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The Rizal Memorial Sports Complex (RMSC; formerly known as Rizal Memorial Field [1]) is a national sports complex of the Philippines, located on Pablo Ocampo St. (formerly Vito Cruz St.), Malate, Manila.
Site name Description Province City or municipality Address Coordinates Image PH-40-0001 Luz-Katigbak House: Also known as Casa de Segunda, this ancestral house was built in the 1880s by Segunda Katigbak and her husband Manuel Metra Luz. Katigbak is mentioned as the first love of Rizal in his biography. [1] Batangas: Lipa: 198 Rizal St.
Other popular venues in the region include the Smart Araneta Coliseum in Quezon City which hosts several professional and collegiate basketball leagues, and the Rizal Memorial Stadium in Malate which is home to both the Philippine national football team and the Philippines national rugby union team.
Name Image City/Municipality Province Region Notes Antipolo Cathedral: Antipolo: Rizal: Calabarzon: On January 14, 1954, the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines declared the new Antipolo Church as declared the National Shrine to Our Lady of Peace and Good Voyage.
The Rizal Memorial Track and Football Stadium (simply known as the Rizal Memorial Stadium) is a stadium in Manila, Philippines.Part of the Rizal Memorial Sports Complex which is designated by the National Historical Commission of the Philippines as a historical landmark, it served as the main stadium of the 1954 Asian Games and the Southeast Asian Games on three occasions.
The renovation of the facility was completed on November 13, 2019, with the send-off ceremony for the Philippine team in preparation for the games held at the arena. [ 8 ] The facility was temporarily used as an refurbished as a quarantine and isolation center in April 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic .
The only FINA-certified swimming pool facility in the Philippines. The following is an annotated list of swimming pools in the Philippines that conform to the Olympic standard . Additionally, it lists other long-course facilities that do not quite come up to the full standard of 50 × 25 metres, 10 (middle 8 used) lanes.
The Rizal Memorial Coliseum prior to the 2019 renovation. The Rizal Memorial Coliseum within the Rizal Memorial Sports Complex was built on the former site of Manila Carnival Grounds [1] in 1934 as a tennis stadium named "Rizal Memorial Tennis Stadium", [2] but was later renamed “Rizal Memorial Coliseum” at an unknown time.