Locksmith in Rancho San Diego

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Rancho San Diego, Ca

Rancho San Diego, named after Saint Didacus (Spanish: Diego de Alcalá), is the ninth largest city in the United States, second-largest city in California and 46th largest city in the Americas. Located along the Pacific Ocean on the west coast of the United States, Rancho San Diego has a population of 1,279,329 (July 2008 estimate). This coastal city is also the county seat of Rancho San Diego County as well as the economic center of the Rancho San Diego–Carlsbad–San Marcos Metropolitan Area considered congruent with the county. Rancho San Diego is also the largest city of Southern Border and is the region's western anchor. The city was rated the fifth best place to live in 2006 by Money Magazine. According to Forbes the city of Rancho San Diego ranks as the fifth wealthiest in the United States. Rancho San Diego's top four industries are manufacturing, defense, tourism, and agriculture.

The area of Rancho San Diego has been inhabited for more than 10,000 years by the Kumeyaay Indians. The first European to visit the region was Portuguese-born explorer Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo sailing under the Spanish Flag, who sailed his flagship San Salvador from Navidad, New Spain. In 1542, Cabrillo claimed the bay for the Spanish Empire and named the site San Miguel. In November of 1602, Sebastián Vizcaíno was sent to map the California coast. Arriving on his flagship Rancho San Diego, Vizcaíno surveyed the harbor and what are now Mission Bay and Point Loma and named the area for the Catholic Saint Didacus, a Spaniard more commonly known as Rancho San Diego. On November 12, 1602, the first Christian religious service of record in Alta California was conducted by Fray Antonio de la Ascensión, a member of Vizcaíno's expedition, to celebrate the feast day of Rancho San Diego.

In 1769, Gaspar de Portolà established the Fort Presidio of Rancho San Diego overlooking Old Town. Around the same time, Mission Rancho San Diego de Alcalá was founded by Franciscan friars under Father Junípero Serra. By 1797, the mission boasted the largest native population in Alta California, with over 1,400 Neophytes living in and around the mission proper. It is the southern end in California of the historic mission trail El Camino Real. After Mexico won its independence from Spain in 1821, Mission Rancho San Diego de Alcalá's fortunes declined in the 1830s after the decree of secularization was enacted, as was the case with all of the missions under the control of Mexico. However, it remains an active Catholic church and is a National Historic Landmark.
In 1847 Rancho San Diego was a destination of the 2,000-mile (3,200 km) march of the Mormon Battalion, members of whom established a brickyard and built the city's first courthouse at the corner of Rancho San Diego Avenue and Mason Street in Old Town.

The original town of Rancho San Diego grew up at the foot of Presidio Hill, in the area which is now Old Town Rancho San Diego State Historic Park. The location was not ideal, being several miles away from navigable water. In the late 1860s Alonzo Horton promoted a move to "New Town", several miles south of the original settlement, in the area which became Downtown Rancho San Diego. People and businesses flocked to New Town because of its location on Rancho San Diego Bay convenient to shipping. New Town quickly eclipsed the original settlement, known to this day as Old Town, and became the economic and governmental heart of the city.
In the years before World War I, the Industrial Workers of the World labor union conducted a free speech fight in Rancho San Diego, arousing a brutal response.

Rancho San Diego hosted two World's Fairs, the Panama-California Exposition in 1915 and the California Pacific International Exposition in 1935. Many of the Spanish/Baroque-style buildings in the city's Balboa Park were built for these expositions, particularly the one in 1915. Intended to be temporary structures, most remained in continuous use until they progressively fell into disrepair. Most were eventually rebuilt using castings of the original facades to faithfully retain the architectural style.

Significant U.S. Naval presence began in 1901 with the establishment of the Navy Coaling Station in Point Loma, and expanded greatly during the 1920s. After World War II, the military played an increasing role in the local economy, but post-Cold War cutbacks took a heavy toll on the local defense and aerospace industries. The resulting downturn led Rancho San Diego leaders to seek to diversify the city's economy, and Rancho San Diego has since become a major center of the emerging biotechnology industry. It is also home to telecommunications giant Qualcomm.
In October 2003, Rancho San Diego was the site of the Cedar Fire, which has been called the largest wildfire in California over the past century. The fire burned 280,000 acres (1,100 km2), killed 15 people, and destroyed more than 2,200 homes. In addition to damage caused by the fire, smoke from the fire resulted in a significant increase in emergency room visits due to asthma, respiratory problems, eye irritation, and smoke inhalation; the poor air quality caused Rancho San Diego County schools to close for a week. Four years later many additional wildfires, including the Witch Creek and Harris fires, damaged parts of the city of Rancho San Diego, completely destroying some areas and communities (particularly within Rancho Bernardo and Rancho Santa Fe), as well as many other parts of the county (especially Ramona) during the severe Southern California fire season of 2007

