How Manila Became the Densest City in the World

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 10 окт 2024
  • Check out the new plushie on Makeship before they're gone! www.makeship.c...
    MUSIC:
    "Tribes of Fortune" by Trailer Worx*
    "Summer" by bensound.com
    "Pacific Journey" by Edward Karl Hanson*
    "When Warriors Align" by Zauana*
    "Across the Oceans" by Bonnie Grace*
    "Canada" by Cushy*
    "Dusty Wheels" by Kikoru*
    (*via EpidemicSound)
    📖 SOURCES:
    web.archive.or...
    www.detrack.co...
    manilafyi.com/...
    www.transparen...
    business.inqui...
    www.macrotrend...
    👕 MERCH! crowdmade.com/...
    CONTACT: contact@khanubis.tv
    SPONSORSHIP INQUIRIES: khanubis@thoughtleaders.io
    👥 DISCORD SERVER: / discord
    THANK YOU, BRONZE AGE+ PATRONS! ( / khanubis )
    Bulcsú Farmasi, Nif Lindsay, Rajmohana Panicker, Rebanics, TC Safavi, Larry Burch, Tobi Burch-Rates
    Or make one-time donations at paypal.me/khan...
    www.khanubis.tv

Комментарии • 179

  • @KhAnubis
    @KhAnubis  2 дня назад +13

    Remember to check out the KhAnubis logo plushie now on sale! I'm very grateful to be working with Makeship on this and hope you all get to enjoy this too
    www.makeship.com/products/khanubis-plushie
    (This comment will self-destruct in 20 days, if you're still seeing this there's still time!)

  • @lan-w6956
    @lan-w6956 2 дня назад +162

    Speaking of urban planning, while other cities in the country are getting the recognition and are urbanizing too, no planning is in place. Many cities outside Manila are described to be rows of SM Malls beside 2 storey houses, VERY wide roads with no centralized transportation system, and sometimes upper-class developments enroach to mountains or forests (as seen in Cebu).
    Baguio for example, was planned by the Americans and hailed as a beautiful city, but with a lack of public transit and urbanization, Baguio experiences heavy traffic during the cool months due to influx of tourists.
    The good news is a new attempt at urban planning is being done with New Clark City being built, but concerns over it enroaching over native Aeta lands and especially a lack of public transit would be challenges that the development needs to face.
    Btw your pronunciations of the place names were excellent!

    • @emperorjonz9590
      @emperorjonz9590 2 дня назад +4

      Just eminent domain Aeta lands no land is exempt from eminent domain.

    • @PaulJohn01
      @PaulJohn01 2 дня назад +9

      I live in Baguio and agree 100%, no planning since the Americans left, no new roads in decades, no bypass, no ring road, all public transport takes you to city centre, so if you're on east side and want to go north, 1st you go to city centre then walk to transfer to go north.
      Many roads built "too" Baguio just to bring in tourists.
      Vast amount of illegal construction since the 80's allowed by every City Council.

    • @theotherohlourdespadua1131
      @theotherohlourdespadua1131 День назад

      ​@@emperorjonz9590 Dude, that is the running issue for 500 years now here that has led to indigenous groups embracing the Commies. You really want us to restart those old wars again?

  • @aldrinmilespartosa1578
    @aldrinmilespartosa1578 2 дня назад +102

    Also large companies building expressways everywhere rather than a much better mass transport systems like trains because the generation of toll fees is quite high.

    • @flip1sba
      @flip1sba День назад

      there are various mass transit transportation being built both commuter rail and rapid transit.

    • @aldrinmilespartosa1578
      @aldrinmilespartosa1578 День назад +4

      @@flip1sba of course, but its little too late. Many also labby against it.

    • @flip1sba
      @flip1sba День назад +1

      @@aldrinmilespartosa1578 and WHO are these people who lobbied against it?
      Nothing is too late, Jakarta just built their rapid transit and they are a huge city.

    • @aldrinmilespartosa1578
      @aldrinmilespartosa1578 День назад +2

      @@flip1sba im just saying what is it now, not what it will be.

    • @flip1sba
      @flip1sba День назад +1

      @@aldrinmilespartosa1578 and what is now, there are various railway projects under construction, some almost completed such as LRT-1 extension. I live in Southern Metro Manila and see its progress.

  • @Given06
    @Given06 2 дня назад +22

    This is actually a very well researched video, i was also really surprised by the Metro Manila-isms you mentioned, as someone from the actual metro. Props to you Khanubis and everyone else who helped shed light on this!

  • @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un
    @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un 11 часов назад +6

