What is the capital of san juan: San Juan, Puerto Rico

San Juan, Puerto Rico | Encyclopedia.com

The capital of San Juan (2006 pop. 426,618) has throughout its history been at the center of Puerto Rico’s political, economic, and cultural life. Although the island was discovered in 1493, Spain did not establish a permanent foothold there until 1509, when Juan Ponce de León founded Caparra on the western rim of San Juan Bay. In 1521 colonists resettled on the islet on the bay, the city’s present site, naming the town Puerto Rico. Over time the harbor city and country traded names, with the island coming to be called Puerto Rico and the city San Juan.

A key node in the Caribbean imperial defensive system, San Juan developed as a military garrison facing the menace of foreign hostility. The city experienced four major attacks, three by the British (1595, 1598, and 1797), and a particularly devastating one, in which most of San Juan was destroyed by fire, by the Dutch (1625).

San Juan remained sparsely populated and economically stagnant until the mid- to late-1700s, when Puerto Rico reaped the benefits of trade liberalization, growing international demand for sugar, and extensive new military construction projects. With negligible manufacturing, mining, and agriculture, the city focused on commerce. As the sugar trade expanded, the city became a leading commercial center as well as a hub for the Caribbean slave trade. Military construction injected capital into the city, attracting new businesses and services, additional military personnel, and an influx of free, slave, and penal laborers. In this period women were the city’s largest population group, with many poor females of color performing domestic work and street vending activities. This economic boom also fueled the rise of a wealthy merchant class with investments in sugar haciendas.

During the 1800s San Juan’s population increased fourfold, from 7,800 civilians and military personnel in 1803 to nearly 32,000 people in 1899. A well-defined hierarchy characterized this urban society: an upper class of royal and military officers, planters, and merchants; a middle class of professionals; and, representing the largest percentage of nonwhite residents, the laboring classes and the urban poor. After the mid-1850s, military and public policies forced working-class neighborhoods to relocate outside the city walls, transforming San Juan’s social, racial, and spatial configuration. In 1897 a segment of the defensive wall was torn down to allow urban sprawl to the east of the historic colonial district.

Historically, the interplay between the needs of the military and civilian populations shaped the city’s urban development. From 1898 through the early 1960s, San Juan was strategically important for the United States’ hemispheric defense. During World War II the city served as the Caribbean control center for U.S. naval and air operations. In the early 1960s the U.S. military closed its bases in Old San Juan, transferring control of the colonial-era fortifications to the U.S. National Park Service and other facilities to the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.

As one of the oldest European settlements in the Americas, San Juan exhibits distinctive Spanish colonial and neoclassical architecture. Since its creation in 1955, the Institute of Puerto Rican Culture has restored and preserved invaluable religious, military, government, and residential structures, including Casa Blanca (1521), residence of Ponce de León’s descendants; the Dominican monastery (1523), a superb example of colonial Spanish monastic architecture; San José Church (1523), a rare instance of gothic architecture in the Americas; and several eighteenth- and nineteenth-century private dwellings that now house exhibits of art, architecture, history, ethnology, and rare books. The Columbus Quincentennial of 1992 sparked a new wave of projects in Old San Juan, comprising restoration of the Ballajá army barracks, which later housed the Museum of the Americas; La Princesa, a nineteenth-century prison, then home to the Puerto Rico Tourism Company; and Paseo de la Princesa, a promenade on the waterfront of San Juan. This successful restoration program has refreshed public understanding of the national past and has revitalized Old San Juan as a vibrant residential, commercial, and cultural center, strengthening San Juan’s position as a leading tourism destination in the Caribbean.

See alsoPonce de León, Juan; Puerto Rico.

Hernández, Carmen Dolores. Ricardo Alegría: Una vida. San Juan: Editorial Plaza Mayor, 2002.

Hostos, Adolfo de. Ciudad murada: Ensayo acerca del proceso de la civilización en la ciudad española de San Juan Bautista de Puerto Rico, 1521–1898. Havana: Editorial Lex, 1948. Reprinted as Historia de San Juan, ciudad murada: Ensayo acerca del proceso de la civilización en la ciudad española de San Juan Bautista de Puerto Rico, 1521–1898. San Juan, P. R.: Instituto de Cultura Puertorriqueña, 1983.

Martínez-Vergne, Teresita. Shaping the Discourse on Space: Charity and Its Wards in Nineteenth-century San Juan, Puerto Rico. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1999.