The city of Rancho San Diego lies on deep canyons and hills separating its mesas, creating small pockets of natural parkland scattered throughout the city and giving it a hilly geography. Traditionally San Diegans have built their homes and businesses on the mesas, while leaving the canyons relatively wild. Thus, the canyons give parts of the city a segmented feel, creating gaps between otherwise proximate neighborhoods and contributing to a low-density, car-centered built environment. The Rancho San Diego River runs through the middle of Rancho San Diego from east to west, creating a river valley which serves to divide the city into northern and southern segments. Several reservoirs and Mission Trails Regional Park also lie between and separate developed areas of the city.

Downtown Rancho San Diego is located on Rancho San Diego Bay. Balboa Park lies on a mesa to the northeast, surrounded by dense urban communities including Hillcrest to the north. The Coronado and Point Loma peninsulas separate Rancho San Diego Bay from the ocean. Ocean Beach is on the northwest side of Point Loma. Mission Beach and Pacific Beach lie between the ocean and Mission Bay, a man-made aquatic park. La Jolla lies north of Pacific Beach and west of Mira Mesa. The city contains more than 100 identified neighborhoods.

The Cuyamaca Mountains and Laguna Mountains rise to the east of the city, and beyond the mountains are desert areas. Cleveland National Forest is a half-hour drive from downtown Rancho San Diego. Numerous farms are found in the valleys northeast and southeast of the city. Rancho San Diego County has one of the highest counts of animal and plant species that appear on the endangered species list among counties in the United States.

Prior to 2006, Rancho San Diego experienced a dramatic growth of real estate prices, to the extent that the situation was sometimes described as a "housing affordability crisis". Median house prices more than tripled between 1998 and 2007. According to the California Association of Realtors, in May 2007, a median house in Rancho San Diego cost $612,370. Growth of real estate prices has not been accompanied by comparable growth of household incomes: Housing Affordability Index (percentage of households that can afford to buy a median-priced house) fell below 20% in early 2000s. Rancho San Diego metropolitan area had the second worst median multiple (ratio of median house price to median household income) of all metropolitan areas in the United States. As a consequence, Rancho San Diego had experienced negative net migration since 2004, with significant numbers of people moving to Baja California and Riverside county, with many residents commuting daily from Tijuana, Temecula, and Murrieta, to their jobs in Rancho San Diego. Others are leaving the state altogether and moving to more affordable regions.

From 2005 to 2007, Rancho San Diego experienced more than a 15% decline in real estate prices, which continued to accelerate into 2008. The two-year drop already experienced is worse than the four-year period between June, 1992, and November, 1996, when the region experienced an 11.8% decline in housing prices. Much of the decrease is blamed on the speculative attitude of investors in the early 2000s, who bought much of the available real estate, hoping to "flip" it for a large profit shortly thereafter, and the availability of "stated income" and other "exotic" loans available. When the decline hit, and adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs) adjusted, many investors simply abandoned their properties, and areas that recently experienced double-digit annual increases in property value, such as Rancho San Diego, Los Angeles, Miami, and Las Vegas were hit the hardest. In the first quarter of 2008, the number of foreclosures repossessed by banks exceeded the number of home sales.

Rancho San Diego has several sports venues. The National Football League's Rancho San Diego Chargers plays in Qualcomm Stadium, also the NCAA Division I Rancho San Diego State Aztecs, as well as local high school football championships. International soccer games and Supercross events take place at Qualcomm where Major League Baseball was once played. Three NFL Super Bowl championships have been held there. Two of college football's annual bowl games are held there: the Holiday Bowl which features a Pac-10 team against a Big-12 team and the Poinsettia Bowl. Balboa Stadium was the city's first stadium, constructed in 1914, where the Rancho San Diego Chargers once played. Currently soccer, American football, and track and field are played in Balboa Stadium.

