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San Mateo, Rizal

San Mateo, officially the Municipality of San Mateo (Tagalog: Bayan ng San Mateo), is a 1st class municipality in the province of Rizal, Philippines. According to the 2020 census, it has a population of 273,306.

San Mateo
Municipality of San Mateo
Welcome facade of San Mateo at Nangka Bridge
Nickname: 
Mountain Biking Capital of the Philippines
Motto(s): 
"San Mateo, Bayan Ko, Mahal Ko"
(San Mateo, My Town, My Love)
Map of Rizal with San Mateo highlighted
OpenStreetMap
San Mateo
Location within the Philippines
Coordinates: 14°41′49″N 121°07′19″E / 14.69694°N 121.12194°E / 14.69694; 121.12194Coordinates: 14°41′49″N 121°07′19″E / 14.69694°N 121.12194°E / 14.69694; 121.12194
CountryPhilippines
RegionCalabarzon
ProvinceRizal
District 3rd district
FoundedSeptember 21, 1571[1]
Named forSt. Matthew the Apostle
Barangays15 (see Barangays)
Government
[2]
 • TypeSangguniang Bayan
 • MayorOmie Rivera (LP)
 • Vice MayorJimmy Roxas (PDP-Laban)
 • RepresentativeJose Arturo Garcia Jr. (NPC)
 • Municipal Council
Members
 • Electorate110,276 voters (2022)
Area
 • Total55.09 km2 (21.27 sq mi)
Elevation
80 m (260 ft)
Highest elevation
435 m (1,427 ft)
Lowest elevation
8 m (26 ft)
Population
 (2020 census) [4]
 • Total273,306
 • Rank6 out of 1,489 Municipalities
 • Density5,000/km2 (13,000/sq mi)
 • Households
64,054
Economy
 • Income class1st municipal income class
 • Poverty incidence4.22% (2018)[5]
 • Revenue₱797,887,464.32 (2020)
 • Assets₱1,835,617,070.59 (2020)
 • Expenditure₱833,461,750.76 (2020)
 • Liabilities₱752,874,574.38 (2020)
Service provider
 • ElectricityManila Electric Company (Meralco)
Time zoneUTC+8 (PST)
ZIP code
1850
PSGC
045811000
IDD:area code+63 (0)2
Native languagesTagalog
Websitewww.sanmateo.gov.ph

It is bordered by Quezon City to the west, Marikina and Antipolo to the south, and by the Municipality of Rodriguez to the north. San Mateo is approximately 24 kilometers (15 mi) east of Manila and 11 kilometers (6.8 mi) north of Antipolo, the provincial capital of Rizal.

Conurbated to the urban agglomeration of the Greater Manila Area, San Mateo is one of the fastest-growing municipalities in Rizal Province, according to the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA) and the Provincial Government of Rizal. It is a commuter hub to Metro Manila.

San Mateo is the home of the miraculous image of Our Lady of Aranzazu (Nuestra Señora de Aranzazu).

History

In his book Conquistas de las Islas Filipinas, Father Gaspar de San Agustín records what is now San Mateo in 1572 to be a satellite settlement of Pasig. He described the inhabitants being “fierce but friendly and of quiet disposition.” Father Juan de Medina, in his account Relación de los Conventos Y Pueblos Fundados por los PP. Agustinos likewise put 1572 as the year the Parish of San Mateo was established. However, according to Miguel López de Legazpi, the first Governor-General of the Philippines from 1571 to 1572, it was his nephew Juan de Salcedo who arrived at the site of the town during an expedition to Manila from Cebu. Accounts say that two years prior, Legazpi sent Salcedo along with 150 soldiers to prepare the inauguration of the City of Manila. It must have been Salcedo who discovered the town before Legazpi inaugurated Manila on June 24, 1571.

Still, another account was that of a certain Augustinian named Father Cavada, who said that the first chapel in the islands with Saint Matthew as patron was built by the riverside in 1596 south of the present Población of the town, which was then only a Barrio of Tondo. Saint Matthew thus gave the town his name as the chapel was built on his feast day.

What may be gleaned from the above accounts somehow is that San Mateo was discovered sometime in 1571, while its first church was built in 1596. It may be true, too, that the Parish of San Mateo was erected in 1572.

Aside from the disagreement over the town’s precise foundation date, there is uncertainty as to how San Mateo acquired its name. According to one account, when the Spaniards made a reconnaissance of Manila's environs, they saw the San Mateo floodplains and were enamored by the natural beauty of the place. They decided to found a community there and one day, a Spanish scribe happened to stand on a mound with a book in one hand and a pen in the other. His statuesque pose prompted a companion to laugh and comment how the scribe resembled Saint Matthew, referring to the usual manner the evangelist is depicted in art. In the midst of their banter and merriment, they decided to call the place “San Mateo”.

Another account says that San Mateo was named for its geographical resemblance to another town in Spain of the same name. As described by Paluzie in a geographical book, this small Spanish town is near a high mountain (and) has a river that flowed through its center, which often floods but quickly recedes. The town is also a grazing pasture for big animals and a fishing village. The present San Mateo is traversed by the Maly and Nangka rivers and its flood plains may have been a lush grazing area then.

The Augustinian priests in San Mateo were later formally replaced (in 1689) by the Jesuits, who as early as 1637 included San Mateo among their missions, with the missions of San Isidro and Paynaan under it. The Jesuits brought with them an image of the Virgin Mary which came from the Spanish town of Arantzazu in Vizcaya. They were the ones responsible for building the church now located in the Población since the original chapel by the Augustinians beside the river was destroyed in a flood. The location of the present church is in Barangay Santa Ana and its patron saint is Our Lady of Aranzazu. The original image of Saint Matthew, which was housed in the destroyed Augustinian chapel, was translated to Barangay Dulongbayan (formerly llaya), where it was enshrined as patron of the village, which still keeps his feast on 21 September.

In the following centuries, San Mateo had a colorful and distinguished history. In 1639, a pitched battle ensued between Chinese rebels on one side and combined Spanish and native troops on the other. The Chinese were defeated and retreated east to the Sierra Madre Mountains, but not before burning the town and its church.

On May 16, 1687, the territory and convent of San Mateo were added to Pasig by the Augustinians, with the headquarters and residences of the mission at Mariquina (Marikina). Two years later, the Augustinians handed over the ecclesiastical administration of San Mateo to the Jesuits. In 1699, the convent of Saint Augustine won a court case against native inhabitants with regard to a claim over a ranch in the district of San Mateo.

From 1696 to 1746, residents rebelled against Spanish authority in the town. They fled to the mountains and abandoned the lowland settlement until 1746, when they returned following dialogue and persuasion by the Jesuits.

The independent-mindedness of the San Mateo people showed itself again in the 15-year period from 1751 to 1765 when they rebelled against Spanish rule. The residents were ordered to surrender their weapons, but they refused. With this resistance, the Spanish government was forced to reduce the town to ruins.

In 1712, the Governor-General, the Conde de Lizarriaga, sent Captain Don Lorenzo de Yturriaga together with twelve soldiers to punish Captain Pambila, a native chieftain who was reportedly inciting the residents to revolt against Spanish colonial authorities and the local Spanish priest. Captain Pambila attacked the Spanish officer, but the latter was able to parry the blow and shoot the native leader dead.

 
Doctrina Christiana

San Mateo was partitioned on April 27, 1871, when Captain-General Isquierdo issued a decree separating the barrios of Balite, Burgos, Marang and Calipahan from San Mateo and formed them into the new municipality of Montalbán (Rodríguez).

In the Spanish Period, there was only one public school in San Mateo and the educational advancement of the youth was very slow. The books used were limited to the religious tracts called Eaton, Camia, Castiana, and the Doctrina Christiana. After knowing how to read, most students quit school while the few wealthy enrolled in Catholic schools in Manila.

 
General Aguinaldo

In November 1896, during the Philippine Revolution against the Spanish Empire, General Mariano Llanera made San Mateo his headquarters. By August 6, 1898, San Mateo joined the revolutionary government of General Emilio Aguinaldo.

During the succeeding Philippine–American War, Gen. Licerio Gerónimo's guerrilla bands from the foothills of San Mateo and Montalbán attacked American troops in October 1900. However, the Filipinos were defeated. A curious twist of history occurred when during the fighting, Gen. Henry Ware Lawton–who had captured the elusive Apache leader Geronimo–was in turn killed by a sharpshooter under Gen. Gerónimo. In the eyes of the Filipino people, Gen. Geronimo became a great man for killing an illustrious American general who distinguished himself during the American Civil War and the American military campaign in Cuba as well as in northern, southern and central Luzon.