    In the US, the top 12 densest municipalities in the US are all in the NYC metro area, with the top four all in Hudson County, NJ. Guttenberg, Union City, West New York, and Hoboken. To put things into perspective for Guttenberg, over 12K people (in 2020 census) live in a land area that's just .19 square miles (total area of .24 square miles)! And I call it the Whittier, Alaska of New Jersey because of the Galaxy Towers! A trio of 44-story octagonal towers (with two 16-story connecting structures) built right on the Palisades, with over a thousand residential units (began as rentals but was converted to condos in 1980), retail, and office space! It takes its name from Johannes Gutenberg as it used to be populated by many Germans but now it's very Cuban. Hoboken has been nicknamed the Mile Square City, but it actually occupies about 1.25 sq mi (3.2 sq km) of land! Hoboken is the location of the first officially recorded game of baseball (in 1846) and of the Stevens Institute of Technology, one of the oldest technological universities in the US. It is also known as the birthplace and hometown of Frank Sinatra! The character of the city has changed from an artsy industrial vibe from the days when Maxwell House coffee, Lipton tea, Hostess Cupcakes, and Wonder Bread called Hoboken home, to one of trendy shops and condominiums. Hoboken even has an active NJT rail terminal, which is also served by ferries, PATH, light-rail, and NJT buses. Because of the lack of space, these small dense places like Hoboken and Weehawken bury their bodies in North Bergen, which is why a good portion of North Bergen (still in Hudson County) has cemeteries. Hoboken hasn't had a car crash-related fatality since 2017 thanks to making its streets safe for cyclists and pedestrians! Under Mayor Ravi Bhalla, Hoboken implemented daylighting, installing flexible posts, rain gardens or racks to prevent cars from parking at street corners and improve visibility between pedestrians and drivers! They also reduced the limit from 25 mph to 20 mph in 2022!
    Alongside Guttenberg, Union City and West New York are known as Havana on the Hudson because of their Cuban population. Union City is also known as the "Embroidery Capital of the US". Before Latinos immigrated, German Americans and Dutch dominated the area. Along with Swiss and Austrian immigrants, they founded the European-style lace making industries for which they were famous. And the introduction of Schiffli lace machines in Hudson County earned Union City its embroidery capital title. Jersey City and Weehawken, both in Hudson County, are within the top 20 municipalities in the US as well. In the 2020 census, Weehawken had a population of 17,197, living in a land area of just .78 sq miles! Weehawken is of course famous for the Weehawken Dueling Grounds, the site of the Hamilton-Burr duel. The boulder that Hamilton rested on after he was shot is still there. Hamilton actually helped design the streets of downtown Jersey City! In 2020, Jersey City had a population of 292,449 living in a land area of 14.74 sq miles! Redevelopment of the Jersey City waterfront has made the city one of the largest centers of banking and finance in the US and has led to the district and city being nicknamed Wall Street West. These places mentioned have experienced a housing boom thanks to the Hudson-Bergen Light-Rail, which connects places like North Bergen, Union City, Weehawken, Hoboken, Jersey City, and Bayonne. In Jersey City's case, both them and Hoboken have PATH stations and HBLR stations and have taken advantage through building TOD around these stations, alongside miles of protected bike lanes with Citi Bike bikeshare. Not just downtown either, Journal Square has densified too thanks to it being a major bus/PATH hub for NJT buses and frequent jitneys. NY Waterway has different stops for its ferries in Jersey City, Hoboken, and Weehawken, as well as Edgewater in Bergen County, to connect with Lower Manhattan and Midtown.

  • @lord_of_love_and_thunder
    @lord_of_love_and_thunder 2 дня назад +72

    I doubt that the Philippines intended to focus all their development in one city. A highly populated and underdeveloped major city seems to be a common feature in poorer countries. There simply is less capital to go around, and it tends to concentrate.

    • @aldrinmilespartosa1578
      @aldrinmilespartosa1578 2 дня назад +15

      Its in a way a negative feedback loop. Its also called by the locals as "imperial" manila for a reason, hugging all the resources while other parts of the country starve with infrastructure funds like in southern lands like mindanao.

    • @joerionis5902
      @joerionis5902 2 дня назад

      ​​@@aldrinmilespartosa1578Pretty sure Metro Manila gives more than what it gets from the Internal Revenue Allotment. I think it's more of a case of corruption and a lack of good ideas from the elites regarding the planning of their own cities. Yes it's also a case of too much concentrated development in one area, but I sure would not just throw around the word "Imperial" in a country where political dynasties from everywhere control the state. Take the Kamara, it's literally a legislative chamber with representation from all districts, Metro Manila making up a minority of the seats.

    • @madensmith7014
      @madensmith7014 День назад +4

      ​@@aldrinmilespartosa1578There's also that shitty political culture where the politicians will really only develop things if it benefits their own businesses. The National Budget is also influenced by this culture. NCR development is a given, but to other provinces and municipalities, it's pretty much decided whether you're on good terms with the top party on whether you get priority with the funding.

    • @kzm-cb5mr
      @kzm-cb5mr День назад +7

      @@aldrinmilespartosa1578 Locals, you mean Bisaya. Literally only Visayans like to pull the "imperial manila" card when they also have big cities in the south, it's not Manila's problem that their local governments are so inept in attracting investments and finding partners to build infrastructure.

    • @mdc7081
      @mdc7081 День назад +2

      ​@@kzm-cb5mr don't lump all visayas on your propaganda. only cebuanos are bitter about that, some of them even refuse to speak tagalog.

  • @blogdesign7126
    @blogdesign7126 2 дня назад +28

    I knew Manila is the densest city in the Philippines but its amazing I didn't think Manila would be denser than even cities in India and China. I would have guessed those places would have taken 1st place for densest cities in the world. Mexico city and Tokyo would have been up there too. But then again we are looking at the current census.

    • @dayangmarikit6860
      @dayangmarikit6860 22 часа назад +1

      The densest city is Manila itself... not Metro Manila as a whole.