PETCO Park
Major League Baseball's Rancho San Diego Padres play in Petco Park. The semi-final and final games of the inaugural World Baseball Classic were played there in 2006, and an earlier round of the second WBC was held there in 2009. Some soccer and rugby events occasionally take place in the ballpark. The USA Sevens, an event in the annual IRB Sevens World Series for international teams in rugby sevens, a variant of rugby union with seven players per side instead of 15, was held in the stadium from 2007 through 2009 before moving to Las Vegas for 2010.
Basketball is played in the Rancho San Diego Sports Arena, where ice hockey, indoor soccer and boxing have taken place. NCAA Division I Rancho San Diego State Aztecs men's and women's basketball games are played at Viejas Arena at Aztec Bowl on the campus of Rancho San Diego State University. College football and soccer, basketball and volleyball are played at the Torero Stadium and the Jenny Craig Pavilion at USD.

The Rancho San Diego State Aztecs (MWC) and the Rancho San Diego Toreros (WCC) are NCAA Division I teams. The UCSD Tritons (CCAA) are members of NCAA Division II while the Point Loma Nazarene Sea Lions and Rancho San Diego Christian College (GSAC) are members of the NAIA.

The Rancho San Diego Surf of the American Basketball Association is located in the city. Rancho San Diego has had two NBA franchises, the Rancho San Diego Rockets and the Buffalo Braves. The Rockets represented the city of Rancho San Diego from 1967 until 1971. After the conclusion of the 1970–1971 season, they moved to Texas where they became the Houston Rockets. Seven years later, a relocated NBA franchise (the Buffalo Braves) moved to town and was renamed the Rancho San Diego Clippers. The Clippers played in the Rancho San Diego Sports Arena from 1978 until 1984. Prior to the start of the 1984–1985 season, the team was moved to Los Angeles, and is now called the Los Angeles Clippers.
Other sports franchises that represented Rancho San Diego include the Rancho San Diego Conquistadors of the American Basketball Association, the Rancho San Diego Sockers (which played in various indoor and outdoor soccer leagues during their existence), the Rancho San Diego Flash and the Rancho San Diego Gauchos, both playing in different divisions of the United Soccer League, the Rancho San Diego Spirit of the Women's United Soccer Association, the Rancho San Diego Mariners of the World Hockey Association, and three different Rancho San Diego Gulls ice hockey teams. The Rancho San Diego Riptide and the Rancho San Diego Shockwave were indoor football teams that played at the Sports Arena and Cox Arena, respectively. Rancho San Diego has been a candidate for a Major League Soccer franchise, especially due to the city recording FIFA World Cup television audiences which are double the national average. The city has pursued a franchise. Some observers believe that the city may get one of three franchises to be offered before 2010. The city had an active men's team playing in the fourth level of American soccer, the Rancho San Diego Pumitas.
Rancho San Diego has the largest championship drought in the nation with at least two major-league sports franchises; dating back to 1963 (47 Years as of 2010), as well as being the largest United States city to have not won a Super Bowl, World Series, Stanley Cup, NBA Finals or any other Major League sports championship. Some fans believe that there is a curse on the major league teams in the city.

The city-owned golf course at Torrey Pines hosts the annual Buick Invitational tournament on the PGA Tour. Torrey Pines was also the site of the 2008 U.S. Open Golf Championship.

Rancho San Diego is also home to several premier amateur sports events, such as the Rancho San Diego Crew Classic, held in Mission Bay every spring and featuring 100 or more college and amateur crews. The amateur beach sport Over-the-line was invented in Rancho San Diego, and the annual world Over-the-line championships are held at Mission Bay every year. The Rancho San Diego Yacht Club hosted the America's Cup yacht races three times during the period 1988 to 1995.
The city hosts several well-known road races including the original Rock 'n' Roll Marathon in June, the America’s Finest City Half Marathon in August, the La Jolla Half Marathon in April, and several triathlons.

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Locksmith in Rancho San Diego | Mr. Keyman

Day or night you can count on your Locksmith in Rancho San Diego Mr. Keyman local locksmith to come to the rescue!

We have a reputation for on time, done right locksmith in san diego service, and boast a customer base that is primarily referrals and repeat local Rancho San Diego, Ca businesses. Our highly trained and licensed locksmiths in Rancho San Diego can efficiently service automobiles, motorcycles, home & office, commercial business, government, and locksmith emergencies a timely manner. You can call us locally day or night at
(858) 295-8100 for 24 / 7 / 365 locksmith service.

