Country Philippines District 6th District of Cebu ZIP code 6014 | City Mandaue Time zone PST (UTC+8) Province Cebu | |
Region Central Visayas (Region VII) |
Urban homes condominium in tipolo mandaue city as low as p7k per mo
The Tipolo (Filipino: Barangay ng Tipolo, Cebuano: Barangay sa Tipolo) is a barangay in Mandaue, Philippines.
Contents
- Urban homes condominium in tipolo mandaue city as low as p7k per mo
- Swagkingz metal tipolo mandaue city
- Origin of Name
- History
- Schools
- References
Tipolo is the second southernmost barangay of Mandaue. The first being Subangdaku which bounds Tipolo in the south and southwest. In the east it is bounded by The Mandaue Reclamation Area. In the north by barangay Guizo and in the northeast by Banilad, Mandaue.
Swagkingz metal tipolo mandaue city
Origin of Name
Barangay Tipolo was named after the Tipolo, or Antipolo, tree (Artocarpus blancoi). The tree related to breadfruit under the family Moraceae. These monstrous trees were once abundant in the area.
History
On 7 April 1521, Ferdinand Magellan landed and founded a settlement in the "Cove of Cebu". Five decades after the death of Ferdinand Magellan, Miguel López de Legazpi came back to the Philippines. The year was 1565, upon reaching the Philippines, he established the country’s first dry-dock complex in the said cove.
A few meters from the cove is a spring surrounded by trees of tipolo. People from other places flock to the spring to wash their clothes and take a bath. Close to the spring and in between the tipolo trees laid the old railway.
In the 1960s San Miguel Corporation was expanding its operations in Cebu province. Mandaue was picked the location of the new brewing complex. The complex was built in Tipolo due to its strategic location. The industrial complex was started in 1964 and inaugurated on 8 February 1968. The 27.1-hectare (67-acre) SMC complex occupied what used to be farmlands in Tipolo. Since then the brewery has been a landmark in the barangay and in the city of Mandaue.
Mowadays, not a single tipolo tree can be found in the barangay. The spring has dried out. In the site of the spring passes a canal where the wastes from SMC flows. Above the canal is the Tipolo bridge. Connected to the bridge is a highway, M. C. Briones St., were the railway once laid. The shores of Tipolo, the root of barangay Tipolo, is now gone. It was reclaimed in the late 1990s.