Showing posts with label Manila. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Manila. Show all posts

Saturday, April 26, 2008

B & W



In sepia, black or white
The images of your smile
Seem impossible
To keep from the mind



The shadow of its passage
Seem to pause in between
The dimly lit shades
Of my way home



In sepia, black or white
When all the colors are nil


In sepia, black, or white (by Karlo Mikhail Mongaya; in emanilapoetry.com)

TIKIM: HAP CHAN (PEDRO GIL, MANILA)


You wouldn't miss it. It's just right across the street from Robinson's Place Ermita. We've been visiting this place for so many years now since our night-out nights (huh ?!) during Malate's hey days. These days, when late-night hunger pangs call for something quick and nifty and you've just finished a long movie at the mall, the place to be is Hap Chan along Pedro Gil. According to their
website, hap means "to put together or bundle in one group." Chan is Chinese for “place”. Hap Chan has come to be “the right place” for gathering the family, the clan.

What's a dimsum place without the usual complimentary hot tea?





Friday, January 18, 2008

INTRODUCTION TO THE ESCOLTA SERIES


Calle de la Escolta, c. 1899

Everybody who have lived in the City of Manila for years know Escolta like the palm of their hand. Dubbed as the principal business district of Binondo and the whole of Manila for that matter during the 19th century up to about the 1950s, it was said to be comparable in those day-terms with the Ramblas district of Barcelona. Escolta connects two historic districts: Binondo and Sta. Cruz.

I have no idea how the name Escolta came about. Suffice to say that the word escoltar (verbo transitivo; a transitive verb) exists in the Spanish language which means "to escort" and escolta means "body guard". A quick visit to the Images of Asia site reveal that this thoroughfare was initially used by the British Commodore as a convoy route during the years 1762 to 1764.

Looking at Escolta now, I suppose Escolta and the surrounding districts eventually lost their appeal when Cubao in Quezon City and Makati City started to develop. Or so that's what the stories say.

In 2006, former Mayor Lito Atienza signed a memorandum of understanding with the Federation of Filipino-Chinese Chambers of Commerce and Industry, Inc., headed by its President Francis Chua, and the Escolta Commercial Association, Inc., headed by its President Arturo C. Dy, to collaborate efforts to immediately develop and promote Calle Escolta as an ultra-modern IT hub. This is part of the plans to reinvigorate the once prosperous street. An Escolta Waterfront Development Plan was also hatched, part of which is already in place.

Today, Escolta remains to be a busy street thanks to some banks, restaurants, and condominiums that remain to exist here. Notable among the more recent developments is the new Escolta Pasig River ferry terminal which brings to life that area of the street near the bridge.

This is an attempt to record through photographs the continung saga of this famous Manila street. A disclaimer: I am not a historian; therefore, should there be errors in the data presented in the series below, I will be most happy to correct them. Data presented here that may be similar to what is written in other Manila travel blogs is not a coincidence: the data is all over the internet anyway.

Thank you very much and welcome to Manila's Calle de la Escolta.

Sunday, January 13, 2008

NATIVIDAD BUILDING (ESCOLTA SERIES)


Personally, I find the Natividad Building along Escolta cor. Tomas Pinpin Sts. one of the most beautiful pieces of architecture around these parts. There is a sense of modernity - and thus of universality - in its design. For those who haven't noticed, the front part of the building was used in the recent Nescafe advert where a man and a woman met under the rain. It was made to look like they met somewhere in a rainy Paris street. This pretty much confirms that many parts of Manila can lend themselves to themed shoot locations, allowing the audience to be transported to other places without knowing they've never left Manila at all.
During its heydey, the Insurance Commission found its home here. (Source: Honesto General). The building is still pretty much in the best of conditions. Together with the neighboring Calvo, the Natividad has been described as beaux-arts in its style, a style that began in France in the 1800s or thereabouts.
A most impressive facade. I hope they convert the rooms of this building into living spaces.