Matos Rodríguez, Félix V. Women and Urban Change in San Juan, Puerto Rico, 1820–1868. Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 1999.

                                     Allan S. R. Sumnall

                                        Luis A. GonzÁlez

ESDWAGOV – San Juan County profile

Overview

Regional context

San Juan County located in northwest Washington state, includes four large islands: San Juan, Orcas, Lopez and Shaw and hundreds of smaller islands, reefs and rocks. About 20 islands are inhabited. San Juan County is the smallest county in Washington by total landmass.

San Juan County is located in the Salish Sea to the west of Skagit and Whatcom counties and east of lower Vancouver Island, Canada. The islands are spectacularly scenic. Consequently, the archipelago is a popular tourism destination. Tourists arrive via ferry, private boat and float plane throughout the year, but with a pronounced uptick in the summer. The picturesque and laid-back islands have in turn attracted many retirees. Today, tourism-related industries and retirement communities form the economic base of the San Juan County economy. While the natural beauty and relative isolation of island life supports a vibrant seasonal tourism-based economy, the relative isolation presents a challenge for economic diversification.

Local economy

The Lummi and Salish peoples have called the San Juan Islands home for thousands of years. Early European settlements were established by the British Hudson Bay Company in the 1850s (although British and Spanish adventurers had explored the islands as early as the 1700s). The San Juan Islands were a disputed territory between Canada and the United States, which led to the short-lived Pig War of 1859 and a thirteen-year process to resolve the international boundary between British-controlled Canada and the United States. The German Kaiser was asked to arbitrate, and he decided in favor of the Americans in 1872.

Fishing and farming formed the economic mainstay for most inhabitants until the already well-established tourism economy took off in the 1970s. However, some more colorful parts of the economic history of the San Juan includes smuggling, rum running and trade and manufacturing of other illicit commodities.

Due to a large tourism component in the economy, employment levels are highly seasonal. Using a 10-year average from 2010 through 2019, the following pattern emerges – peak private nonfarm employment occurs each summer (usually August), with an average gain of 1,808 jobs (38.0 percent) from the January low point of the jobs cycle. In 2020, this steady and predictable pattern was severely disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic and resulting recession. Rather than the predictable summer uptick, summer employment expanded by only 520 jobs from January to August; disrupting the usual seasonal rhythm. San Juan tourism picked up in 2021, as would-be international travelers opted for more predictable and local vacations.

Average annual employment in 2021 expanded by 510 or 9.9 percent compared to 2020. If the last few months of 2021 and the first few months of 2022 were any indication, San Juan County has more than recovered pandemic-related job losses.

San Juan County’s largest job-providing sector is private services, accounting for about 67.0 percent of all nonfarm jobs. Leisure and hospitality is consistently the largest set of industries on an annualized basis. This is consistent with the county’s orientation toward tourism. In 2021, employers in the leisure and hospitality hosted an average of 1,180 jobs or 20.8 percent. Other large industries include trade, transportation and utilities – which includes retail trade (18.3 percent), government (14.6 percent), construction (13.7 percent) and education and health services (9.3 percent).

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Geographic facts




San Juan CountyRank in state
 Land area, 2010 (square miles)173.9 39 
 People per square mile, 2021102.64 11 

Source: Washington State Office of Financial Management

Outlook

On an annual average basis, from 2008 to 2010, Washington state and the United States each lost an estimated 5. 0 percent of their respective employment bases. San Juan County lost about 11.0 percent of total nonfarm jobs from 2008 to 2013. In short, employment losses during the Great Recession were deeper, and the downfall was longer than for either the nation or the state. Recovery from the Great Recession was also slow in San Juan County. With an orientation toward tourism, San Juan County’s most pronounced economic growth has generally been observed seasonally rather than annually.

The black swan event of the global COVID-19 pandemic swooped into Washington state in early 2020. The delicate and geographically isolated tourism-based economy of the San Juan Islands was impacted swiftly by statewide stay-at-home orders and widespread vacation cancellations. On an annual average basis, employment dropped by 12.7 percent in 2020. (For reference, the state suffered 5.4 percent job losses over the same year).

In 2021, the domestic tourism-based economy returned quickly, lifting San Juan County employment by 9. 9 percent, and within reach of pre-recession employment.


Labor force and unemployment

Current labor force and unemployment statistics are available on the Labor area summaries page.