  • @amehak1922
    @amehak1922 2 дня назад +175

    Manilla is one city in the metro area, there are 7 other cities, some of which are larger than Manilla itself, it used to be the largest city until recently.

    • @napabilirim
      @napabilirim 2 дня назад

      yeah but those "cities" are just suburbs of Manila

    • @sonicvenom8292
      @sonicvenom8292 2 дня назад +48

      Manila is one of 16 cities in Metro Manila, excluding Pateros which technically isn't a city.

    • @alexilonopoulos3165
      @alexilonopoulos3165 2 дня назад +52

      He literally said this. Watch the video before you comment

    • @oliverbulus7181
      @oliverbulus7181 2 дня назад +7

      @@sonicvenom8292 Tokyo has 27 Citiee and Los Angeles has 88 Citiee within it.

    • @joerionis5902
      @joerionis5902 2 дня назад +4

      The metro area is also called Metro Manila, so...

  • @AverytheCubanAmerican
    @AverytheCubanAmerican День назад +6

    Daniel Burnham also planned Baguio! Baguio was selected to become the summer capital. In November 1901, the American colonial government expropriated lands in Baguio, 14,000 acres, owned by the Ibaloi people, who were forced to sell their land. Baguio was called Kafagway by indigenous peoples. The name Baguio originated in the American period and is derived from the Ibaloi word bagiw (moss), which was then Hispanicized as Baguio. Burnham's plans emphasized improved sanitation, a cohesive aesthetic, and visual reminders of government authority. In Baguio, government structures were built looming from the cliffs above the town. Burnham planned Manila and Baguio, while William Edwards Parsons went to the Philippines in November 1905 to "interpret" the preliminary plans prepared by Burnham for Manila and Baguio and modify these as needed while Burnham left. Baguio's Mansion was designed by Parsons. Parsons also designed the Gabaldon school buildings across the country, inspired by the traditional Filipino houses of bahay kubo and bahay na bato. Daniel Burnham actually had big roles in the creation of master plans for the development of many cities, not just in the Philippines! Including the Plan of Chicago (Riverwalk, Navy Pier, Grant Park, Northerly Island were all part of this plan). The 1909 Plan of Chicago was inspired by plans for Manila, Baguio, downtown DC, and the temporary White City he helped design for the 1893 Columbian Exposition. He also designed several famous buildings like Chicago's Field Museum (the museum was moved from Jackson Park to Grant Park after the exposition), Chicago Union Station and the Reliance and Rookery Buildings, NYC's Flatiron Building, Pittsburgh's Union/Penn Station, and DC's Union Station!
    So yeah, it was funny for you to mention DC, since Burnham not only designed DC's Union Station, but also helped plan the current look of downtown DC and the National Mall through the 1902 McMillan Plan. DC was originally designed under the L'Enfant plan by Parisian Pierre L'Enfant, but the McMillan Commission (also known as the Senate Park Commission) reaffirmed and updated L'Enfant's planning principles in their 1902 Plan. The McMillan Plan proposed eliminating the Victorian landscaping of the National Mall and replacing it with an uncomplicated expanse of grass, narrowing the Mall, a reflecting pool on the western end, and permitting the construction of low, Neoclassical museums and cultural centers along the Mall's east-west axis. The Ellipse would remain open space in order to preserve the vista from the White House south to the Washington Monument and the Potomac. The Pennsylvania Railroad's Baltimore & Potomac Railroad Passenger Terminal, located at what is today New Jersey Avenue NW and Constitution Avenue NW, would be torn down, replaced by Burnham's Union Station. Additionally, the McMillan Plan contemplated constructing clusters of tall, Neoclassical office buildings around Lafayette Square and the Capitol, as well as an extensive system of neighborhood parks and recreational facilities throughout the city. Never formally adopted by the federal government, the McMillan Plan was implemented piecemeal in the decades after its release. The location of the Lincoln Memorial, Ulysses S. Grant Memorial, Union Station, and US Department of Agriculture Building are due to the McMillan Plan. Proposals to construct Arlington Memorial Bridge received a significant boost from the plan as well. The McMillan Plan continues to guide urban planning in and around DC, into the 21st century and has become a part of the federal government's official planning policy for the national capital.

  • @juangrimaldi100
    @juangrimaldi100 2 дня назад +15

    Your pronunciation of the names of the places is almost perfect

    • @KhAnubis
      @KhAnubis  2 дня назад +4

      You know what, I'll take it

    • @pom8130
      @pom8130 2 дня назад

      @@KhAnubisHe’s lying but you are better than most Americans that even live here 😂

  • @JulioOther
    @JulioOther 2 дня назад +28

    As someone from South East Asia corruption and bad planning is like the norm here. There's a reason people call the ASEAN countries the Asian Balkan.

    • @nunyabiznes33
      @nunyabiznes33 2 дня назад +15

      Balkans but less stabby stabby with each other

    • @FebyanKudrat
      @FebyanKudrat День назад

      We just curse each other in online games 😂​@@nunyabiznes33

    • @JRAS_
      @JRAS_ День назад +9

      much harder to get stabby stabby when the other guy is in a different island

    • @PetrasJem
      @PetrasJem День назад

      Balkans but less stabby stabby with each other because one day we protect each other, the other we bicker like little siblings

    • @mr.slimeyt
      @mr.slimeyt День назад +1

      ​@@PetrasJem probably cuz everyone shared the same scars from both European and japanese rule

  • @metalbob123
    @metalbob123 2 дня назад +19

    I love you Khanubis

    • @KhAnubis
      @KhAnubis  2 дня назад +17

      [Metro Man voice] And I love you, random citizen!