During the American Occupation, Act No. 137 of the Philippine Commission incorporated San Mateo, previously part of the Province of Manila, into the newly created Province of Rizal on June 11, 1901. In line with its policy of fiscal economy and centralized governance, the Philippine Commission also enacted Act No. 942 in 1903 which merged the towns of San Mateo and Montalbán, with the former serving as the seat of government. On February 29, 1908, Executive Order No. 20 partitioned both, thus formalizing Montalbán's status as an independent municipality. Its real divisions then included the barrios of Ampid, Santa Ana, Guitnangbayan, Dulongbayan, Malanday, Guinayang and Maly. However, due to constant development of the rural areas and the increase in population, the barrios of Guitnangbayan and Dulongbayan were divided into two sections.

With regard to education, it was in 1909 when public schools were opened in the country under the supervision of Dr. David Burrows. San Mateo became a recipient of the new, democratized education system when Mr. Frank Green was assigned as the town’s first school supervisor, assisted by two Filipino teachers José Bernabé and Miguel Cristi. The English language was also taught in the public school. Transportation and other facilities in the municipality were increased and repaired thus resulting to more communication and exchange of goods and services.

During the Japanese Occupation, the Japanese Army occupied San Mateo, but no battle transpired between Japanese and Filipino forces. There were only minor encounters between the Japanese soldiers and members of the Filipino guerrilla forces. Nevertheless, some prominent residents of the town were killed and maltreated by the Japanese military on suspicions that they were either guerrillas or sympathisers.

Upon their arrival in the municipality, the Japanese troops seized school buildings and several big houses for use as their headquarters. Productive ricelands irrigated by water from the main pipe of the Metropolitan Water District were also forcibly appropriated and tilled under the direct supervision of Japanese officials. Livestock and crops were confiscated to supply the Japanese military stationed in San Mateo and Montalban.

When the American forces landed north of Manila on February 3, 1945 and started recapturing the surrounding areas, San Mateo came under the line of fire of the Liberation Forces and was continued with help of Filipino soldiers under the Philippine Commonwealth Army and Philippine Constabulary and local guerrillas. Residents were advised by the Air Raid Warden to vacate the Población and seek refuge in Sitio Kalamyong on the west bank of the Marikina River. There, they built temporary shelters while the U.S. Air Force conducted daily bombings on Japanese installations in Montalbán. However, one afternoon, a bomb on board an American Air Force plane was accidentally dropped on the refugee camp at Sitio Kalamyong, killing a hundred civilians.

Although in the aftermath of the war the American Government compensated the people of San Mateo for the war damages, there were cases when the amounts received were not considered commensurate with the sufferings endured. When municipal governance was instituted by the Spaniards in San Mateo in 1799, the town was governed by a Gobernadorcillo who served for one year and exercised the power to appoint the Cabeza de Barangay for the same term of one year. However, there were instances when the Governadorcillo served for two or three years. The first resident appointed to the post of Governadorcillo in 1799 was Donato Sulit while the last one to hold the post in 1895 was one Ismael Amado Jr., who incidentally continued serving up to 1905 even after the establishment of the Civil Government under the Americans in 1901 when he was appointed Capitán Municipal by the Military Governor of the United States Army Department.

Cityhood and redistricting proposal

As early as 2016, the town's Sangguniang Bayan approved Resolution No. 60, Series of 2016 requesting Senate through its president, Franklin Drilon and the House of Representatives through its speaker, Feliciano Belmonte Jr. to co-sponsor a bill for San Mateo's conversion into a city and creation of a lone legislative district.

This was proposed by Rizal's 2nd district Representative Juan Fidel Felipe Nograles through House Bill No. 336, making sure that the second district of Rizal will be reorganized to add two more districts, along with Rodríguez (Montalbán). Finally, on April 12, 2021, the 3rd district of Rizal, which consists only of San Mateo, was established by virtue of Republic Act No. 11533.[6] It elected its first representative in 2022 in the person of Jose Arturo Garcia Jr.

Timeline

Date/Year Milestone
1571–1572 San Mateo was discovered as a town annexed to Pasig.
1639 Battle between Chinese rebels and combined Spanish and native troops. The Chinese were defeated and retreated east to the Sierra Madre.
May 16, 1687 The territory and convent of San Mateo are annexed to Pasig by the Augustinians.
1689 Jesuit priests formally replace the Augustinian priests who were in San Mateo as early as 1637. They brought the image of the Virgin Mary from the town of Aranzazu in Spain.
1705 Fr. Juan Echazabal, a Jesuit priest, introduced devotion to Our Lady of Aranzazu, replacing Saint Matthew as the town patron.
1799 Donato Sulit is appointed as the first resident Gobernadorcillo of San Mateo.
April 27, 1871 San Mateo is partitionee when Captain General Izquierdo issued a decree separating the barrios of Balite, Burgos, Marang and Calipahan from San Mateo to form Montalban (Rodriguez).
1895 Ismael Amado, Jr. presides over San Mateo as its last Gobernadorcillo. He serves up to 1905 even after the establishment of the Civil Government under the American Regime in 1901, when he was appointed Capitán Municipal by the Military Governor of the United States Army Department.
November 1896 General Mariano Llanera makes San Mateo his headquarters during the Philippine Revolution.
August 6, 1898 San Mateo joins the revolutionary government of Gen. Emilio Aguinaldo.
October 1900 Gen. Licerio Gerónimo's guerrilla bands from the foothills of San Mateo and Montalban (Rodriguez) attack the American troops during the Philippine–American War.
June 11, 1901 San Mateo is incorporated into the new province of Rizal through the Philippine Commission Act No. 137 during the American Occupation.
1903 Act No. 942 of the Philippine Commission enacts the consolidation of the municipalities of San Mateo and Montalban (Rodriguez) with San Mateo serving as the seat of government in line with its policy of fiscal economy and centralized governance.
1906 Lucas Santiago serves San Mateo as its first mayor.
February 29, 1908 San Mateo becomes an independent municipality under Executive Order No. 20 which separates San Mateo and Montalban (Rodriguez).
June 25, 1983 The Church of San Mateo is placed under the newly erected Roman Catholic Diocese of Antipolo.
1996 San Mateo is raised from being a fourth class municipality in 1993 to a first class municipality under the term (1992–2001) of then Mayor Crispin "Amo" Santos
1997–1999 San Mateo is awarded the title of "The Cleanest and Greenest Municipality" in Rizal.
2001–2006 San Mateo inaugurates a new town hall during the term of the late Mayor José F. Díaz
2001–2006 A new lying-in clinic in Gulod Malaya, the Pamantasan ng Bayan San Mateo and various improvement road networks are built.
October 2003 Construction began on Timberland Heights, a premier mountain resort town, initially offering Mandala Residential Farm Estates 1.[7] It is nestled in the mountains of San Mateo.
February 2004 The Parish of Nuestra Señora de Aranzazu is declared a Diocesan Shrine by the Vatican, becoming the only church in the Philippines under this Marian title, and the only sister-parish of the Basilica of Arantzazu in Spain.
July 2004 The Diocesan Shrine of Our Lady of Aranzazu is canonically erected.
2007 San Mateo's population exceeds 150,000.
August 11, 2007 Budgetlane Sulitmarket, a member of Philippine Amalgamated Supermarkets Association Incorporated (PAGASA Inc.), opens to the public.
September 2008 San Mateo achieved the record of "longest parade of kakanin" in its history.
December 19, 2008 Puregold Price Club opened in San Mateo at the intersection of Gen. Luna Avenue and Batasan-San Mateo Road.
September 26, 2009 San Mateo was devastated by Typhoon Ondoy. 80% of San Mateo was submerged in muddy water.
September 27, 2011 Typhoon Pedring dumped heavy rains like Ondoy over Luzon including Metro Manila and nearby provinces. Floods submerged houses in several barangays of Marikina and San Mateo, including Santa Ana, Banaba, Ampid 1, and Ampid 2. The town records one death, and by 29 September 2011, the waters subsided.
May 15, 2015 The country's largest mall developer SM Prime Holdings opens SM City San Mateo to the public, the first full-service mall of San Mateo.
May 31, 2017 The image of Our Lady of Aranzazu receives a canonical coronation, being the 34th crowned Marian image in the Philippines.

Geography

The town lies in the Marikina Valley. The Marikina River runs through the western portion of the municipality, while the Nangka River runs through the south, bounded by Marikina. San Mateo has lush trees in other high areas. Most of the municipality is composed of residential areas, whereas the eastern side is composed of high plateaus and foothills of the Sierra Madre Mountains.

Barangays

 
San Mateo, Rizal Political Map. (This is subject to correction by San Mateo LGU). It shows the 15 barangays of San Mateo, Rizal and the adjacent cities/municipalities.