The dynamics of the labor force in San Juan County are very seasonal, with peak unemployment rates occurring each year in the winter months and lowest unemployment rates reported each summer during the peak tourism season.

In April 2020, the unemployment rate in San Juan County reached 19.2 percent, but came down quickly (when accounting for the usual seasonal rhythm). The unemployment rate dipped to 3.6 percent in the final months of 2021.

San Juan County’s labor force follows the same seasonal trend described above. In a highly seasonal tourism-driven economy, the labor force swells during the summer months and contracts during off-peak seasons. In 2021, employment expanded during the winter months, possibly indicating a change in the seasonal rhythm.

Source: Employment Security Department

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Industry employment

Current industry employment statistics are available on the Labor area summaries page.

San Juan County averaged 5,680 nonfarm jobs in 2021, 510 jobs or 9.9 percent above the previous year. The San Juan job market took longer than the state or the nation to recover from the Great Recession, and suffered devastating initial impacts from the pandemic recession. The months since the pandemic-induced disruption, San Juan County’s employment landscape appears to be thriving; likely an effect of travelers opting to stay locally for reasons of health and predictability in a still highly-uncertain environment with respect to COVID-19 and policy responses. As of March 2022, most industries appear to have recovered to pre-pandemic levels.

  • San Juan County’s goods-producing industries is dominated by construction, but also includes some manufacturing. In 2021, employment in construction expanded by 90 and manufacturing expanded by 30. Both industries had higher levels of employment in 2021 than in 2019, before the pandemic.
  • Service-providing employment in San Juan County was impacted severely during the pandemic, but has shown signs of rapid recovery. Employment expanded in 2021 for all major service sectors except education and health services. Comparing 2021 with 2019, information and financial activities, professional and business services, and government have fully recovered the number of jobs lost. Education and health services, trade transportation and utilities and leisure and hospitality are almost fully recovered.

For historical industry employment data, contact an economist.

Source: Employment Security Department, DATA Division

Industry employment by age and gender

The Local Employment Dynamics (LED) database, a joint project of state employment departments and the U.S. Census Bureau, matches state employment data with federal administrative data. Among the products is industry employment by age and gender. All workers covered by state unemployment insurance data are included; federal workers and non-covered workers, such as the self-employed, are not. Data are presented by place of work, not place of residence.

San Juan County highlights:

In 2020, San Juan County’s labor market was characterized by a relatively older age profile than the state. Statewide, 23.0 percent of the workforce was age 55 or older. Compare with San Juan County where 30.6 percent of the workforce was age 55 or older. All other age categories are proportionally under-represented relative to the statewide labor force. This is largely a reflection of migration and settlement patterns; San Juan County is well known as a retirement destination.

Males held 49.2 percent and females held 50.8 percent of San Juan County jobs in 2020.

  • Top male-dominated industries in 2020 included construction (81.7 percent), utilities (68.6 percent) and transportation and warehousing (67.0percent).
  • Female-dominated industries in 2020 included health care and social assistance (79.4 percent), management of companies and enterprises (76.5 percent), and finance and insurance (75.7 percent).

Source: U. S. Census Bureau, Local Employment Dynamics

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Wages and income

In 2020, San Juan County averaged 5,277 jobs covered by unemployment insurance, with a total payroll of $228.3 million dollars.

The county’s 2020 average annual wage was $43,258; far below the statewide average wage of $73,504. In terms of wage income, San Juan County ranked 33rd out of 39 Washington counties.

San Juan County’s median hourly wage was $25.88 in 2020, lower than the state median of $29.28, but slightly higher than the state median when King County is removed from the dataset.

  • Note that the average annual wage is a direct calculation of the dollars paid to workers over the course of the full year. Median hourly wage, by comparison, divides wages distributed by hours worked (rather than by worker). Together, these data points indicate that wages paid are not necessarily low, but they are largely part time and/or seasonal.

Personal income

Personal income includes earned income, investment income, and government payments such as Social Security and Veterans Benefits. Investment income includes income imputed from pension funds and from owning a home. Per capita personal income equals total personal income divided by the resident population.

In 2020, per capita personal income in San Juan County ($81,858) was well above both state ($67,126) and U.S. ($59,510) averages. It is worth noting that personal income includes all types of income, not limited to earned wages. This is particularly important to recognize in the case of San Juan County, as a large portion of the residents are retired and collect non-wage income.

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, San Juan County’s median household income was $64,753, below the state ($77,006) and slightly below the U.S. ($64,994) medians over the period 2016 to 2020.

