Metro Bacolod
Metro Bacolod | |
|---|---|
Skyline of Urban Bacolod | |
| Country | Philippines |
| Region | Negros Island Region |
| Province | Negros Occidental |
| Cities | Bacolod Bago Don Salvador Benedicto Murcia Pulupandan Silay Talisay City |
| Legislative districts | Lone District of Bacolod 1st Districts of Negros Occidental 3rd District of Negros Occidental 4th District of Negros Occidental |
| Barangays | 178[1] |
| Largest city | Bacolod |
| Government | |
| • Type | Metropolis |
| Area | |
• Total | 106.329 km2 (41.054 sq mi) |
| Population (2024)[3] | |
• Total | 1,145,150 |
| • Density | 10,769/km2 (27,890/sq mi) |
| Time zone | UTC+8 (Philippine Standard Time) |
Metro Bacolod (Hiligaynon: Kaulohan nga Bacolod; Tagalog: Kalakhang Bacolod) is a metropolitan area located in the Negros Island Region in the Philippines . This metropolitan area as defined by the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) has an estimated population of 1,145,150 inhabitants.
The metropolitan area is centered on Bacolod, the provincial capital,and includes the component cities of Bago, Silay Talisay, and the municipalities of Don Salvador Benedicto, Murcia, and Pulupandan, all located in the province of Negros Occidental. Metro Bacolod is among those identified by the National Framework for Physical Planning: 2001–2030 as one of the country's industrial, financial and technological centers.[4][5]
Cities and municipalities
All of the cities and municipalities of Metro Bacolod are located in the province of Negros Occidental.
| City | Population (2024)[3] | Barangays | Pop. density (per km2) | Area (km2) | Income class | Legal class | Zip code |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bacolod | 624,787 | 61 | 3,840 | 162.67 | 1st class | Highly urbanized city | 6100 |
| Bago | 192,993 | 24 | 481 | 420.20 | 1st Class | Component city | 6101 |
| Don Salvador Benedicto | 28,231 | 7 | 170 | 420 | 4th class | Municipality | 6117 |
| Murcia | 21101 | 23 | 836 | 322.86 | 1st class | Municipality | 6129 |
| Pulupandan | 31,942 | 20 | 230 | 18.49 | 4th Class | Municipality | 6102 |
| Silay | 136,802 | 16 | 592 | 214.80 | 3rd Class | Component city | 6116 |
| Talisay | 109,294 | 27 | 510 | 201.18 | 4th Class | Component city | 6115 |
Media
AM stations
- DYWB Bombo Radyo 630 (People's Broadcasting Service, Inc.)
- DYEZ Aksyon Radyo 684 (Manila Broadcasting Company)
- DYHB RMN 747 (Radio Mindanao Network)
- DYRL Radyo Pilipino 1035 (Radyo Pilipino Corporation)
- DZRH Nationwide 1080 (Pacific Broadcasting System; relay station of DZRH 666 in Manila)
- DYAF Radyo Totoo 1143 (Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines; operated by the Diocese of Bacolod; a member of the Catholic Media Network)
- 1233 DYVS (Far East Broadcasting Company)
- GMA Super Radyo DYSB 1341 (GMA Network, Inc.; relay station of DZBB 594 in Manila)
- RPN DYKB Radyo Ronda 1404 (Radio Philippines Network)
FM stations
- 90.3 Solid FM (Southern Broadcasting Network; operated by Yes2Health Advertising, Inc.)
- 91.1 FM Radio (Philippine Collective Media Corporation)
- 91.9 Love Radio (Manila Broadcasting Company; operated by Muñoz Broadcasting Concepts)
- 94.3 iFM (Radio Mindanao Network)
- 95.9 Star FM (People's Broadcasting Service, Inc.)
- 96.7 XFM (DCG Radio-TV Network; operated by Yes2Health Advertising, Inc.)