  • @flip1sba
    @flip1sba День назад +12

    Metro Manila alone is 13 million but Greater Manila including CALABARZON and Central Luzon are around 25 million and we are talking about continuous urban area.
    Jakarta has one light rail and one metro line, less than that of Metro Manila but it has an extensive commuter rail system.

  • @sasi5841
    @sasi5841 2 дня назад +18

    8:10 the patron systems originates from the roman republic. That tradition was inherited be the iberian, italian (it's more present in the south), and greeks, as well as places that were colonized by the iberians.
    So, the Philippines inherited a Roman tradition for some reason.

    • @xXxSkyViperxXx
      @xXxSkyViperxXx День назад +5

      333 years of spanish rule begets that, i guess.

    • @parasatc8183
      @parasatc8183 День назад

      ​@@xXxSkyViperxXxExactly this. There's a video by Asianometry that (indirectly) explains how patronage came to be in the Philippines, though it's more about why the country struggles to implement land reform.

    • @brickstonesonn9276
      @brickstonesonn9276 22 часа назад +2

      Really interesting how Philippines inherited both Roman and Chinese traditions directly or indirectly

    • @AureliusLaurentius1099
      @AureliusLaurentius1099 19 часов назад

      Philippines the true successor to Rome

  • @napoleonibonaparte7198
    @napoleonibonaparte7198 День назад +9

    The biggest problem is lack of actual planning. Let alone strategic planning. Metro Manila has 16+1 cities with their own local authorities. Most of them held by a political dynasty hell bent on keeping their power.
    Coastal cities have given their blessing for more reclamation, worsening floods, building development for rich people to play in.
    Metro Manila does not really lack land. It just sucks at strategic planning, much of the slums are low rise structures. Coupled with a car-first mindset of policymakers, it is no wonder the go-to solution they resort to are road-widenings and more highways. The latest brain-dead project is putting up a highway along the river Pasig.

    • @maestershaw8604
      @maestershaw8604 День назад

      It's not the lack of actual planning (manila has a masterplan already design), it's enforcing those plans. Leaders being elected did not care about those master plans until very recently.

  • @gurvb
    @gurvb 3 дня назад +12

    it's tomorrow AND i'm gonna have school at 10am
    but still looking forward to this!
    i'm gonna give my opinions in this comment when the vid goes live and i get back from school

    • @KhAnubis
      @KhAnubis  3 дня назад +1

      Fair enough, I normally upload on Sundays partially for this reason

  • @I_am_somebody_1234
    @I_am_somebody_1234 День назад +3

    Something similar happened in Costa Rica. Between 1950-1980, San Jose exploded in population, as it was the one place in the country with industrial jobs instead of agriculture.
    The problem: The government didn't really know what to do, and left urban development to each individual municipality rather than to a higher authority. This led to a complete urban disorder, specially in southern SJ (Alajuelita, Desamparados, Aserri,...)
    Traffic here is shit for how small the city is (2.5 million ppl), and traffic projects have to cross so many legal hurdles that our main highway loop around SJ (called Circunvalacion) took 7 decades to finish...
    Nowadays the city is not growing so fast, but that is mostly cuz ppl now move to nearby cities (Heredia, Alajuela, Cartago) and it seems they are going a similar path XD

  • @burprobrox9134
    @burprobrox9134 2 дня назад +9

    Nice one. I’d love to visit there someday.

    • @theelevatedone2536
      @theelevatedone2536 2 дня назад +2

      Hopefully our rail line extensions will be done by then. Commuting here is an absolute nightmare as it is right now.

    • @mr.slimeyt
      @mr.slimeyt День назад

      ​@@theelevatedone2536 luckily we got joyride or grab 😂

    • @NanobanaKinako
      @NanobanaKinako 18 часов назад +1

      ​@@mr.slimeytThey're overpriced. If you are going around the city without anything heavy and big, we have Angkas.

  • @shinsenshogun900
    @shinsenshogun900 2 дня назад +10

    A week's worth of a belated birthday present from a resident of this sprawling metro!

  • @mariabumby
    @mariabumby День назад

    just subscribed recently and was surprised by you uploading about where I lived, i know yall talked about manila-metro manila in relation, but as a Quezon City native I'm always fascinated by how perceptions of "southies" "northies" "tondo/manila" energies/stereotypes have come about, historically i mean! thanks again for the video i've been having a kick learning about geopolitics and thematic history on youtube lately

  • @nunyabiznes33
    @nunyabiznes33 2 дня назад +8

    You can thank the Japanese. After WW2 people flocked into the then levelled Manila (the Americans bombed it to get rid of the Japanese).

    • @sonicvenom8292
      @sonicvenom8292 2 дня назад +9

      True. WWII stopped the Burnham plan in its tracks, and destroyed a lot of Manila's infrastructure(it was the second most destroyed city in WWII after Warsaw), including the literal tracks, since pre-war Manila had a tram system that it conspicuously lacks today. At least the Japanese helped rebuild some infrastructure after the war, though it's sad that they still refuse to teach the full history of WWII and Japan's actions to the Japanese people.