San Mateo is politically subdivided into 15 barangays.[8]

Barangay Area (km2) Population
(2020 census)[9]
Population density
(/km2)
Ampid 1 1.316 27,346 20,794.07
Ampid 2 0.245 4,657 15,040.82
Banaba 1.382 27,910 15,595.51
Dulong Bayan 1 0.5879 5,229 8,555.88
Dulong Bayan 2 4.3 13,072 1,590
Guinayang 2.73 9,871 2,625.27
Guitnang Bayan 1 4.12 35,121 5,996.84
Guitnang Bayan 2 6.14 19,661 2,228.01
Gulod Malaya 1.394 12,962 6,143.47
Malanday 3.53 14,526 3,836.83
Maly 5.65 14,612 2,638.05
Pintong Bukawe 7.53 5,657 541.83
Santa Ana 0.8 10,862 11,470
Santo Niño 0.8711 12,769 12,650.67
Silangan 7.655 59,051 7,095.32
San Mateo 48.251 273,306 6,915.26

In the 2020 census, the population of San Mateo, Rizal, was 273,306 people, [4] with a density of 5,000 inhabitants per square kilometer or 13,000 inhabitants per square mile.

Climate

Climate data for San Mateo, Rizal
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 29
(84)
30
(86)
32
(90)
34
(93)
33
(91)
31
(88)
30
(86)
29
(84)
29
(84)
30
(86)
30
(86)
29
(84)
31
(87)
Average low °C (°F) 20
(68)
20
(68)
21
(70)
23
(73)
24
(75)
25
(77)
24
(75)
24
(75)
24
(75)
23
(73)
22
(72)
21
(70)
23
(73)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 7
(0.3)
7
(0.3)
9
(0.4)
21
(0.8)
101
(4.0)
152
(6.0)
188
(7.4)
170
(6.7)
159
(6.3)
115
(4.5)
47
(1.9)
29
(1.1)
1,005
(39.7)
Average rainy days 3.3 3.5 4.8 8.1 18.9 23.5 26.4 25.5 24.5 19.6 10.4 6.4 174.9
Source: Meteoblue[10]

Demographics

 
San Mateo Municipal Hall
Population census of San Mateo
YearPop.±% p.a.
1903 4,510—    
1918 4,841+0.47%
1939 6,134+1.13%
1948 6,811+1.17%
1960 12,044+4.86%
YearPop.±% p.a.
1970 29,183+9.24%
1975 38,955+5.96%
1980 51,910+5.91%
1990 82,310+4.72%
1995 99,217+3.56%
YearPop.±% p.a.
2000 135,603+6.93%
2007 184,860+4.37%
2010 205,255+3.88%
2015 252,527+4.03%
2020 273,306+1.57%
Source: Philippine Statistics Authority[11][12][13][14]

Economy

 
E. De Los Santos Street

Industries

The industrial establishments found in San Mateo are classified as light to medium industries. Welding shops and motor pool are among the predominant industries found within the municipality. Other industrial establishments are relatively small scale, like leather craft and kiskisan. Moreover, agri-business establishments which include poultry and piggery do exist within the municipality.

Various products are being manufactured in San Mateo. In fact, a group of different factories is found along Kambal Road, Barangay Guitnang Bayan 2. This includes San Mateo Rubber Corp. (Nikon and Durawalk Slippers), Jolly Food Corp., First Win Corp. (Slippers), and Golden Union Footwear Inc. (Evans Shoes). A Coca-Cola warehouse is also situated at Patiis Road corner GSIS Street (Daang Tubo) in Barangay Dulong Bayan 2. San Mateo also primarily manufactures gravel and sand aggregates together with other construction supplies that are found in hardware shops distributed all over the municipality.

Commerce and trade

 
Manahan Building in Barangay Ampid 1

The Central Business District is strategically located amidst the concentration of settlements. A major commercial area starts from the vicinity of the public market, bounded by the national road going to Rodriguez (Montalban) and Street of Daang Bakal in Barangay Guitnang Bayan 2. This commercial zone is a conglomeration of financial institutions, a public market, restaurants/small eateries, retail stores and the like.

Another area, which may be considered as major commercial area, is within the vicinity of De los Santos Street corner Gen. Luna Avenue, in Barangay Ampid 1. Other commercial areas extending to St. Mattheus Medical Hospital near the boundary of San Mateo and Marikina are located near Puregold San Mateo (formerly the Producer's Market) at Barangay Banaba and another at the corner of Patiis Road and Gen. Luna Avenue, in Barangay Malanday.

SM City San Mateo along Gen. Luna Avenue in Barangay Ampid 1 adds to the list of major commercial centers of San Mateo. This SM Supermall and the very first full-service mall of San Mateo opens on May 15, 2015, serving local residents and from neighboring areas. Further boost in San Mateo's economy is expected with the mall.

Banking

San Mateo has many bank branches like Banco de Oro (BDO), Bank of the Philippine Islands, Metrobank, Philippine Savings Bank (PSBank), EastWest Bank, China Bank, Philippine National Bank (PNB), Premiere Bank, Merchants Bank, Banco San Juan, Marikina Valley-San Mateo (MVSM) Bank, RCBC Savings Bank, United Coconut Planters Bank (UCPB), Banco Rodriguez, Country Builders Bank, the Real Bank (a thrift bank). Many automated teller machines in San Mateo are provided with security system such as anti-crime alarms. Security guards are also monitoring the premises of the banks in San Mateo for the safety of the customers.

Landmarks

 
The San Mateo Arch in Rizal Province, stands as a boundary between Marikina and this town.
 
Diocesan Shrine of Our Lady of Aranzazu
  • Diocesan Shrine of Our Lady of Aranzazu (Nuestra Señora de Aranzazu)

Festivals

These are some of the notable events in San Mateo:

Events Date Place of Event
Malanday Feast February 13–14 Patiis and Malanday
Ampid Fiesta: Sombrero and Walis Festival May 1 Ampid
Kawan Holiday (Kab Scout of the Phil.) July 21 and 22 All of public schools in San Mateo
San Mateo Festival: Parada ng Kakanin September 9 San Mateo Plaza and San Mateo Municipal Hall Stage
Guitnang Bayan: Parada ng kakanin September 9 Nuestra Señora De Aranzazu Church
San Mateo foundation day September 21 Dulong Bayan Chapel
St. Francis of Assisi Parish Fiesta October 4 Guinayang
Santa Barbara Villas 2 (SBV2) Fiesta October 5 Santa Barbara Villas 2
St. Anthony Maria Zaccaria Parish Fiesta July 5 Silangan

Infrastructure

Transportation

San Mateo has a variety of conveyances that provide the residents with ready means of transportation. These are public utility jeepneys, buses, tricycles, pedicabs and UV Express Service are operating in the town. These facilitate the movement of people and goods to Metro Manila and nearby towns of Rizal.

There are six jeepney terminals in San Mateo: San Mateo Plaza, Barangay Pintong Bukawe, Barangay Banaba (Puregold), Barangay Silangan (AFP Housing & Tierra Monte) and Barangay Santo Niño (Modesta).

Transportation routes passing San Mateo, are Montalban-Cubao (jeepneys), Montalban-San Mateo (jeepneys), and Commonwealth, Philcoa-San Mateo (jeepneys) thru the San Mateo-Batasan Bridge. These routes traverses Quezon City, Marikina, San Mateo and Rodriguez (Montalban). The only way to get through Pintong Bukawe is through Marcos Hi-way, Cabading & Sapinit Roads in Antipolo.

Long before the Manila Light Rail Transit System opened its services in Santolan in the Pasig-Marikina border in the early 2000s, steam train services had once served those places in the past, even before World War II.

In Marikina, there is a street named "Daangbakal", also called by the names of "Shoe Avenue Extension", "Munding Avenue" and "Bagong Silang". There is also a similar "Daangbakal" in the San Mateo-Montalban (Rodriguez) area, and on the maps one can notice that the two roads should have been connected with each other. In fact, as the name suggests in Tagalog, these streets were once a single railway line. The two sides of the "Daangbakal" roads were once connected by a bridge in the San Mateo-Marikina border. However, as the railroad tracks have been largely ignored after the Japanese Occupation and was transformed into separate highways, the railway connection was abandoned.

The old railroad tracks, called the Marikina Line, was connected from Tutuban station in Manila, passing through Tramo (Barangay Rosario, Pasig) coming all the way to the town of Marikina up to Montalban. On the northern end of the "Daangbakal" road in Montalban is a basketball court. That basketball court which stands today, surrounded by the Montalban Catholic Church and Cemetery, was once the railway station terminus of that particular line.

The present-day Santo Niño Elementary School in Marikina was said to be a train depot. And also it was said that a railroad station once stood in the Marikina City Sports Park.

The Marikina Line was completed in 1906, and continued its operation until 1936. It was said that the Japanese Imperial Army made use of this railway line during the Second World War. These railways were dismantled during the 1960s and were converted into ordinary roads.

Today, the citizens are dependent on tricycles, jeepneys, Taxis, FX, Buses, and AUV's which contribute to the everyday unusual and unbearable traffic of Metropolitan Manila. Even now, there is uncertainty in the Northrail project, which links Manila to the northern provinces of Luzon, because of corruption within the project's construction.

Aside from the Marikina Line, two other lines have existed before but are now removed permanently.