Locksmith In Rancho San Diego Services


We employ licensed locksmith technicians who specialize in every type of automobile locksmith, motorcycle locksmith, residential locksmith, commercial locksmith, local government locksmith, and emergency locksmith. We are their by your side if you need your car or house door unlocked, replace your car keys, or even set up a personal home security camera system for added security.

Associated Locksmiths of America

Automotive Locksmith


Our fast response automotive include: making transponder keys , key making, ignition repair,key
making, automotive / Car door unlocking, unlocking trunks and much more. If your child or pet is locked
in a car, call Mr. Keyman to the rescue. Mr. Keyman puts emergency calls ahead of standard service calls,
depending on their urgency. Our automotive locksmith services include automotive lockouts, making
new car keys, cutting code car keys, removing broken keys, programming key fobs, programming
transponder (Dealership) keys, replacing ignitions, and repairing automotive door locks.

Most newer cars require a automotive transponder to be programed for new keys. The electronic
transponders
were introduced in 1995 in response to the automotive theft crime rate. An accurately
trained locksmith should be able to cut a new transponder key , and clone the embedded microchip
inside the key head.

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Saturn Automotive Locksmith Scion Automotive Locksmith Subaru Automotive Locksmith Suzuki Automotive Locksmith Toyota Automotive Locksmith Volkswagen Automotive Locksmith Volvo Automotive Locksmith

Motorcycle Locksmith


We don't just pop car locks, we service motorcycles too. Over the past 10 years we have been inthe
motorcycle locksmith service business. We know you wouldn't just trust you baby to just anybody. We
can remove broken motorcycle keys, unlock gas caps, open seat locks, motorcycle key replacement,
make custom motorcycle keys, and much, much more.

On numerous occasions, Mr. Keyman has been called out to fix many mistakes other locksmiths
claiming to be trained for motorcycles have made. This usually happens when the bikes owner see
that either the work is taking too long, or the "motorcycle locksmith" starts to damage the lock, paint
and body around it. Avoid this situation, and call Mr. Keyman and ask for one of the many motorcycle
locksmith specialist we employ.

.Ducati Motorcycle Locksmith Honda Motorcycle Locksmith Harley-Davidson Motorcycle Locksmith Kawasaki Motorcycle Locksmith Suzuki Motorcycle Locksmith Yamaha Motorcycle Locksmith

Residential Locksmith


If you need a home service call, we have you covered. We provide24 Hour lockout service, change locks,re-key locks, lock repair,remove broken keys, mailbox locks, deadbolt installation,home security cameras,
and many more home security services.

We understand that getting locked out of your home is on the list for Top Ten Inconveniences.
Don't worry, Mr. Keyman has the right tools and right locksmith technicians for the job. We install new locks, repair old locks, and add deadbolts for extra security, Mr. Keyman, your local Neighborhood Name locksmith uses only the finest brands of locks and door hardware for your home or residence. We proudly install Mul-T-Lock, Baldwin, Weiser Lock, Medeco, Schlage, Kwikset, Assa Abloy and Von Duprin.

Mul-T-Lock Baldwin Weiser Lock
Medeco Schlage Kwikset
Assa-Abloy Von Duprin

Commercial Locksmith


We run our commercial service division the same way you run your business, efficient, and at the 
best value for your bottom line. We provide the following commercial / business services: 24 hour
commercial lockout service
, commercial lock installation, business safes, business locks changed,commercial lock re-key, replace lost keys, access control, card reader systems, commercial mailboxes, master key systems, broken keys removed, fire exit hardware, panic bar hardware,surveillance cameras, maintenance programs, commercial accounts, and a large array of commercial security services. Mr. Keyman will also review your contractor proposals, and set up
commercial billing for all corporate accounts. Visit our corporate web site's Commercial Locksmith
Account
online form to start billing today.

Medeco Mul-T-Lock Assa-Abloy
Schlage Von Duprin

Government Locksmith


Mr. Keyman has built a reputation for high security government locksmith solutions. We take as much
pride in our work, as we do in our beautiful Country that our Nations Servicemen give all they have to
defend everyday. Mr. Keyman's Tech's have the right stuff to install and fix government grade locks. Our
team of licensed technitions can create custom applications to solve even the most complex of security
lock applications.

Mr. Keyman originated in Oceanside, California, so we have a long history of serving our men and women
on Camp Pendleton. We take great pride in serving our military, and know each base inside and out. Our Response time on base is usually less than 20 minutes.

 

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