    • @xXxSkyViperxXx
      @xXxSkyViperxXx День назад +5

      and now JICA by Japanese is doing the metro manila planning....

  • @CrystalClearWith8BE
    @CrystalClearWith8BE День назад +1

    Over the years, Metro Manila's rapid urbanization was insane and empty land is becoming limited, but the neighboring provinces like Bulacan and Cavite have empty land. Today, Metro Manila lacks public transport, but we're still building new ways of public transport including new rapid teansit lines and a new commuter rail that replaces the national railway. Rapid urbanization also happened during Martial Law.

    • @Jose.AFT.Saddul
      @Jose.AFT.Saddul День назад

      It’s so unfortunate how long it’s taking to construct the new rail Lines. If you pass by commonwealth you can see the trains for the new train line already rusting. And they’ve never even been used yet which is unfortunate. The government shouldn’t have had those trains delivered until the line was finished

  • @heekki3951
    @heekki3951 День назад +4

    watching this from ubelt is crazy

  • @paoloesquillo1421
    @paoloesquillo1421 День назад +3

    You did your research well, you even got the U-belt. Cheers bro, on corruption yes it’s actually a culture here. We even say “wag mo ako kakalimutan ah (kapag naging Mayor/Governor etc public official ka)” ~Don’t forget me when you become a government official

  • @targolg
    @targolg 2 дня назад +3

    the only time i heard someone correctly pronuncing laguna de bay

    • @roelmendoza7638
      @roelmendoza7638 День назад +1

      Almost. But Bay is supposed to be two syllables as it refers to a town in Laguna province - Ba-ý or Ba-é.

  • @exgeeinteractive
    @exgeeinteractive День назад +2

    Manila City is the densest city in the World but Metro Manila as a whole isn't even in the Top 5.
    The only way to decongest Metro Manila is by spreading developments throughout the country. But Instead of bringing investments to other regions, the gov't and the private sector did the dumbest thing by reclaiming more land. GENIUS

  • @IagoSB__0.0
    @IagoSB__0.0 2 дня назад +11

    I am getting São Paulo vibes, but denser

    • @ichiro.g
      @ichiro.g День назад

      I knew it Manila is just an Asian favela

    • @NanobanaKinako
      @NanobanaKinako 18 часов назад +1

      The slums here are very similar to what Brazilian slum is.

    • @NoVisionGuy
      @NoVisionGuy 14 часов назад

      @@NanobanaKinako same materials and climate

  • @alfblack2
    @alfblack2 2 дня назад +1

    dang good research. a good condensed summary.

  • @clearlyweird
    @clearlyweird 2 дня назад +5

    I’ve been looking for this info, I’m so glad to get a video on it. Not even kidding

  • @rinotilde2699
    @rinotilde2699 День назад

    This is one of the better videos in RUclips. Thank you!

  • @renaultellis6188
    @renaultellis6188 День назад +1

    Manila is unlike her neighbouring capital cities who weren't bombed during WWII (It was manila and Krakow that had the greatest losses during that time). Almost all of the proposed plans were scrapped when most of the structures and infrastructures laid in ruins and rebuilding was done in a hasty process, leading to the mess it is today

  • @FebyanKudrat
    @FebyanKudrat День назад +4

    As Indonesian, a fellow ASEAN , I know what Philippines feel about corruption, nepotism, and political dynasty. That's ASEAN for you 😂

  • @mmyr8ado.360
    @mmyr8ado.360 21 час назад

    7:22 Those two areas aren't separated by a highway. A part of it is only separated by a wall, and you can go between those two areas beside the mall.

  • @nooblangpoo
    @nooblangpoo 23 часа назад

    For me the overcentralization came first from the Spaniards due to trying to consolidate power to easily facilitate trade and customs in Manila for the international trade, then the US excacerbated it due to the challenge of the vast archipelago, its just that Philippines was forced not by the countries but by its geological advantage and disadvantage to overcentralize due to the natural flow of modernization and increasing rural to urban logistics. Radial Road 10 has seen significant upgrades through out the years but the sheer volume of traffic of goods that comes out of the Port of Manila (North and South Harbor) is still significant enough that every week at midnight, there is significant traffic at Radial Road 10 which often bleeds out to other major highways of the city. EDSA, an outdated highway, was just overwhelmed and the lack of space created one of the worst highways to go to the point that arterial and collectors are used by people to alleviate and escape the traffic.

  • @guimauves6374
    @guimauves6374 День назад

    Good research, though I do wish you mentioned that the daytime population balloons by a few more million people due to people commuting into the metropolis from nearby areas (from provinces like Cavite, Laguna, Bulacan, etc.). Take a look at the term "bedroom communities". But good video overall, and quite good pronunciation lol

  • @SimonSenaviev
    @SimonSenaviev 2 дня назад +4

    Curious how there's so many people there but it looks like it's mostly houses
    Meanwhile here in São Paulo where 22 million people live in the greater metropolitan area you see a endless sea of residential towers everywhere

    • @barrs817
      @barrs817 День назад +3

      Been to Sao Paulo before (and Rio too hehe), and all I can say is, both Brazilian cities are mostly mountainous, that's why a lot of people there live in residential towers. Our Manila is mostly flat though, plus a lot less effectively managed than SP or RDJ.

