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  2. Giant shoes of Marikina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giant_Shoes_of_Marikina

    The Marikina city government, known for its shoe-making industry, under Mayor Marides Fernando is responsible for the creation of two giant shoes. The crafting of the shoes were part of a bid to break the Guinness World Records on the "largest shoes in the world" as well as an attempt to boost the city's reputation in shoe-making globally.

  3. Riverbanks Center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riverbanks_Center

    The pair of giant shoes are on display inside the Shoe Gallery of Riverbanks Mall. 5.29 metres (17.4 ft) long and 2.37 metres (7 ft 9 in) wide, equivalent to a French shoe size of 753, they were created over 77 days between August 5 and October 21, 2002, by Marikina shoe industry business people.

  4. Marikina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marikina

    Formerly a rural settlement, Marikina is now primarily residential and industrial and has become increasingly commercial in recent years. The City of Marikina is considered one of the wealthiest local government units in the Philippines. [7] Marikina is known as the "Shoe Capital of the Philippines" owing to its famous shoe industry. [8]

  5. New mural tells story of immigration, shoe factories in ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/mural-tells-story-immigration...

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  6. Kapitan Moy Residence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kapitan_Moy_Residence

    Facade of Kapitan Moy Building, a Bahay na bato with its structure of nails and adobe and big capiz windows on the second floor.. Kapitan Moy Building, also known as Cultural Center of Marikina situated in Marikina, Metro Manila, the Philippines, is the 200-year-old house of Don Laureano Guevarra (July 4, 1851 – December 30, 1891), known as the founder of the Marikina shoe industry.

  7. Okabashi's Shoes Are Japan By Way of Iran By Way of Georgia - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2014-10-07-this-built-america...

    First known for making leather horse collars and saddles, the city's factories shifted their focus in the 1920s to shoes, made from the cast-off leather of newly cut horse collars.