First is the Cavite Line, which passed through Paco, Parañaque, Bacoor and up to Naic, Cavite. Completed in 1908, its operation continued until 1936.

Second is the Antipolo Line, which passed through Santa Mesa, Mandaluyong, Pasig, Cainta, Taytay, up to Antipolo near the "Hinulugang Taktak" Falls. There is also a street named "Daangbakal" in Antipolo, where like the "Daangbakal" roads on Marikina and San Mateo, a railway line once existed. The railroad tracks also passed through what is now the Ortigas Avenue Extension. Its operation ceased in 1917.

Jeepneys are the most common form of transportation within the municipality because of its convenience and low fare as compared to other forms of transportation. Other modes are tricycles and pedicabs which are used mainly to transport people and goods where regular jeepney routes are not available.

Buses – The Marikina Auto Line Transport Corporation (MALTC) buses are the public utility buses that mainly operate in San Mateo. They operate ordinary-type buses, and newly acquired airconditioned buses which provide safe travel to passengers. There are some private buses that transport people who work at the Fortune Tobacco Plant and other nearby factories in Marikina.

Power

Power services in the town are provided by the Manila Electric Company (Meralco), except in the mountain barangay of Pintong Bukawe. There were 23,189 customers in San Mateo as of March 1999. Of these, 27,115 or 95.37 percent residential customers while commercial, industrial and streetlights number 971 (4.19 percent), 36 (0.15 percent), and 67 (0.29 percent), respectively. The municipality of San Mateo had a total demand of 55,355 megawatt-hours in 1998.

San Mateo Mini-Hydro Power Plant

A 2.46 megawatt[22] mini-hydro power plant is on the way to start its operation by 2016, the projected year of completion of the spearheading company Hydrotec Renewables, Inc. of Germany, along San Mateo River, part of Marikina River.[23] The company has already obtained Certificate of Non-Coverage from the Department of Energy which permits to proceed with its construction.[24] This hydro project is one among the eight hydro power application projects of Hydrotec in the north-western Rizal-Marikina area which will effectively contribute a combined capacity of 25 to 30 megawatts of environment-friendly and clean energy to the Luzon grid or Meralco franchise area. Flood events within the locality are also expected to be reduced with the upcoming hydro power plant.[25]

Water

The main source of the municipality's water supply are deep wells, pump wells (operated by Manila Water), open wells, springs and other ground water resources. Some of the elevated parts of the municipality are under watershed protected areas since the topography is characterized by rolling to mountainous terrain. From 0.65%, San Mateo's water sanitation reached 100% on 2006 through the operation of Manila Water.[26]

North Manila Septage Treatment Plant

Completed and started operating in May 2007, the Manila Water North Septage Treatment Plant is located in Barangay Guitnang Bayan 2. This treats 586 cubic meters of septage a day.[27]

Santo Niño-Silangan Water Supply Project

About 42,000 residents are expected to benefit from continuous water supply once Manila Water's P320-M water supply project in San Mateo, Rizal gets completed.

The project, dubbed as Santo Niño-Silangan Water Supply Project, is divided into two phases: Phase 1, which will serve barangays Gulod Malaya, Santo Niño and portion of Silangan, and Phase 2, which will serve the whole of Silangan and the elevated areas of Parang in Marikina.

The project involves the construction of pumping station and reservoirs and the laying of 25 kilometers of water lines including mainlines and will benefit twelve existing subdivisions occupying a total land area of 27 hectares.

Started in October 2007, the water project is expected to provide ample water supply to meet the 15 to 20 million liters per day (MLD) demand of the more than 13,000 households in the area.[28]

San Mateo Sanitary Landfill

In 2008, a proposal to build a 200-hectare sanitary landfill within the jurisdiction of two barangays was met with resistance by several environmental groups. The proposed landfill was to be constructed on ground area within a protected forest.[29]

Bucking opposition by environment activists, the operator of the San Mateo waste dump is ready to give it a go. Andy Santiago, president of the San Mateo Sanitary Landfill and Development Corp., said it has given the green light for the 19-hectare facility in Rizal province to do business.[30]

Communication

Telecommunications serve as a major link, within the sub-sectors and among other sectors of the economy, in the population centers and hinterlands. It also serves as a catalyst for growth and development. Telephone (Fixed landline & Wireless), & DSL Broadband Internet services are being provided by the Philippines Long Distance Telephone Company (PLDT), PT&T and Converge ICT. While cellular phone services are provide by Globe Telecom, Smart Communications, and Dito Telecommunity.

Education

There are public and private education institutions including colleges in San Mateo.[31][32]

High schools

  • Academe Deo Favente International
  • Academia Del Tierra Grande, Inc.
  • Ampid National High School
  • Center for Positive Future
  • Charles Science Integrated School of San Mateo Inc.
  • Christian Care Academy
  • Christ the Lord of Harvest Academy
  • Eastern Star Academy, Inc.
  • Guardian Angel Academy
  • Guinayang National High School
  • Holy Name of Mary School
  • Jose F. Diaz Memorial National High School
  • Kids' World Christian Academy High School (Annex)
  • Manila Waldorf School
  • Maria Carmeli Catholic School
  • Moses Cradle Academy
  • Nuestra Señora de Aranzazu Parochial School
  • Pintong Bukawe National High School
  • San Mateo National High School
  • Silangan National High School
  • St. Joseph Banaba
  • St. Joseph Montessori – Branch
  • St. Joseph Montessori – Main
  • St. Mary Integrated Learning School (Ampid I)
  • St. Matthew College
  • Santa Cecilia Parochial School
  • San Mateo Senior High School
 
MCCID College School Building, San Mateo, Rizal

Colleges and universities

  • Eastern Star Institute of Science & Technology [ESIST] (TESDA accredited)
  • San Mateo Municipal College (Formerly Pamantasan ng Bayan ng San Mateo)
  • St. Matthew College

Special education

Sister cities

These are the municipality's sister cities or municipalities.

Local

See also

References

  1. ^ Presidential Proclamation No. 540, s. 2018 (25 July 2018), Declaring Friday, 21 September 2018, a Special (Non-Working) Day in the Municipality of San Mateo, Province of Rizal, retrieved August 8, 2022
  2. ^ Municipality of San Mateo | (DILG)
  3. ^ "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.
  4. ^ a b Census of Population (2020). "Region IV-A (Calabarzon)". Total Population by Province, City, Municipality and Barangay. PSA. Retrieved 8 July 2021.
  5. ^ "PSA Releases the 2018 Municipal and City Level Poverty Estimates". Philippine Statistics Authority. 15 December 2021. Retrieved 22 January 2022.
  6. ^ Republic Act No. 11546 (30 March 2021), An Act Reapportioning the Second Legislative District of the Province of Rizal into Three (3) Legislative Districts, retrieved August 8, 2022
  7. ^ The Peak Life, December 2007 Issue. A Publication of Timberland Heights [1][permanent dead link]
  8. ^ "Province: Rizal". PSGC Interactive. Quezon City, Philippines: Philippine Statistics Authority. Retrieved 12 November 2016.
  9. ^ Philippine Statistics Authority's 2015 Census of Population
  10. ^ "San Mateo: Average Temperatures and Rainfall". Meteoblue. Retrieved 11 May 2020.
  11. ^ Census of Population (2015). "Region IV-A (Calabarzon)". Total Population by Province, City, Municipality and Barangay. PSA. Retrieved 20 June 2016.
  12. ^ Census of Population and Housing (2010). "Region IV-A (Calabarzon)". Total Population by Province, City, Municipality and Barangay. NSO. Retrieved 29 June 2016.
  13. ^ 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.
  14. ^ "Province of Rizal". Municipality Population Data. Local Water Utilities Administration Research Division. Retrieved 17 December 2016.
  15. ^ "Poverty incidence (PI):". Philippine Statistics Authority. Retrieved 28 December 2020.
  16. ^ https://psa.gov.ph/sites/default/files/NSCB_LocalPovertyPhilippines_0.pdf; publication date: 29 November 2005; publisher: Philippine Statistics Authority.
  17. ^ 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.
  18. ^ 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.
  19. ^ 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.
  20. ^ 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.
  21. ^ "PSA Releases the 2018 Municipal and City Level Poverty Estimates". Philippine Statistics Authority. 15 December 2021. Retrieved 22 January 2022.
  22. ^ "Pending Hydropower Applications". April 2013. Department of Energy 2014-03-28 at the Wayback Machine
  23. ^ "Power firm set to build eight hydro plants along Marikina River". Lenie Lectura. January 8, 2014. Business Mirror
  24. ^ "Hydrotec projects obtain permits". Alena Mae S. Flores. March 20, 2014. Manila Standard Today
  25. ^ "Big companies going into pumped storage, run-of-river power plants". Ray S. Eñano. March 27, 2014. Manila Standard Today
  26. ^ Jorge C. Mateo. October 23, 2007. "Metropolitan Waterworks and Sewerage System (MWSS) Regulatory Office". [2]
  27. ^ August 22, 2007. "DENR Updates" June 7, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  28. ^ July 1, 2008. "P320-M water supply project in San Mateo, Rizal now underway". Manila Water[permanent dead link]
  29. ^ DJ Yap. January 10, 2009. "Plan to Build New San Mateo Landfill Hit". Philippine Daily Inquirer 2009-01-25 at the Wayback Machine
  30. ^ Gigi Muoz David and Erika Z. Vizcarra. February 2, 2009. "San Mateo Dump gets the Green Light". Manila Standard Today
  31. ^ Various Schools in San Mateo, Rizal 2011-09-05 at the Wayback Machine – Batang San Mateo Website
  32. ^ List of Public Schools in San Mateo 2010-07-26 at the Wayback Machine- Department of Education
  33. ^ "Zamboanga City Sisterhood". SunStar. 2012. Archived from the original on April 16, 2013. Retrieved June 23, 2012.