    • @xXxSkyViperxXx
      @xXxSkyViperxXx День назад +1

      each of the houses or buildings in metro manila contain a lot of people. it's not very often to find a place in metro manila where the person lives alone unless it's just one single cheap bedspacer room

  • @revinhatol
    @revinhatol День назад +7

    Yorme Isko has his chance in the City Hall, and he almost blew it before he ran for president (where, of course, he lost to BBM). Now he betrays who he once considered his running mate.

    • @jamesrocket5616
      @jamesrocket5616 День назад +1

      Agree, the betrayal has cost him his reputation

  • @SamPetunia
    @SamPetunia 22 часа назад

    I live in one of the upperclass districts in Mandaluyong Manila. You could tell when you walk the streets who are the rich people from the social climbers.

  • @SalalilaII
    @SalalilaII 10 часов назад +1

    I like how you actually mentioned the pre colonial polities when talking about Manila. Especially Tondo. When people here Tondo, they always think about this huge slum, but way before the Spanish came, Tondo was a dominant polity in pre colonial Luzon. Its sphere of influence reached as far as Butuan, through the Laguna copper plate inscription, they were more involved and interested in trading and diplomacy than warfare. With that being said, given the state of Manila today, there really is no hope for it to flourish anymore cause its completely unorganised and it lacks basic necessities from top to bottom such as sewage, and drainage systems, poor infrastructure still stuck in the 19th century, and its too overpopulated. A new capital really needs to be built cause the current one is a shihhthole. Should rename the new capital Tondo as a tribute to the Tondoan Lakanate/Tondo polity. Manila is dead...

  • @cachecow
    @cachecow 2 дня назад

    Excellent video!
    Which urban oasis is next?

  • @houselemuellan8756
    @houselemuellan8756 День назад

    2:02 oh no the Spani- BRUNEI JUMPSCARE

  • @tobirates916
    @tobirates916 День назад

    No one is talking about that adorable plushie, which is an absolute dead ringer for KhAnubis? C’mon!

  • @guillerhonora717
    @guillerhonora717 2 дня назад

    Actually well put as someone who lives a province right next to NCR(Rizal)

  • @monadieu402
    @monadieu402 18 часов назад

    Manila should limit and reduce its population by encouraging investors in the province in exchange of tax insentives so that the people will voluntary leave Manila, example Bicol and Central Luzon and Batangas area has potential to become a Business District.

  • @dennismedilo
    @dennismedilo 2 дня назад +7

    the 13 million you mention, is the population of Metro Manila. the city of Manila has just 1.8million (w/ a density of 43k)

    • @afdhalulakbar5382
      @afdhalulakbar5382 2 дня назад +17

      Did you watch the whole video? He did mentions that information....

    • @Jose.AFT.Saddul
      @Jose.AFT.Saddul 2 дня назад +4

      Just finished the video. And yes he does mention this.

    • @mr.slimeyt
      @mr.slimeyt День назад

      Watch fully before commenting

  • @Z1tu0
    @Z1tu0 2 часа назад

    I have to say, I did not greatly enjoy my time in Manila. I've spent some time living in the Philippines, and I'm quite fond of the places I've seen there and the people of those places. That said, Manila was most definitely not at the top of my list of favourites. Even though of course, it being the center of everything, there are some things you might find in Manila that you might struggle to find outside the city.
    I harbour no I'll will towards Manila though. Mabuhay! ✌️

  • @pjc_deleon7290
    @pjc_deleon7290 День назад

    You forgot to mention an important factor, world war 2. Manila was devastated, 2nd most devastated city in the world after Warsaw actually. Then independence was urgently granted to avoid the cost of reconstruction so all systematic urban planning was thrown out the window, and then you have the massive influx of people from the provinces...

  • @ramongabutina8015
    @ramongabutina8015 День назад

    Perhaps but Phils only ranked 10th in the most densed country worldwide.Does not seem to be so visually densed compared to Mumbai, Shanghai,Hong Kong,Tokyo or Dhaka for example.

  • @annemarielastrassi-y7h
    @annemarielastrassi-y7h 20 часов назад

    never seen a youtuber from another country talk about our University Belt, this is nice!
    University Belt in itself is such a unique neighborhood in Manila, I hope you or other like-minded youtubers cover this more in the future. Love your videos btw!

  • @NoVisionGuy
    @NoVisionGuy 14 часов назад

    That is why the Philippines is slowly developing a new capital city up in the north, to move the administrative buildings and other businesses away from Metro Manila.

  • @kibbynibby
    @kibbynibby День назад

    PHILIPPINES MENTIONED 🗣‼‼‼ (it's about Manila being the densest city in the world)

  • @Duggleftforthemilk
    @Duggleftforthemilk День назад

    Filipino here from the city of tacloban, I HATE MANILA, I HATE the taxis, I HATE the buses, I HATE the pollution and I HATE the air (except for BGC and Makati) I relieved when ever I see a jeep or a tricycle or a multicab because it's just better than that bad Aircon in the vehicle.

  • @bunnyfreakz
    @bunnyfreakz 4 часа назад

    ASEAN in general always have share common problems. Corruption, dynasty politic, zero urban planning and bad bureaucracy. People also share same mindset: littering, breaking traffic law and so on.

