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Poverty incidence of Lipa 5 10 15 20 25 30 2006 25.60 2009 3.86 2012 5.21 2015 4.20 2018 9.95 2021 12.03 Source: Philippine Statistics Authority Downtown Lipa Aerial view of Lipa at night Lipa's proximity to the country's capital, Manila, having an approximate distance of 86 kilometers or an hour and half drive via the Southern Luzon Expressway enhances its strategic access to development ...
National Route 433 (N433) or the Banaybanay–Mojon–Cuenca Road is a 17.180-kilometer (10.675 mi) secondary highway that forms part of the Philippine highway network.It is a two-to-four lane road serving as an important thoroughfare to settlements around the southern shore of Taal Lake and to the towns around Balayan Bay, connecting them to Batangas' largest settlement, Lipa.
Jose P. Laurel Highway is a 49-kilometer (30 mi), two-to-six lane, major highway running within the province of Batangas. [1] [2] [3] The highway forms part of National Route 4 (N4) of the Philippine highway network. [4]
Batangas's 6th congressional district is one of the six congressional districts of the Philippines in the province of Batangas. It has been represented in the House of Representatives of the Philippines since 2016. [3] The district consists of all barangays of the city of Lipa.
English: Bugtong na Pulo, Lipa City Iglesia Ni Cristo churches in Lipa City The 0/0utlets Junction - Manila-Batangas Road (DPWH Welcome District Boundary, Batangas 3rd DEO - Lipa City & Santiago, Malvar, Batangas) Jollibee restaurants (Malvar, Batangas) Santiago, Malvar, Batangas Lima Enerzone Corporation an Aboitiz Company along Jose P. Laurel Highway President Jose P. Laurel Highway (Malvar ...
Its present-day barangay Lumang Lipa was the second seat of Lipa in the 17th century before it was moved to Balete. [ 7 ] Mataasnakahoy was created as a municipality through Executive Order No. 308 signed by acting Governor General of the Philippines George C. Butte on March 27, 1931, effective January 1, 1932.
Batangas was initially composed of one representative district, wherein it elected four representatives, at large, to the Malolos Congress in 1898.It was later divided into three representative districts in 1907 for the Philippine Assembly, [1] with a minor adjustment of district boundaries as mandated by Act No. 3378 (enacted on December 3, 1927) taking effect starting in the 1928 elections.
Malvar is located at According to the Philippine Statistics Authority, the municipality has a land area of 33.00 square kilometers (12.74 sq mi) [7] constituting 1.06% of the 3,119.75-square-kilometer (1,204.54 sq mi) total area of Batangas.