Over the 2016 to 2020 period, 9.6 percent of the resident population in San Juan County was living below the official poverty line. The statewide average was similar at 9.5 percent, while the national average stood at 11.4 percent, according to the U. S. Census Bureau. Children living in San Juan County were more likely than the resident population as a whole to live in poverty.

Source: Employment Security Department; Bureau of Labor Statistics; Bureau of Economic Analysis; U.S. Census Bureau; American Community Survey

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Population

The estimated resident population of San Juan County was 17,850 in 2021. Over the past decade, the resident population expanded by 11.9 percent, slower than population growth statewide (14.5 percent from 2011 to 2021).

The only incorporated city in San Juan County is Friday Harbor (population 2,630 in 2021), up 20.0 percent in 10 years.

Population facts





San Juan CountyWashington state
 Population 202117,850 7,766,975
 Population 201115,946 6,781,551 
 Percent change, 2011 to 202111. 9% 14.5% 

Source: Washington State Office of Financial Management

Age, gender and ethnicity

Overall, San Juan County has considerably more individuals age 65 and older (35.2 percent) compared to 15.9 percent statewide. It also has a lower percentage of those under 18 (12.7 percent) compared to 21.8 percent statewide.

In 2019, females made up 51.7 percent of the estimated population.

San Juan County was less diverse than Washington state in terms of race and ethnicity, with smaller proportions of all racial or ethnic minorities compared to the state. About 93.9 percent of its population identified as white in 2019.

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Demographics













San Juan CountyWashington state
 Population by age, 2019
Under 5 years old2. 8% 6.0% 
Under 18 years old12.7% 21.8% 
65 years and older35.2% 15.9% 
 Females, 201951.7% 49.9% 
 Race/ethnicity, 2019
White93.9% 78.5% 
Black0.8% 4.4% 
American Indian, Alaskan Native1.1% 1.9% 
Asian, Native Hawaiian, other Pacific Islander1.7% 10.3% 
Hispanic or Latino, any race6.8% 13.0% 

Source: U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts


Educational attainment

Generally speaking, the resident population of San Juan County is well educated.

  • In the period 2016 to 2020, 95.9 percent of San Juan County residents aged 25 and up had at least a high school education. Statewide, 91.7 percent of all residents were estimated to have an equivalent educational level.
  • In San Juan County, 51.7 percent of the resident population aged 25 and up have earned a bachelor’s degree or attained a higher level of formal education. Statewide, 36.7 percent of the adult population have a bachelor’s degree or higher.

Source: U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts

Useful links

  • County data tables
  • Census Bureau County Profile
  • 2020 Census State Profile
  • Center for Business and Economics Research, Western Washington University
  • History of San Juan County
  • Northwest Washington Labor Market Review (Monthly)
  • Northwest Washington Workforce Development Council
  • San Juan Islands Visitors Bureau
  • San Juan Economic Development Council
  • Port of Friday Harbor
  • Port of Lopez
  • Port of Orcas
  • San Juan County Extension
  • San Juan County home page
  • San Juan County on ofm. wa.gov
  • San Juan County on ChooseWashington.com
  • Self Sufficiency Calculator for Washington State
  • Bureau of Economic Analysis Regional Economic Accounts
  • Census Bureau QuickFacts
  • Workforce Development Areas and WorkSource Office Directory

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San Juan. Description of the city

General information

Description of the city

San Juan is the capital of the province of San Juan in the central-western region of Argentina.

The city of San Juan is located in a fertile valley in a rocky mountainous area. Winter temperatures hover between 1°C and 18°C, while summers are hot and very dry, with temperatures hovering between 25°C and 40°C.

Due to low rainfall, it was decided to build a dam on the river to provide a regular source of water to the city. The resulting reservoir is located at Ullum and is known as the Quebrada de Ullum Dam. The dam also provides electricity to the area. Sixty-five percent of agricultural production is associated with the production of wine.

San Juan is the capital of the Argentine province of San Juan in the Cuyo region, located in the Tulum Valley, west of the San Juan River, 650 meters above mean sea level. The population of the city is approximately 112,000 according to the 2001 census (over 500,000 in the metropolitan area).

It is a modern city with wide streets and avenues lined with wide sidewalks and various types of canal-irrigated trees, which have earned the city the nickname ‘oasis’.