  • @EzekielDeLaCroix
    @EzekielDeLaCroix 22 часа назад

    Manila is a blight on the Earth.

  • @ajbico
    @ajbico 2 дня назад +4

    All of the things you mentioned are the reasons why I hated Manila so much. Im from a province not too far South of Manila. I only go there for important reasons and nothing else.

    • @nunyabiznes33
      @nunyabiznes33 2 дня назад +1

      There's no denying the strategic location tho. It'll retain influence even if the country completely decentralize.

  • @chifukushion9804
    @chifukushion9804 23 часа назад

    You should have added Manila rate and provincial rate

  • @minim6981
    @minim6981 15 часов назад

    because Manila is a tiny city in both land area and population. There are much bigger cities in the Philippines, like Quezon City

  • @altjess
    @altjess День назад

    Love this content! Clarification though, the Islamized indigenous communities in the southern island collectively known as the BangsaMoro people argue that they were never conquered by Spain so they refuse to be included as part of the "Las Islas Filipinas." The Americans won't accept it so they completed the job through a series of bloody massacres and campaigns to establish dominance and control over these territories and people. In 1906, the Americans declared the Moro rebellion pacified and the map of the Philippines as we know of is now legitimized.

  • @Carlo-zk2cy
    @Carlo-zk2cy День назад

    Burnham Plan (1905) envisioned Manila as a city for 200,000 people.

  • @WisdomLearner
    @WisdomLearner День назад +1

    To be honest, albeit colonization is bad and all, the option of having Emilio Aguinaldo a dictator with penchant for murdering his own allies, is not all sunshine and roses.

  • @Penko-mu2
    @Penko-mu2 День назад

    Do Iloilo City please!

  • @Blaqjaqshellaq
    @Blaqjaqshellaq День назад

    The name Intramuros, logically enough, means "within the walls."

  • @vin9649
    @vin9649 День назад

    That's why I dont have a plan to live in Manila, near provinces would be better for me

  • @MarcelinoDeseo
    @MarcelinoDeseo День назад

    8:00 the problem is that the law makers here in the Philippines haven't passed any law to legally define what political dynasty is, so section 26 is kinda in a limbo.

  • @wannaknowwho25
    @wannaknowwho25 2 дня назад

    Can you make a video on Dhaka?

  • @lilyyoung1673
    @lilyyoung1673 15 часов назад

    You know metro manila is different from manila city per se

  • @vinniepeterss
    @vinniepeterss День назад

    ❤❤

  • @samwill7259
    @samwill7259 День назад

    Maybe put another city someplace, damn

  • @ResanduWanasinghe
    @ResanduWanasinghe 2 дня назад

    Do video about sri lanka please 🇱🇰🇱🇰🇱🇰🇱🇰🇱🇰🇱🇰😊

  • @gianrafaelorlanes6824
    @gianrafaelorlanes6824 2 дня назад

    Sadly the provinces get left behind. : (

    • @Jose.AFT.Saddul
      @Jose.AFT.Saddul День назад +1

      Depends on the province.
      Cebu is the richest and has an economy comparable to NCR

    • @barrs817
      @barrs817 День назад +1

      @@Jose.AFT.Saddul yeah. Cebu City is the closest, less dense version of Manila that you can get out of the Philippines lol

    • @Jose.AFT.Saddul
      @Jose.AFT.Saddul День назад +2

      @@barrs817 true. Davao is the only other city that comes close to

    • @kentyagami4791
      @kentyagami4791 День назад

      ​@@Jose.AFT.SaddulI'm from Cebu and Cebu is not the richest you idiot! Do research! Bataan is the richest city in terms of GDP Per Capita while Laguna has the largest GDP in the entire country. Your reference about Cebu being the richest is just the Government Asset which is not a Citizens' Wealth/Economic Indicator. It just simply measures how much resources the Provincial Government has. Do study more about Macroeconomics! You're so cringe!

  • @gilberttello08
    @gilberttello08 День назад

    👍👍

  • @PaulJohn01
    @PaulJohn01 2 дня назад +1

    Is this a re-upload ? i'm sure this came out a few days ago 🤔🤔

  • @sirBrouwer
    @sirBrouwer 2 дня назад +3

    pedanticism activated: isn't Monaco technically already the most densest city in the world.
    As the city of Monaco incomposite's 100% of the country and is completely used. It can't expend anywhere but in to the sea.
    Or it needs to conquer French territory.
    On one hand that would be the most bling bling army ever. The issue would be that army just does not want to get dirty. (do you have any idea what it costs to bedazzle a tank with real crystals?)

    • @blazingfire_0712
      @blazingfire_0712 2 дня назад +1

      Dense in definition is an amount of a unit in a given space. So population density is the amount of people living in a defined area. Monaco has 36,000 people, which it’s not quite dense as there are European towns that are the same size of Monaco but boasts more people.

    • @sirBrouwer
      @sirBrouwer 2 дня назад

      @@blazingfire_0712 but non of those are also such tiny country that it fits in the park of a other city.

    • @aldrinmilespartosa1578
      @aldrinmilespartosa1578 2 дня назад

      Country, not city. The slums is always denser than rich villas lol. 😅 ​@@sirBrouwer

    • @sonicvenom8292
      @sonicvenom8292 2 дня назад

      @@sirBrouwer Monaco has an area of 2.1 Square Kilometres, so the population of 38,000 is divided between those 2.1. Even if Monaco was only 1 square kilometer in size, Manila would still be denser.

