List of barangays in Cabuyao

The City of Cabuyao in the province of Laguna, Philippines is subdivided into eighteen (18) urbanized barangays.[1] Six of them are located along the National Highway, six on the lakeshore of Laguna de Bay, the country's largest lake, three Poblacion Barangays which was created under the Presidential Decree No. 86 and three on the western part and elevation portion of the city.[2]

Map of Cabuyao

The largest barangay in terms of land area is Barangay Gulod, it is popular for being the birthplace and hometown of Charice Pempengco,[3][4] the country's teen singing sensation. In terms of population, Barangay Mamatid is the most populous barangay of the city,[5] it is the site of Clarmil Manufacturing, Inc., the number one manufacturer of Goldilocks products in whole Southern Luzon.[6]

Barangays

No. Barangay Area (in km2) Population (Census 2010) Population Density (2010)Sample computation of quarterly income tax due and payable Barangay Captain (2013-2019)
1Baclaran1.7452512,1926,985/km2Mauro D. Galang
2Banay-Banay3.1012521,9347.073/km2Efren B. Cabuang
3Banlic2.312,6755,511/km2Philip Maurice L. Austria
4Bigaa2.09110,0514,807/km2Mario M. Servo
5Butong1.6212,3607,630/km2Eugenio E. Rosal
6Casile3.182,128669/km2Orlando P. de Sagun
7Diezmo1.592,6811,686/km2Nolie Manimtim
8Gulod4.0879,4172,304/km2Dominador V. Maniclang
9Mamatid2.650,21319,313/km2Erlinda L. Alcasabas
10Marinig3.91537,1699,494/km2Emiliano T. Lirio
11Niugan3.5202726,8077,615/km2Severiano B. Hain
12Pittland2.911,740598/km2Nestor M. Domingo
13Pulo3.015,1245,041/km2Armando Amoranto
14Sala1.5468,2755,353/km2Francisco D. Alimagno
15San Isidro3.1458518,1455,767/km2Emerson L. Devoma
16Barangay I Poblacion0.230172,83912,334/km2Eduardo F. Ordoñez
17Barangay II Poblacion0.233331,8407,886/km2Micheal L. Dalmacio
18Barangay III Poblacion0.23652,84612,034/km2Romeo A. Gardon

Barangay location

Cabuyao City is composed of eighteen (18) urbanized barangays,[1] in which six of them are located along the National Highway, six on the lakeshore of Laguna de Bay, the country's largest lake, three Poblacion Barangays which was created under the Presidential Decree No. 86 and three on the western part and elevation portion of the town.[7]

Former Barangays

Year Name Description
1571–1742 Barangay Calamba Calamba became an independent pueblo on August 28, 1742. With the passage of Republic Act No. 9024 on April 7, 2001, it was promoted from a municipality into Laguna's second component city after San Pablo City.
1571–1688 Barangay Malabanan Biñan separated from its mother town Tabuco (now Cabuyao) in 1688 and became a town. In 2010, it was proclaimed as the fourth component city of Laguna.[8]
1571–1725 Barangay San Pedro Tunasan Barrio San Pedro became a separate town on January 18, 1725. And Tunasan is now a barangay of Muntinlupa City.[9]
1571–1792 Barangay Santa Rosa de Lima On the year after barrio Biñan became a separated town from Tabuco, Barrio Bukol (Santa Rosa, before separation from Biñan) separated from Cabuyao and became a town on January 15, 1792. It is now one of the four first class cities of the province of Laguna.[9]
1571–1678 Barangay Santo Tomas In 1678, Santo Tomas became a town in the neighbor province of Batangas.

See also

References

  1. Philippine Standard Geographic Code Archived 2011-11-14 at the Wayback Machine
  2. Cabuyao, Laguna/Barangay Locations Archived 2012-01-28 at the Wayback Machine
  3. Teen Singing Sensation at oprah.com. Retrieved on 19-February-2009
  4. Voice of the Future Archived 2010-09-04 at the Wayback Machine at thenational.ae. Retrieved on 19-February-2009
  5. 2007 Census table for Laguna Archived 2011-06-07 at the Wayback Machine - National Statistics Office
  6. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-01-02. Retrieved 2010-10-27.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  7. "Cabuyao, Laguna/Barangay Locations". Msc.edu.ph. Archived from the original on January 28, 2012. Retrieved January 25, 2012.
  8. The Official Website of Cabuyao, Laguna - History
  9. "A Glimpse of Laguna's Unrevealed Story". Wowlaguna.com. August 3, 2010. Retrieved January 25, 2012.
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