20and 20City 20Level 20Poverty 20Estima7tes 20Publication 20 281 29 pdf publication date 31 May 2016 publisher Philippine Statistics Authority https psa gov ph sites default files City 20and 20Municipal level 20Small 20Area 20Poverty 20Estimates 202009 2C 202012 20and 202015 0 xlsx publication date 10 July 2019 publisher Philippine Statistics Authority PSA Releases the 2018 Municipal and City Level Poverty Estimates Philippine Statistics Authority December 15 2021 Retrieved January 22 2022 NEDA Board approves Manila subway PNR South Rail projects GMA News September 12 2017 Retrieved September 15 2017 Bueno Donato Message Division of Batangas City Department of Education Archived from the original on November 19 2014 Retrieved April 26 2016 Masterlist of Schools Based on School Year in Public Elementary Schools Batangas City PDF Department of Education Calarbarzon Archived from the original PDF on June 30 2016 Retrieved April 26 2016 Masterlist of Schools Based on School Year in Public Secondary Schools Batangas City PDF Department of Education Calarbarzon Archived from the original PDF on October 13 2017 Retrieved April 26 2016 LIST OF PRIVATE SCHOOLS OPERATING WITH PERMIT RECOGNITION REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES Department of Education Region IV A CALABARZON BATANGAS CITY PDF Department of Education Calarbarzon Archived from the original PDF on March 1 2017 Retrieved April 26 2016 References EditCity Investment amp Tourism Office 2006 Parine na t Magsaya sa Lungsod ng Batangas pamphlet Batangas City Philippines Local Government of Batangas City July 23 1999 Batangas City Profile vol 1 Batangas City Philippines pp 7 8 13 14External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Batangas City Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Batangas City Wikisource has original text related to this article 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica Batangas Official website Philippine Standard Geographic Code Philippine Census Information Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Batangas City amp oldid 1128451417, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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