Friday, January 11, 2008

CALVO BUILDING (ESCOLTA SERIES)

You cannot miss it especially at night. It's the only well-lighted building along the Muelle del Banco Nacional and one of the busiest along Escolta. Among the historic buildings on this street, it is also one of most well-preserved (although I heard an elevator is still manually operated with sliding gates for doors. Cool!). Home to the Escolta Museum (more on this in another entry), it is also home to a well-known drugstore and a restaurant (Wah Yuen) on its ground floor.
In 1950, the Calvo building was home to the studios and corporate offices of the Loreto de F. Hemedes, Inc., later renamed Republic Broadcasting System. Robert “Bob” Stewart of the Uncle Bob fame sent the first signals of radio station dzBB from a makeshift studio on its 4th floor. Seven years after in 1957, that company moved to its current location along EDSA in Quezon City and is now more known as GMA 7 - the Kapuso network.
The beaux-arts architectural style is very obvious on the Calvo. Although its facade is practically wrapped by electrical and phone wires (aaargh!), the beauty of its design - garlands, wreaths, figure sculptures, crests and cornices still stand out.


The Calvo was built in 1933. May the sun never set on its beauty.

Wednesday, January 09, 2008

PEREZ-SAMANILLO BUILDING (ESCOLTA SERIES)

One of two sentinels to Escolta that stand after the Estero de la Reina is the simple but elegant 6-storey Perez-Samanillo Building. Built in 1928, it is now knowm as the First United Building.
A fine example of Art Deco, the building was designed by Paris-born Andres Luna de San Pedro, the same designer of the St. Cecilia Hall of the 100-year old St. Scholastica College, and the Chapel of the Crucified Christ (c. 1927) of St. Paul University (along Pedro Gil St.) De San Pedro is the son of artist and Philippine hero Juan Luna and Paz Pardo de Tavera. It is currently owned by the Sylianteng family who bought it in the 1960's.
Its gates feature the distinct chevron design, while its facade feature the strong lines of triangles and squares broken by stylized floral patterns. It's now sporting a white color, but articles said that it used to sport a coral pink hue, although it's been explained that this was only during former city mayor (now, city mayor once again) Alfredo Lim. The current owners said that when they bought the building, it already sported its current color. (Source: skycrapercity.com)


The building also has an elevator that, in lieu of lighted numbers to indicate which floor you are already on, has a dial similar to those found in US buildings built during the same period.

Monday, January 07, 2008

REGINA BUILDING (ESCOLTA SERIES)

At the corner of Escolta and William Burke streets stand proud a neo-classical beauty - the Regina Building built in 1934. It reminds one of other buildings that can also be seen in other Asian capitals signifying that the style is pervasive throughout the region. I didn't have the chance to enter the building but did an effort of walking around it to have a feel of its immensity.

I read in skycrapercity.com in an article by Honesto General that former Senator Vicente Madrigal used to rent a room here for his staff. Provident Insurance Corporation - one of the first Filipino-owned insurance companies (now is Spanish-owned Mapfre Insular Insurance) -opened here in 1934. Many other insurance companies made this their headquarters when this area was still the main financial district of Manila. It now houses several freight forwarding companies.

Sorry, no idea why it is called Regina. Coincidentally, it stands practically along an estero - estuary - called Estero de la Reina. Regina = Reina. Just playing with the possibilities here.
It is said that the Regina is one of the first examples of structures built with reinforced concrete - something the Americans introduced in these earthquake-prone islands. Along with the nearby building, the equally beautiful Perez-Samanillo Building, the Regina was designed as a three-floor affair by Andres Luna de San Pedro (Note: this information needs verification). Later, when the De Leon family bought the building from the Roxases, a fourth floor was commissioned and was designed by architect Fernando Ocampo, one of the pioneers of modern Filipino architecture known as one of the Thirteen Moderns. He took Civil Engineering, University of Santo Tomas; and Architecture, University of Pennsylvania). He founded the UST College of Architecture in 1930.
A site I came across describes the Regina as Art Deco. The lettering of the name, however, is definitely Roman and is characteristic of the Neo-classical styles which count, among others, the Manila Central Post Office, the National Museum, and the Finance and Tourism buildings at both ends of the Agrifina Circle. When Filipino architects were studing in the US in the 1930s, the trend was starting to veer away from this style towards Art Deco. The Regina is a quite an interesting mixture of these two styles.

Detail. Posts design as seen from the side facing the estero.

Detail. Repetitive design in between posts.

Detail. The warm Sunday sun bathes the external ground floor hallways.

Detail. This hallway ends on Escolta.
A woman does her laundry along the murky waters of the Estero de la Reina. Life definitely goes on in these parts.

Friday, February 16, 2007

CARRIEDO STATION


Plaza Goiti at night (sorry, my hand moved). There are street food galore down there and blind musicians too!
The ubiqitous sinugbang dried pusit vendor along Avenida Rizal