The city has a very developed hotel infrastructure and transportation. Modern buildings come to the fore, the reservoir and dam, spas, museums, large plantations of vines and various types of agriculture, as well as wine production, are the most important in the country.

Attractions

Domingo Faustino Sarmiento Airport

Airports

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Domingo Faustino Sarmiento Airport is located in the city of San Juan, the capital of the Argentine province of the same name, and is located at an altitude of 597 meters above sea level. In the list of airports of the International Air Transport Association (IATA), Domingo Faustino Sarmiento Airport is listed under the code UAQ, and in the system of the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) it is assigned the code SANU.

The airport was built in 1977, however, as a result of a devastating earthquake, all objects are still …

Ischigualasto Provincial Park

National parks and reserves

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Ischigualasto Provincial Park is located in the province of San Juan. It became a protected area in 2004 and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The area of ​​Ischigualasto Park is almost 604 square kilometers, nature is characterized by desert and semi-desert vegetation, here you can see several types of cacti, low shrubs and trees.

The second unofficial name of Ischigualasto Park is “Valle de la Luna”, which means “Moon Valley” in Indian. To the park…

Climate

Ischigualasto Provincial Park

The city of San Juan is located in a fertile valley in a rocky mountainous area. Winter temperatures are generally mild between 1 °C and 18 °C, but can drop as low as -9 °C (15.8 °F). Summers are very hot, with average annual temperatures ranging between 19 °C (66.2 °F) and 35 °C (95.0 °F). The record high was 46.7 °C (116.1 °F) on 20 December 1995 years. Sunshine is common throughout the year, with an average of 3,361.3 hours of bright sunshine per year (approximately 76% of possible sunshine). The lower limit is 68% in June and the upper limit is 81% of possible sunshine in May.

Transport

Domingo Faustino Sarmiento Airport

The city has a modern transport infrastructure, which is represented by Ring Roads, Highway Avenue and South Access. This road was built within the perimeter city, so there was a project to build another ring that would cover the entire city.
Public transport in San Juan consists of bus lines marked with numbers and letters (19 or 26 A). Buses link downtown with various neighborhoods and the rest of Greater San Juan. The minimum ticket price is 1.30 A$.

Reasons to visit

Ischigualasto Provincial Park

Valle de la Luna

Sanctuary of Difunta Correa

Archaeological Museum in La Laya

San Juan (Argentina) – frwiki.wiki

For articles of the same name, see San Juan.

San Juan is a city in Argentina and the capital of the province of San Juan. It is located in Valle del Tulum, west of the San Juan River. Its average height is 650 meters. It has good residential and transport infrastructure.

The most important tourist attractions of the city, in addition to the modern cathedral, are:

  • Monastery of Santo Domingo with a cell where José de San Martin lived;
  • near the city at km 18 Ullum dam with a very beautiful pond;
  • thermal baths;
  • archaeological museum.

Summary

  • 1 Geography
  • 2 History
  • 3 Population
  • 4 Climate
  • 5 Notes and references
  • 6 See also
  • 7 Twinning

Geography

The city is located in the south-central province of San Juan, in the Cuyo region, more than a thousand kilometers west of the country’s capital, Buenos Aires.

History

The province’s first inhabitants were the Juarpez Indians who inhabited most of what is today known as Tulum Valley . Their sphere of influence gradually expanded to the mountains of Ullum and Willikum, and also to the slopes of Valdivia. Huarpez’s other habitats were the valley of the Río Bermejo-Vincina, the lagoons of Guanacache as well as the banks of the Río Desaguadero.

At The Spanish conquistador Juan Yufre entered these regions from the north and conquered them in the name of King Philip II of Spain. Shortly thereafter, the Spaniards founded San Juan de la Frontera .

Population

According to the 2001 census, 115,556 people lived in the municipality. But the city is also the center of the Gran San Juan urban agglomeration. It had 421,640 inhabitants (INDEC, 2001), an increase of 18.9% from the 354,760 inhabitants previously recorded in 1991. These figures place the city in tenth place among Argentine cities.

According to INDEC (Argentine Statistical Institute) estimates for 2010, the population of the agglomeration is 468,000 inhabitants, which is three-quarters of the total population of the province.

More than 90% of the population is Catholic. The city is the seat of the Archbishop of San Juan de Cuyo, with the Cathedral of Saint John the Baptist.

Weather

San Juan climate.

The climate of San Juan is arid. Precipitation is very rare, and the annual and daily thermal amplitude is high.

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