    • @barrs817
      @barrs817 День назад

      Never been to Monaco, but as a resident of Metro Manila, density here is at a whole different level than Monaco HAHAHA

  • @DKtrek21
    @DKtrek21 2 дня назад +7

    One word: discipline. (I'm saying about the heavy traffic)
    Manila might be congested but the roads are okay. It's just that people love to park wherever they want. Vendors selling on the road. Pedestrians don't know how to use overpasses. Vehicles don't really know how to obey traffic rules.
    I'm Filipino and worked in Manila for near a decade. Gotta say, those were the worst traffic jams in my lifetime and I've been living in South Cali for a decade now. That's saying something

    • @zeshua
      @zeshua 2 дня назад +5

      its not just discipline though, it's really just shitty urban planning with a lack of public transportation
      go to the large developments in makati-taguig, pasay-paranaque, and other "developed" areas in the city; and the discipline is quite decent enough.
      Jakarta faced a very similar problem a decade ago and they managed to improved thanks to public transpo

    • @blank2588
      @blank2588 2 дня назад +2

      Ban cars

    • @yokogoph
      @yokogoph 2 дня назад +9

      Blaming it on lack of discipline is a cop out by politicians to pass the blame. The perceived lack of discipline is just a symptom of greater problems Metro Manila has overall.

    • @a.v.2491
      @a.v.2491 2 дня назад +3

      I would say that what you meant by “poor discipline” is one of the symptom of a bad/ineffective system.
      Cars parked where they do not belong, especially in a place like Manila, isn’t often rooted because the drivers want to, but because they don’t have elsewhere to park (Might be generalizing a bit). While there are “nicer roads”, there definitely still is a huge percentage of poorly maintained roads.
      Additionally, Manila itself has poor infrastructure to accommodate cars even when the whole metro is designed to be “car-centric”. There aren’t enough mass transportation systems for a metropolitan region that big. In a positive light however, it seems like the whole National Capital Region and surrounding areas will be due for a “rail renaissance” as MRT 7, 4, NSCR, Metro Manila Subway, etc. are being constructed. I JUST hope that they won’t keep getting delayed due to ROW issues or worse, corruption.
      Though, coming back to your point, to SOME extent, it is also rooted by -by the lack of a better word- “poor” mindset.
      Excuse me for my poor grammar/spelling mistakes if I made some, it’s night time.

    • @barrs817
      @barrs817 День назад +1

      I've read somewhere that despite Manila being dense, it has a lot less road accidents than Jakarta, BKK, and KL.
      I guess it's because of the heavy traffic that cars run really slow hahaha

  • @lilyyoung1673
    @lilyyoung1673 15 часов назад

    Be more careful with your research

  • @arominized
    @arominized День назад

    Pilipins mentioned

  • @d3r3kyasmar
    @d3r3kyasmar 2 дня назад +7

    Be careful whenever you talk about the Philippines. They are notorious in filing for persona non grata.

  • @JustAnNPC69
    @JustAnNPC69 День назад +1

    The Manila that is “improving” is not the Manila the average Filipino people are living in.

  • @steveweast475
    @steveweast475 День назад

    The greatest tax machine of all time

  • @twoninesixfour
    @twoninesixfour 21 час назад

    Why yall americans making fun of our infrastructure atleast our houses dont burn down every year😂

  • @bryanlorang417
    @bryanlorang417 2 дня назад +1

    It'll still be a shit hole

  • @Boris.Becker.
    @Boris.Becker. 2 дня назад +9

    The real problem is captalism

    • @Jose.AFT.Saddul
      @Jose.AFT.Saddul 2 дня назад +14

      I think the biggest issue is the informal settlements. During world war 2 Manila was devastated during the fighting between the Americans and Japanese.
      And so a lot of the population was forced to live in slums. To this day the government hasn’t fixed the housing issue.

    • @sonicvenom8292
      @sonicvenom8292 2 дня назад +4

      @@Boris.Becker. The root issue itself is poor education and corruption, which affect each other cyclically, and from which stems out most of Manila's other problems. Even without Capitalism, corruption would persist.

    • @horatiotodd8723
      @horatiotodd8723 День назад +1

      @sonicvenom8292 Under communism everyone would be guaranteed good education and employment

    • @parasatc8183
      @parasatc8183 День назад

      Under communism most of the cities of the Soviet Union still couldn't compare to Moscow and Leningrad. Beijing and Shanghai were still the most dominant cities in Maoist China. When we think of Karl Marx's writings, we think about the end of social classes and not the end of hierarchies of cities. Hm?

    • @triadwarfare
      @triadwarfare 21 час назад

      ​@@horatiotodd8723under communism, current systems would be much worse, like the padrino system since communism doesn't look to things like merit and can easily be exploited by the military and ones loyal to the party.

  • @sethgreyson3506
    @sethgreyson3506 23 часа назад +1

    thank you for making this video about my country. It's very informative about our struggles with our government and economy. Oh how I wish our government would be better instead of the continued mediocrity. VOTE WISELY NEXT YEAR GUYS 🥹🇵🇭