- 99.1 Yuhum Radio (Mareco Broadcasting Network; operated by RYU Media Companies )
- RJ 99.9 (Rajah Broadcasting Network; relay station of DZRJ 100.3 in Manila)
- 100.3 Radyo Negrense (Provincial Government of Negros Occidental)
- FM Radio 92.3 (Nation Broadcasting Corporation and operated by Philippine Collective Media Corporation; relay station of DWFM 92.3 in Manila)
- 103.1 Brigada News FM (Baycomms Broadcasting Corporation)
- 103.9 K5 News FM Bacolod (Fairwaves Broadcasting Network; operated by 5K Broadcasting Network, Inc.)
- 105.5 Easy Rock (Cebu Broadcasting Company; operated by Muñoz Broadcasting Concepts)
- Klick FM 106.3 (Quest Broadcasting, Inc.; operated by 5K Broadcasting Network, Inc.)
- Barangay FM 107.1 (GMA Network, Inc.)
TV stations
- DYAG - ALLTV-4 (Advanced Media Broadcasting System; formerly from ABS-CBN Corportation)[6][7]
- DYKB - RPN-8 (Radio Philippines Network)[8]
- DWGM - GMA-13 Bacolod (GMA Network, Inc.)[8][9]
- DYGB - Hope Channel-24 (Seventh-day Adventist Church/Gateway UHF Television Broadcasting)[8]
- DYGM - GMA-30 Murcia/Negros Occidental (GMA Network, Inc.)[8][9]
- DYTE - TV5-32 (TV5 Network, Inc.)[8]
Cable & satellite TV providers
- SkyCable – Bacolod
- New Bacolod Cable TV – Bacolod
- My Channel Cable Network – Bacolod, La Carlota, Pulupandan & Silay
- Cignal TV
- G Sat
- Bago City Cable TV Network – Bago
- Prime Cable Network – Murcia, Pulupandan & Talisay
- Negros Cable TV – Silay
- Smile Cable TV – Talisay
- Malihao Cable TV – Victorias
- Vision Ventures Cable TV – La Carlota
Transportation
Airport
Bacolod–Silay International Airport is located in Silay City. Metro Bacolod is approximately 1hr 13mins by air from Ninoy Aquino International Airport and approximately 30–45 minutes by air from Mactan–Cebu International Airport. Commercial Airlines serving the metropolitan area are Philippine Airlines, Cebu Pacific Air, PAL Express, Philippines Air Asia and Cebgo.
Roads
Bacolod has two main roads, Lacson Street to the north and Araneta Street to the south. The city has a good traffic plan lay-out and very seldom has traffic jams. The streets in the downtown area are one way, making Bacolod free from traffic congestion. Recently, Bacolod is experiencing an increase in traffic congestion due to an increase in number of vehicles and a perceived lack of implementation of traffic rules by the local government.
Seaports
Banago Wharf and BREDCO Port are the vessels entry point in Bacolod. It has daily access to Iloilo, with different shipping lines such as 2GO Travel, Weesam Express, SuperCat, Ocean Jet, Montenegro Lines, FastCat, and Tri Star megalink. 2GO Travel routes from Bacolod going Manila, Iloilo and Cagayan de Oro. Bacolod is 18–23 hours from the Port of Manila, 2–3 hours from Dumangas Port and 45 minutes- 1hr from the Port of Iloilo.