External links

  • Official website
  • San Mateo Profile at PhilAtlas.com
  • Philippine Standard Geographic Code

mateo, rizal, mateo, officially, municipality, mateo, tagalog, bayan, mateo, class, municipality, province, rizal, philippines, according, 2020, census, population, mateomunicipalitymunicipality, mateowelcome, facade, mateo, nangka, bridgeflagsealnickname, mou. San Mateo officially the Municipality of San Mateo Tagalog Bayan ng San Mateo is a 1st class municipality in the province of Rizal Philippines According to the 2020 census it has a population of 273 306 San MateoMunicipalityMunicipality of San MateoWelcome facade of San Mateo at Nangka BridgeFlagSealNickname Mountain Biking Capital of the PhilippinesMotto s San Mateo Bayan Ko Mahal Ko San Mateo My Town My Love Map of Rizal with San Mateo highlightedOpenStreetMapSan MateoLocation within the PhilippinesCoordinates 14 41 49 N 121 07 19 E 14 69694 N 121 12194 E 14 69694 121 12194 Coordinates 14 41 49 N 121 07 19 E 14 69694 N 121 12194 E 14 69694 121 12194CountryPhilippinesRegionCalabarzonProvinceRizalDistrict3rd districtFoundedSeptember 21 1571 1 Named forSt Matthew the ApostleBarangays15 see Barangays Government 2 TypeSangguniang Bayan MayorOmie Rivera LP Vice MayorJimmy Roxas PDP Laban RepresentativeJose Arturo Garcia Jr NPC Municipal CouncilMembers Boy SalenJoey BrionesJojo MarianoLeo BuenviajeCristeo CruzJoel DiazFroy SalesDenzel Diaz Electorate110 276 voters 2022 Area 3 Total55 09 km2 21 27 sq mi Elevation80 m 260 ft Highest elevation435 m 1 427 ft Lowest elevation8 m 26 ft Population 2020 census 4 Total273 306 Rank6 out of 1 489 Municipalities Density5 000 km2 13 000 sq mi Households64 054Economy Income class1st municipal income class Poverty incidence4 22 2018 5 Revenue 797 887 464 32 2020 Assets 1 835 617 070 59 2020 Expenditure 833 461 750 76 2020 Liabilities 752 874 574 38 2020 Service provider ElectricityManila Electric Company Meralco Time zoneUTC 8 PST ZIP code1850PSGC045811000IDD area code 63 0 2Native languagesTagalogWebsitewww wbr sanmateo wbr gov wbr phIt is bordered by Quezon City to the west Marikina and Antipolo to the south and by the Municipality of Rodriguez to the north San Mateo is approximately 24 kilometers 15 mi east of Manila and 11 kilometers 6 8 mi north of Antipolo the provincial capital of Rizal Conurbated to the urban agglomeration of the Greater Manila Area San Mateo is one of the fastest growing municipalities in Rizal Province according to the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority MMDA and the Provincial Government of Rizal It is a commuter hub to Metro Manila San Mateo is the home of the miraculous image of Our Lady of Aranzazu Nuestra Senora de Aranzazu Contents 1 History 1 1 Cityhood and redistricting proposal 1 2 Timeline 2 Geography 2 1 Barangays 2 2 Climate 3 Demographics 4 Economy 4 1 Industries 4 2 Commerce and trade 4 3 Banking 5 Landmarks 6 Festivals 7 Infrastructure 7 1 Transportation 7 2 Power 7 2 1 San Mateo Mini Hydro Power Plant 7 3 Water 7 3 1 North Manila Septage Treatment Plant 7 4 San Mateo Sanitary Landfill 7 5 Communication 8 Education 8 1 High schools 8 2 Colleges and universities 8 3 Special education 9 Sister cities 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksHistory EditIn his book Conquistas de las Islas Filipinas Father Gaspar de San Agustin records what is now San Mateo in 1572 to be a satellite settlement of Pasig He described the inhabitants being fierce but friendly and of quiet disposition Father Juan de Medina in his account Relacion de los Conventos Y Pueblos Fundados por los PP Agustinos likewise put 1572 as the year the Parish of San Mateo was established However according to Miguel Lopez de Legazpi the first Governor General of the Philippines from 1571 to 1572 it was his nephew Juan de Salcedo who arrived at the site of the town during an expedition to Manila from Cebu Accounts say that two years prior Legazpi sent Salcedo along with 150 soldiers to prepare the inauguration of the City of Manila It must have been Salcedo who discovered the town before Legazpi inaugurated Manila on June 24 1571 Still another account was that of a certain Augustinian named Father Cavada who said that the first chapel in the islands with Saint Matthew as patron was built by the riverside in 1596 south of the present Poblacion of the town which was then only a Barrio of Tondo Saint Matthew thus gave the town his name as the chapel was built on his feast day What may be gleaned from the above accounts somehow is that San Mateo was discovered sometime in 1571 while its first church was built in 1596 It may be true too that the Parish of San Mateo was erected in 1572 Aside from the disagreement over the town s precise foundation date there is uncertainty as to how San Mateo acquired its name According to one account when the Spaniards made a reconnaissance of Manila s environs they saw the San Mateo floodplains and were enamored by the natural beauty of the place They decided to found a community there and one day a Spanish scribe happened to stand on a mound with a book in one hand and a pen in the other His statuesque pose prompted a companion to laugh and comment how the scribe resembled Saint Matthew referring to the usual manner the evangelist is depicted in art In the midst of their banter and merriment they decided to call the place San Mateo Another account says that San Mateo was named for its geographical resemblance to another town in Spain of the same name As described by Paluzie in a geographical book this small Spanish town is near a high mountain and has a river that flowed through its center which often floods but quickly recedes The town is also a grazing pasture for big animals and a fishing village The present San Mateo is traversed by the Maly and Nangka rivers and its flood plains may have been a lush grazing area then The Augustinian priests in San Mateo were later formally replaced in 1689 by the Jesuits who as early as 1637 included San Mateo among their missions with the missions of San Isidro and Paynaan under it The Jesuits brought with them an image of the Virgin Mary which came from the Spanish town of Arantzazu in Vizcaya They were the ones responsible for building the church now located in the Poblacion since the original chapel by the Augustinians beside the river was destroyed in a flood The location of the present church is in Barangay Santa Ana and its patron saint is Our Lady of Aranzazu The original image of Saint Matthew which was housed in the destroyed Augustinian chapel was translated to Barangay Dulongbayan formerly llaya where it was enshrined as patron of the village which still keeps his feast on 21 September In the following centuries San Mateo had a colorful and distinguished history In 1639 a pitched battle ensued between Chinese rebels on one side and combined Spanish and native troops on the other The Chinese were defeated and retreated east to the Sierra Madre Mountains but not before burning the town and its church On May 16 1687 the territory and convent of San Mateo were added to Pasig by the Augustinians with the headquarters and residences of the mission at Mariquina Marikina Two years later the Augustinians handed over the ecclesiastical administration of San Mateo to the Jesuits In 1699 the convent of Saint Augustine won a court case against native inhabitants with regard to a claim over a ranch in the district of San Mateo From 1696 to 1746 residents rebelled against Spanish authority in the town They fled to the mountains and abandoned the lowland settlement until 1746 when they returned following dialogue and persuasion by the Jesuits The independent mindedness of the San Mateo people showed itself again in the 15 year period from 1751 to 1765 when they rebelled against Spanish rule The residents were ordered to surrender their weapons but they refused With this resistance the Spanish government was forced to reduce the town to ruins In 1712 the Governor General the Conde de Lizarriaga sent Captain Don Lorenzo de Yturriaga together with twelve soldiers to punish Captain Pambila a native chieftain who was reportedly inciting the residents to revolt against Spanish colonial authorities and the local Spanish priest Captain Pambila attacked the Spanish officer but the latter was able to parry the blow and shoot the native leader dead Doctrina Christiana San Mateo was partitioned on April 27 1871 when Captain General Isquierdo issued a decree separating the barrios of Balite Burgos Marang and Calipahan from San Mateo and formed them into the new municipality of Montalban Rodriguez In the Spanish Period there was only one public school in San Mateo and the educational advancement of the youth was very slow The books used were limited to the religious tracts called Eaton Camia Castiana and the Doctrina Christiana After knowing how to read most students quit school while the few wealthy enrolled in Catholic schools in Manila General Aguinaldo In November 1896 during the Philippine Revolution against the Spanish Empire General Mariano Llanera made San Mateo his headquarters By August 6 1898 San Mateo joined the revolutionary government of General Emilio Aguinaldo During the succeeding Philippine American War Gen Licerio Geronimo s guerrilla bands from the foothills of San Mateo and Montalban attacked American troops in October 1900 However the Filipinos were defeated A curious twist of history occurred when during the fighting Gen Henry