Gallery
Bacolod
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MassKara Festival Street Dancing
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Fountain of Justice and downtown Bacolod
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Front view of Bacolod City New Government Center
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Back view of Bacolod City New Government Center
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The Riverside Medical Center Inc. Medical Arts Building along BS Aquino Drive
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Philippine National Bank building, along Lacson Street
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SM City Bacolod during PyroMagic 2007
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Robinsons Place Bacolod, along Lacson Street in Barangay Mandalagan
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La Salle Coliseum of the University of St. La Salle
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UNO-Recoletos façade
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Colegio San Agustin – Bacolod administration building facade
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A view of the Capitol Park and Lagoon looking towards the Negros Occidental Provincial Capitol building
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Panaad Stadium
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L'Fisher Chalet (daytime)
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L'Fisher Chalet (at night)
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Bacolod Public Plaza
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North Drive Bacolod
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Sacred Heart Seminary and Shrine – Bacolod (Lupit Church)
Silay
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Silay City ancestral houses
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San Diego Pro-cathedral
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Sugarcane fields, near the City Center
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Pre-departure area, Bacolod–Silay International Airport
Talisay
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Statue of Andres Bonifacio
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The District – North Point at Ayala North Point
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Campuestohan Highland Resort
Proposed developments
Former Bacolod Mayor Monico Puentevella proposed the creation of Metro Bacolod Development Authority (MBDA) which was supported by the former Governor of Negros Occidental, Alfredo Marañon Jr. The cities of Bacolod, Talisay, Silay, Bago, and the municipality of Murcia will be the components of MBDA.[10]
Metro Bacolod Chamber of Commerce and Industry (MBCCI) president Frank Carbon believes that turning Bacolod and surrounding places into a metropolitan area is an essential factor in progress. He envisions Metro Bacolod to be composed of Bacolod, Silay, Talisay and Bago cities, as well as Murcia and Don Salvador Benedicto towns. There is a need to create a master plan for Metro Bacolod and the Metro Bacolod Development Authority (MBDA) which will help this capital city and nearby areas achieve their long-term goals and boost their business sector, Carbon said.[11]
This plan divides the cities and municipalities to the following industries:
- Bacolod: Capital city, metropolitan core and financial center
- Bago: Industrial center
- Murcia: Agro-tourism hub
- Silay City: Heritage and cultural hub
- Talisay City: Village city and sub-urban development
- Don Salvador Benedicto: Summer capital
Notable People
Bacolod
Bago
Murcia
Pulupandan
Silay
Talisay
See also
References
- ^ Government of the Philippines. "Total Population by Province, City, Municipality and Barangay: as of August 1, 2007 (Region VI – Western Visayas)" Archived February 15, 2010, at the Wayback Machine, Philippine Statistics Authority, Republic of the Philippines, Retrieved on July 7, 2010.
- ^ "List of Cities". Archived from the original on April 29, 2011. Retrieved July 7, 2010.
- ^ a b Census of Population (2020). Table B - Population and Annual Growth Rates by Province, City, and Municipality - By Region. Philippine Statistics Authority. Retrieved 8 July 2021.
- ^ "Building Globally Competitive Metro Areas in the Philippines" (PDF). National Economic and Development Authority. August 30, 2007. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 4, 2013. Retrieved February 6, 2014.
- ^ "DAILY STAR: Top Stories". Archived from the original on February 3, 2018.
- ^ "Para sa mga nais maki-saya sa ALLTV2 na naka-Analog TV, narito ang inyong guide! Alamin kung anong channel ang ALLTV2 sa inyong lugar.". Facebook. 2025-02-09. Retrieved 2026-03-06.
- ^ "NTC Broadcast Stations via FOI website" (PDF). National Telecommunications Commission. p. 5. Archived from the original on 2019-10-27. Retrieved 2026-03-06.
- ^ a b c d e "TV BROADCAST STATIONS - as of July 2024" (PDF). National Telecommunications Commission. Retrieved 2026-03-06.
- ^ a b "2024_full_1744710753" (PDF). GMA Network. p. 32. Retrieved 2026-02-10.
- ^ "Local News: Gov. Supports Creation of Metro Bacolod Development Authority | Negros Daily Bulletin". Archived from the original on August 11, 2013. Retrieved August 7, 2013.
- ^ "Panaynewsphilippines.com".
External links
- Official website of National Economic and Development Authority Archived August 4, 2016, at the Wayback Machine