Ware Lawton who had captured the elusive Apache leader Geronimo was in turn killed by a sharpshooter under Gen Geronimo In the eyes of the Filipino people Gen Geronimo became a great man for killing an illustrious American general who distinguished himself during the American Civil War and the American military campaign in Cuba as well as in northern southern and central Luzon During the American Occupation Act No 137 of the Philippine Commission incorporated San Mateo previously part of the Province of Manila into the newly created Province of Rizal on June 11 1901 In line with its policy of fiscal economy and centralized governance the Philippine Commission also enacted Act No 942 in 1903 which merged the towns of San Mateo and Montalban with the former serving as the seat of government On February 29 1908 Executive Order No 20 partitioned both thus formalizing Montalban s status as an independent municipality Its real divisions then included the barrios of Ampid Santa Ana Guitnangbayan Dulongbayan Malanday Guinayang and Maly However due to constant development of the rural areas and the increase in population the barrios of Guitnangbayan and Dulongbayan were divided into two sections With regard to education it was in 1909 when public schools were opened in the country under the supervision of Dr David Burrows San Mateo became a recipient of the new democratized education system when Mr Frank Green was assigned as the town s first school supervisor assisted by two Filipino teachers Jose Bernabe and Miguel Cristi The English language was also taught in the public school Transportation and other facilities in the municipality were increased and repaired thus resulting to more communication and exchange of goods and services During the Japanese Occupation the Japanese Army occupied San Mateo but no battle transpired between Japanese and Filipino forces There were only minor encounters between the Japanese soldiers and members of the Filipino guerrilla forces Nevertheless some prominent residents of the town were killed and maltreated by the Japanese military on suspicions that they were either guerrillas or sympathisers Upon their arrival in the municipality the Japanese troops seized school buildings and several big houses for use as their headquarters Productive ricelands irrigated by water from the main pipe of the Metropolitan Water District were also forcibly appropriated and tilled under the direct supervision of Japanese officials Livestock and crops were confiscated to supply the Japanese military stationed in San Mateo and Montalban When the American forces landed north of Manila on February 3 1945 and started recapturing the surrounding areas San Mateo came under the line of fire of the Liberation Forces and was continued with help of Filipino soldiers under the Philippine Commonwealth Army and Philippine Constabulary and local guerrillas Residents were advised by the Air Raid Warden to vacate the Poblacion and seek refuge in Sitio Kalamyong on the west bank of the Marikina River There they built temporary shelters while the U S Air Force conducted daily bombings on Japanese installations in Montalban However one afternoon a bomb on board an American Air Force plane was accidentally dropped on the refugee camp at Sitio Kalamyong killing a hundred civilians Although in the aftermath of the war the American Government compensated the people of San Mateo for the war damages there were cases when the amounts received were not considered commensurate with the sufferings endured When municipal governance was instituted by the Spaniards in San Mateo in 1799 the town was governed by a Gobernadorcillo who served for one year and exercised the power to appoint the Cabeza de Barangay for the same term of one year However there were instances when the Governadorcillo served for two or three years The first resident appointed to the post of Governadorcillo in 1799 was Donato Sulit while the last one to hold the post in 1895 was one Ismael Amado Jr who incidentally continued serving up to 1905 even after the establishment of the Civil Government under the Americans in 1901 when he was appointed Capitan Municipal by the Military Governor of the United States Army Department Cityhood and redistricting proposal Edit Main article Cities of the Philippines As early as 2016 the town s Sangguniang Bayan approved Resolution No 60 Series of 2016 requesting Senate through its president Franklin Drilon and the House of Representatives through its speaker Feliciano Belmonte Jr to co sponsor a bill for San Mateo s conversion into a city and creation of a lone legislative district This was proposed by Rizal s 2nd district Representative Juan Fidel Felipe Nograles through House Bill No 336 making sure that the second district of Rizal will be reorganized to add two more districts along with Rodriguez Montalban Finally on April 12 2021 the 3rd district of Rizal which consists only of San Mateo was established by virtue of Republic Act No 11533 6 It elected its first representative in 2022 in the person of Jose Arturo Garcia Jr Timeline Edit Date Year Milestone1571 1572 San Mateo was discovered as a town annexed to Pasig 1639 Battle between Chinese rebels and combined Spanish and native troops The Chinese were defeated and retreated east to the Sierra Madre May 16 1687 The territory and convent of San Mateo are annexed to Pasig by the Augustinians 1689 Jesuit priests formally replace the Augustinian priests who were in San Mateo as early as 1637 They brought the image of the Virgin Mary from the town of Aranzazu in Spain 1705 Fr Juan Echazabal a Jesuit priest introduced devotion to Our Lady of Aranzazu replacing Saint Matthew as the town patron 1799 Donato Sulit is appointed as the first resident Gobernadorcillo of San Mateo April 27 1871 San Mateo is partitionee when Captain General Izquierdo issued a decree separating the barrios of Balite Burgos Marang and Calipahan from San Mateo to form Montalban Rodriguez 1895 Ismael Amado Jr presides over San Mateo as its last Gobernadorcillo He serves up to 1905 even after the establishment of the Civil Government under the American Regime in 1901 when he was appointed Capitan Municipal by the Military Governor of the United States Army Department November 1896 General Mariano Llanera makes San Mateo his headquarters during the Philippine Revolution August 6 1898 San Mateo joins the revolutionary government of Gen Emilio Aguinaldo October 1900 Gen Licerio Geronimo s guerrilla bands from the foothills of San Mateo and Montalban Rodriguez attack the American troops during the Philippine American War June 11 1901 San Mateo is incorporated into the new province of Rizal through the Philippine Commission Act No 137 during the American Occupation 1903 Act No 942 of the Philippine Commission enacts the consolidation of the municipalities of San Mateo and Montalban Rodriguez with San Mateo serving as the seat of government in line with its policy of fiscal economy and centralized governance 1906 Lucas Santiago serves San Mateo as its first mayor February 29 1908 San Mateo becomes an independent municipality under Executive Order No 20 which separates San Mateo and Montalban Rodriguez June 25 1983 The Church of San Mateo is placed under the newly erected Roman Catholic Diocese of Antipolo 1996 San Mateo is raised from being a fourth class municipality in 1993 to a first class municipality under the term 1992 2001 of then Mayor Crispin Amo Santos1997 1999 San Mateo is awarded the title of The Cleanest and Greenest Municipality in Rizal 2001 2006 San Mateo inaugurates a new town hall during the term of the late Mayor Jose F Diaz2001 2006 A new lying in clinic in Gulod Malaya the Pamantasan ng Bayan San Mateo and various improvement road networks are built October 2003 Construction began on Timberland Heights a premier mountain resort town initially offering Mandala Residential Farm Estates 1 7 It is nestled in the mountains of San Mateo February 2004 The Parish of Nuestra Senora de Aranzazu is declared a Diocesan Shrine by the Vatican becoming the only church in the Philippines under this Marian title and the only sister parish of the Basilica of Arantzazu in Spain July 2004 The Diocesan Shrine of Our Lady of Aranzazu is canonically erected 2007 San Mateo s population exceeds 150 000 August 11 2007 Budgetlane Sulitmarket a member of Philippine Amalgamated Supermarkets Association Incorporated PAGASA Inc opens to the public September 2008 San Mateo achieved the record of longest parade of kakanin in its history December 19 2008 Puregold Price Club opened in San Mateo at the intersection of Gen Luna Avenue and Batasan San Mateo Road September 26 2009 San Mateo was devastated by Typhoon Ondoy 80 of San Mateo was submerged in muddy water September 27 2011 Typhoon Pedring dumped heavy rains like Ondoy over Luzon including Metro Manila and nearby provinces Floods submerged houses in several barangays of Marikina and San Mateo including Santa Ana Banaba Ampid 1 and Ampid 2 The town records one death and by 29 September 2011 the waters subsided May 15 2015 The country s largest mall developer SM Prime Holdings opens SM City San Mateo to the public the first full service mall of San Mateo May 31 2017 The image of Our Lady of Aranzazu receives a canonical coronation being the 34th crowned Marian image in the Philippines Geography EditThe town lies in the Marikina Valley The Marikina River runs through the western portion of the municipality while the Nangka River runs through the south bounded by Marikina San Mateo has lush trees in other high areas Most of the municipality is composed of residential areas whereas the eastern side is composed of high plateaus and foothills of the Sierra Madre Mountains Barangays Edit San Mateo Rizal Political Map This is subject to correction by San Mateo LGU It shows the 15 barangays of San Mateo Rizal and the adjacent cities municipalities San Mateo is politically subdivided into 15 barangays 8 Barangay Area km2 Population 2020 census 9 Population density km2 Ampid 1 1 316 27 346 20 794 07Ampid 2 0 245 4 657 15 040 82Banaba 1 382 27 910 15 595 51Dulong Bayan 1 0 5879 5 229 8 555 88Dulong Bayan 2 4 3 13 072 1 590Guinayang 2 73 9 871 2 625 27Guitnang Bayan 1 4 12 35 121 5 996 84Guitnang Bayan 2 6 14 19 661 2 228 01Gulod Malaya 1 394 12 962 6 143 47Malanday 3 53 14 526 3 836 83Maly 5 65 14 612 2 638 05Pintong Bukawe 7 53 5 657 541 83Santa Ana 0 8 10 862 11 470Santo Nino 0 8711 12 769 12 650 67Silangan 7 655 59 051 7 095 32San Mateo 48 251 273 306 6 915 26In the 2020 census the population of San Mateo Rizal was 273 306 people 4 with a density of 5 000 inhabitants per square kilometer or 13 000 inhabitants per square mile Climate Edit Climate data for San Mateo RizalMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage high C F 29 84 30 86 32 90 34 93 33 91 31 88 30 86 29 84 29 84 30 86 30 86 29 84 31 87 Average low C F 20 68 20 68 21 70 23 73 24 75 25 77 24 75 24 75 24 75 23 73 22 72 21 70 23 73 Average precipitation mm inches 7 0 3 7 0 3 9 0 4 21 0 8 101 4 0 152 6 0 188 7 4 170 6 7 159 6 3 115 4 5 47 1 9 29 1 1 1 005 39 7 Average rainy days 3 3 3 5 4 8 8 1 18 9 23 5 26 4 25 5 24 5 19 6 10 4 6 4 174 9Source Meteoblue 10 Demographics Edit San Mateo Municipal Hall Population census of San MateoYearPop p a 19034 510 19184 841 0 47 19396 134 1 13 19486 811 1 17 196012 044 4 86 YearPop p a 197029 183 9 24 197538 955 5 96 198051 910 5 91 199082 310 4 72 199599 217 3 56 YearPop p a 2000135 603 6 93 2007184 860 4 37 2010205 255 3 88 2015252 527 4 03 2020273 306 1 57 Source Philippine Statistics Authority 11 12 13 14 Economy EditPoverty Incidence of San Mateo Source Philippine Statistics Authority 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 E De Los Santos Street Industries Edit The industrial establishments found in San Mateo are classified as light to medium industries Welding shops and motor pool are among the predominant industries found within the municipality Other industrial establishments are relatively small scale like leather craft and kiskisan Moreover agri business establishments which include poultry and piggery do exist within the municipality Various products are being manufactured in San Mateo In fact a group of different factories is found along Kambal Road Barangay Guitnang Bayan 2 This includes San Mateo Rubber Corp Nikon and Durawalk Slippers Jolly Food Corp First Win Corp Slippers and Golden Union Footwear Inc Evans Shoes A Coca Cola warehouse is also situated at Patiis Road corner GSIS Street Daang Tubo in Barangay Dulong Bayan 2 San Mateo also primarily manufactures gravel and sand aggregates together with other construction supplies that are found in hardware shops distributed all over the municipality Commerce and trade Edit Manahan Building in Barangay Ampid 1 The Central Business District is strategically located amidst the concentration of settlements A major commercial area starts from the vicinity of the public market bounded by the national road going to Rodriguez Montalban and Street of Daang Bakal in Barangay Guitnang Bayan 2 This commercial zone is a conglomeration of financial institutions a public market restaurants small eateries retail stores and the like Another area which may be considered as major commercial area is within the vicinity of De los Santos Street corner Gen Luna Avenue in Barangay Ampid 1 Other commercial areas extending to St Mattheus Medical Hospital near the boundary of San Mateo and Marikina are located near Puregold San Mateo formerly the Producer s Market at Barangay Banaba and another at the corner of Patiis Road and Gen Luna Avenue in Barangay Malanday SM City San Mateo along Gen Luna Avenue in Barangay Ampid 1 adds to the list of major commercial centers of San Mateo This SM Supermall and the very first full service mall of San Mateo opens on May 15 2015 serving local residents and from neighboring areas Further boost in San Mateo s economy is expected with the mall Banking EditSan Mateo has many bank branches like Banco de Oro BDO Bank of the Philippine Islands Metrobank Philippine Savings Bank PSBank EastWest Bank China Bank Philippine National Bank PNB Premiere Bank Merchants Bank Banco San Juan Marikina Valley San Mateo MVSM Bank RCBC Savings Bank United Coconut Planters Bank UCPB Banco Rodriguez Country Builders Bank the Real Bank a thrift bank Many automated teller machines in San Mateo are provided with security system such as anti crime alarms Security guards are also monitoring the premises of the banks in San Mateo for the safety of the customers Landmarks Edit The San Mateo Arch in Rizal Province stands as a boundary between Marikina and this town Diocesan Shrine of Our Lady of Aranzazu Diocesan Shrine of Our Lady of Aranzazu Nuestra Senora de Aranzazu Festivals EditThese are some of the notable events in San Mateo Events Date Place of EventMalanday Feast February 13 14 Patiis and MalandayAmpid Fiesta Sombrero and Walis Festival May 1 AmpidKawan Holiday Kab Scout of the Phil July 21 and 22 All of public schools in San MateoSan Mateo Festival Parada ng Kakanin September 9 San Mateo Plaza and San Mateo Municipal Hall StageGuitnang Bayan Parada ng kakanin September 9 Nuestra Senora De Aranzazu ChurchSan Mateo foundation day September 21 Dulong Bayan ChapelSt Francis of Assisi Parish Fiesta October 4 GuinayangSanta Barbara Villas 2 SBV2 Fiesta October 5 Santa Barbara Villas 2St Anthony Maria Zaccaria Parish Fiesta July 5 SilanganInfrastructure EditTransportation Edit San Mateo has a variety of conveyances that provide the residents with ready means of transportation These are public utility jeepneys buses tricycles pedicabs and UV Express Service are operating in the town These facilitate the movement of people and goods to Metro Manila and nearby towns of Rizal There are six jeepney terminals in San Mateo San Mateo Plaza Barangay Pintong Bukawe Barangay Banaba Puregold Barangay Silangan AFP Housing amp Tierra Monte and Barangay Santo Nino Modesta Transportation routes passing San Mateo are Montalban Cubao jeepneys Montalban San Mateo jeepneys and Commonwealth Philcoa San Mateo jeepneys thru the San Mateo Batasan Bridge These routes traverses Quezon City Marikina San Mateo and Rodriguez Montalban The only way to get through Pintong Bukawe is through Marcos Hi way Cabading amp Sapinit Roads in Antipolo Long before the Manila Light Rail Transit System opened its services in Santolan in the Pasig Marikina border in the early 2000s steam train services had once served those places in the past even before World War II In Marikina there is a street named Daangbakal also called by the names of Shoe Avenue Extension Munding Avenue and Bagong Silang There is also a similar Daangbakal in the San Mateo Montalban Rodriguez area and on the maps one can notice that the two roads should have been connected with each other In fact as the name suggests in Tagalog these streets were once a single railway line The two sides of the Daangbakal roads were once connected by a bridge in the San Mateo Marikina border However as the railroad tracks have been largely ignored after the Japanese Occupation and was transformed into separate highways the railway connection was abandoned The old railroad tracks called the Marikina Line was connected from Tutuban station in Manila passing through Tramo Barangay Rosario Pasig coming all the way to the town of Marikina up to Montalban On the northern end of the Daangbakal road in Montalban is a basketball court That basketball court which stands today surrounded by the Montalban Catholic Church and Cemetery was once the railway station terminus of that particular line The present day Santo Nino Elementary School in Marikina was said to be a train depot And also it was said that a railroad station once stood in the Marikina City Sports Park The Marikina Line was completed in 1906 and continued its operation until 1936 It was said that the Japanese Imperial Army made use of this railway line during the Second World War These railways were dismantled during the 1960s and were converted into ordinary roads Today the citizens are dependent on tricycles jeepneys Taxis FX Buses and AUV s which contribute to the everyday unusual and unbearable traffic of Metropolitan Manila Even now there is uncertainty in the Northrail project which links Manila to the northern provinces of Luzon because of corruption within the project s construction Aside from the Marikina Line two other lines have existed before but are now removed permanently First is the Cavite Line which passed through Paco Paranaque Bacoor and up to Naic Cavite Completed in 1908 its operation continued until 1936 Second is the Antipolo Line which passed through Santa Mesa Mandaluyong Pasig Cainta Taytay up to Antipolo near the Hinulugang Taktak Falls There is also a street named Daangbakal in Antipolo where like the Daangbakal roads on Marikina and San Mateo a railway line once existed The railroad tracks also passed through what is now the Ortigas Avenue Extension Its operation ceased in 1917 Jeepneys are the most common form of transportation within the municipality because of its convenience and low fare as compared to other forms of transportation Other modes are tricycles and pedicabs which are used mainly to transport people and goods where regular jeepney routes are not available Buses The Marikina Auto Line Transport Corporation MALTC buses are the public utility buses that mainly operate in San Mateo They operate ordinary type buses and newly acquired airconditioned buses which provide safe travel to passengers There are some private buses that transport people who work at the Fortune Tobacco Plant and other nearby factories in Marikina Power Edit Power services in the town are provided by the Manila Electric Company Meralco except in the mountain barangay of Pintong Bukawe There were 23 189 customers in San Mateo as of March 1999 Of these 27 115 or 95 37 percent residential customers while commercial industrial and streetlights number 971 4 19 percent 36 0 15 percent and 67 0 29 percent respectively The municipality of San Mateo had a total demand of 55 355 megawatt hours in 1998 San Mateo Mini Hydro Power Plant Edit A 2 46 megawatt 22 mini hydro power plant is on the way to start its operation by 2016 the projected year of completion of the spearheading company Hydrotec Renewables Inc of Germany along San Mateo River part of Marikina River 23 The company has already obtained Certificate of Non Coverage from the Department of Energy which permits to proceed with its construction 24 This hydro project is one among the eight hydro power application projects of Hydrotec in the north western Rizal Marikina area which will effectively contribute a combined capacity of 25 to 30 megawatts of environment friendly and clean energy to the Luzon grid or Meralco franchise area Flood events within the locality are also expected to be reduced with the upcoming hydro power plant 25 Water Edit The main source of the municipality s water supply are deep wells pump wells operated by Manila Water open wells springs and other ground water resources Some of the elevated parts of the municipality are under watershed protected areas since the topography is characterized by rolling to mountainous terrain From 0 65 San Mateo s water sanitation reached 100 on 2006 through the operation of Manila Water 26 North Manila Septage Treatment Plant Edit Completed and started operating in May 2007 the Manila Water North Septage Treatment Plant is located in Barangay Guitnang Bayan 2 This treats 586 cubic meters of septage a day 27 Santo Nino Silangan Water Supply ProjectAbout 42 000 residents are expected to benefit from continuous water supply once Manila Water s P320 M water supply project in San Mateo Rizal gets completed The project dubbed as Santo Nino Silangan Water Supply Project is divided into two phases Phase 1 which will serve barangays Gulod Malaya Santo Nino and portion of Silangan and Phase 2 which will serve the whole of Silangan and the elevated areas of Parang in Marikina The project involves the construction of pumping station and reservoirs and the laying of 25 kilometers of water lines including mainlines and will benefit twelve existing subdivisions occupying a total land area of 27 hectares Started in October 2007 the water project is expected to provide ample water supply to meet the 15 to 20 million liters per day MLD demand of the more than 13 000 households in the area 28 San Mateo Sanitary Landfill Edit In 2008 a proposal to build a 200 hectare sanitary landfill within the jurisdiction of two barangays was met with resistance by several environmental groups The proposed landfill was to be constructed on ground area within a protected forest 29 Bucking opposition by environment activists the operator of the San Mateo waste dump is ready to give it a go Andy Santiago president of the San Mateo Sanitary Landfill and Development Corp said it has given the green light for the 19 hectare facility in Rizal province to do business 30 Communication Edit Telecommunications serve as a major link within the sub sectors and among other sectors of the economy in the population centers and hinterlands It also serves as a catalyst for growth and development Telephone Fixed landline amp Wireless amp DSL Broadband Internet services are being provided by the Philippines Long Distance Telephone Company PLDT PT amp T and Converge ICT While cellular phone services are provide by Globe Telecom Smart Communications and Dito Telecommunity Education EditThere are public and private education institutions including colleges in San Mateo 31 32 High schools Edit Academe Deo Favente International Academia Del Tierra Grande Inc Ampid National High School Center for Positive Future Charles Science Integrated School of San Mateo Inc Christian Care Academy Christ the Lord of Harvest Academy Eastern Star Academy Inc Guardian Angel Academy Guinayang National High School Holy Name of Mary School Jose F Diaz Memorial National High School Kids World Christian Academy High School Annex Manila Waldorf School Maria Carmeli Catholic School Moses Cradle Academy Nuestra Senora de Aranzazu Parochial School Pintong Bukawe National High School San Mateo National High School Silangan National High School St Joseph Banaba St Joseph Montessori Branch St Joseph Montessori Main St Mary Integrated Learning School Ampid I St Matthew College Santa Cecilia Parochial School San Mateo Senior High School MCCID College School Building San Mateo Rizal Colleges and universities Edit Eastern Star Institute of Science amp Technology ESIST TESDA accredited San Mateo Municipal College Formerly Pamantasan ng Bayan ng San Mateo St Matthew CollegeSpecial education Edit Manila Christian Computer Institute for the Deaf MCCID Sister cities EditThese are the municipality s sister cities or municipalities LocalAntipolo Rizal Marikina Metro Manila Quezon City Metro Manila Rodriguez Rizal Zamboanga City 2012 33 Valenzuela Metro Manila 2017 See also EditLegislative districts of RizalReferences Edit Presidential Proclamation No 540 s 2018 25 July 2018 Declaring Friday 21 September 2018 a Special Non Working Day in the Municipality of San Mateo Province of Rizal retrieved August 8 2022 Municipality of San Mateo 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 Census of Population 2020 Region IV A Calabarzon Total Population by Province City Municipality and Barangay PSA Retrieved 8 July 2021 PSA Releases the 2018 Municipal and City Level Poverty Estimates Philippine Statistics Authority 15 December 2021 Retrieved 22 January 2022 Republic Act No 11546 30 March 2021 An Act Reapportioning the Second Legislative District of the Province of Rizal into Three 3 Legislative Districts retrieved August 8 2022 The Peak Life December 2007 Issue A Publication of Timberland Heights 1 permanent dead link Province Rizal PSGC Interactive Quezon City Philippines Philippine Statistics Authority Retrieved 12 November 2016 Philippine Statistics Authority s 2015 Census of Population San Mateo Average Temperatures and Rainfall Meteoblue Retrieved 11 May 2020 Census of Population 2015 Region IV A Calabarzon Total Population by Province City Municipality and Barangay PSA Retrieved 20 June 2016 Census of Population and Housing 2010 Region IV A Calabarzon Total Population by Province City Municipality and Barangay NSO Retrieved 29 June 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 Rizal Municipality Population Data Local Water Utilities Administration Research Division Retrieved 17 December 2016 Poverty incidence PI Philippine Statistics Authority Retrieved 28 December 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 15 December 2021 Retrieved 22 January 2022 Pending Hydropower Applications April 2013 Department of Energy Archived 2014 03 28 at the Wayback Machine Power firm set to build eight hydro plants along Marikina River Lenie Lectura January 8 2014 Business Mirror Hydrotec projects obtain permits Alena Mae S Flores March 20 2014 Manila Standard Today Big companies going into pumped storage run of river power plants Ray S Enano March 27 2014 Manila Standard Today Jorge C Mateo October 23 2007 Metropolitan Waterworks and Sewerage System MWSS Regulatory Office 2 August 22 2007 DENR Updates Archived June 7 2011 at the Wayback Machine July 1 2008 P320 M water supply project in San Mateo Rizal now underway Manila Water permanent dead link DJ Yap January 10 2009 Plan to Build New San Mateo Landfill Hit Philippine Daily Inquirer Archived 2009 01 25 at the Wayback Machine Gigi Muoz David and Erika Z Vizcarra February 2 2009 San Mateo Dump gets the Green Light Manila Standard Today Various Schools in San Mateo Rizal Archived 2011 09 05 at the Wayback Machine Batang San Mateo Website List of Public Schools in San Mateo Archived 2010 07 26 at the Wayback Machine Department of Education Zamboanga City Sisterhood SunStar 2012 Archived from the original on April 16 2013 Retrieved June 23 2012 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to San Mateo Rizal Official website San Mateo Profile at PhilAtlas com Philippine Standard Geographic Code Philippine Census Information Local Governance Performance Management System Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title San Mateo Rizal amp oldid 1129807145, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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