Tuesday, May 13, 2014

MAKATI CITY

Location: Makati City, NCR, Philippines
Coordinates: 14°33′N 121°02′E
Elevation: 15.4 m (50.5 ft) City Land Area: 21.57 km2 (8.33 sq mi)
Metro Land Area: 638.55 km2 (246.55 sq mi)
No. of Districts: Two Districts
No. of Barangays: 33
Time Zone: PST (UTC+8)
Zip Code: 1200 to 1299
Dialing Code: 2
Date of Cityhood: January 2, 1995
Income Class: Highly-Urbanized City

Descriptive Summary: Makati is the financial center of the Philippines; it has the highest concentration of multinational and local corporations in the country. Major banks, corporations, department stores as well as foreign embassies are based in Makati.


View Makati in a larger map


The skyscrapers along Ayala Avenue of Makati City


Makati being a highly-urbanized, modern and world-class city has all the amenities, luxuries and hotels where local and international tourist can enjoy. For booking your hotel accommodations and other relevant information, this link Makati hotels will be useful to you.

The busy street of Ayala Avenue late in the afternoon


The high-rise condominium residence towers along Ayala Avenue


Glorietta 4 with the Ascott Towers


Makati Nightscape courtesy by jan shim photography


Part of Glorietta Right Wing and Glorietta 5


The picturesque Greenbelt Park


Chain of restaurants, cafes and coffee shops at Greenbelt


The RCBC Plaza Tower (center) located in the corners of Ayala Avenue and Gil Puyat Avenue


A closer glimpse of RCBC Plaza Tower


The tallest tower is GT Tower International


The prominent Insular Life Building in the corners of Ayala Avenue and Paseo de Roxas


A shot taken from the Enterprise Tower in the corners of Ayala and Paseo de Roxas


Along Ayala Avenue with Enterprise Tower (left) and Philippine Stock Exchange Tower (right)


The glass-walled Zuellig Tower in the corners of Paseo de Roxas and Makati Avenue just opposite Mandarin Oriental Hotel


Lapu-Lapu Monument erected in the corners of Makati Avenue and Paseo de Roxas


Along Makati Avenue from the corner of Paseo de Roxas to Sen. Gil Puyat Avenue


Taken from the Mandarin Oriental Hotel in the corners of Makati Avenue and Paseo de Roxas


Photo of Zuellig Tower (left) and Mandarin Oriental Hotel (right)


The centerpiece is the One Roxas Triangle Tower in the corners of Paseo de Roxas and Cruzada Street


The Development Bank of the Philippines building (left) and on its back is the Pacific Star Building


Zuellig Tower


Along Paseo de Roxas


Along Makati Avenue


Manila Peninsula Hotel


Ayala Avenue from Manila Peninsula Hotel


Shangri-La Hotel - Makati


The Ascott Twin Towers and Glorietta 4


A green park fronting Glorietta 4 and 5


Glorietta 5 Shopping Mall


Uniqlo at Glorietta 5


Glorietta Activity Center


Still a part of Glorietta


The Greenbelt Park and its malls


Sto. Nino de Paz Chapel at the heart of Greenbelt Park


The interior of Sto. Nino de Paz Chapel


Greenbelt Park and the posh hotels around it


An open, stylish and classy restaurant at Greenbelt


Seattle's Best Coffee at Greenbelt


A busy evening at Greenbelt


Lavish shopping at Greenbelt 5


Peeping thru the glass windows of Greenbelt 5


Shoppers rush before the mall closing


Dusit Thani Hotel


AYALA TRIANGLE GARDENS

Location: Bel-Air, Makati City, Metro Manila, Philippines
Operating Hours: 6:00 A.M. to 10:00 P.M.
Coordinates: 14°33'25"N 121°1'26"E
Total Land Area: 20,000 square meters
Nearby Cities and Municipality: Quezon City, Mandaluyong City, Pasay City, Pasig City, Taguig City and Pateros Municipality
Descriptive Summary:
Ayala Triangle Gardens is a sub-district of the Makati Central Business District between Ayala Avenue, Makati Avenue and Paseo de Roxas beautifully landscaped park and shaded with a hundred of trees of different variety including rain trees, golden palms, fire trees, kamuning and podo cerpus. It also showcases inspired public art pieces from some of the country’s leading artists. Formerly, this strip of land was the runway of the former Nielsen Field, Metro Manila’s main airport in the 1930s.

View Ayala Triangle Park in a larger map


The lush green Ayala Triangle Gardens Park


This park is a part of Makati City, one of the 16 cities and one municipality consisting Metropolitan Manila. Makati City is the financial capital of the Philippines where it hosts most of the main offices both big corporate companies, government offices and some multi-national companies. Metropolitan Manila is the capital of the Philippines and is also known as the National Capital Region (NCR).

This place is a refuge of the residents within the city of Makati for fitness and recreational activities like jogging, brisk walking, sports training for basic mountaineering course and even for purely people-watching. Others would just like to visit the place to unwind and to get close with nature in the midst of a metropolitan city.

The Philippine Stock Exchange Tower at the backdrop


Accessibility is one of the reasons why people come and go to this park where it is just adjacent to the busy street of Ayala Avenue, the Wall Street of the Philippines. Public transport is never a problem to get to this place.

The Philippine Stock Exchange Tower - The Gateway to the Park


The park has also the following attractions, namely: The Filipinas Heritage Library, Gabriela Silang Monument, Ninoy Aquino Monument The Sultan Kudarat Monument. It is also the venue of some events and activities.

The vibrant Ayala Triangle Gardens at night


The park is most busy starting early in the evening till it closes at 10:00 P.M. as the corporate populace and fitness-conscious people flock to the place for some to dine in the 14 restaurants serving of an array of delectable cuisines, namely:

* Amici
* Banapple
* BreadTalk
* Bon Chon Chicken
* C.B.D.
* Caramia Gelateria
* Chef Laudico's Bfast
* The Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf
* Golden Spoon
* Kanin Club
* MoMo Cafe
* Omakase
* Poco Deli
* Wee Nam Kee

The skyscrapers along the Paseo De Roxas side of the Park


No wonder the park is visited by a lot of people early in the evening as it is being surrounded with a lot of corporate offices housed in the skyscrapers visible in the picture above. The area has also Wi-fi hotspots which can be used for residents and employees, meetings or simply when hanging out with friends.

The dramatic landscape of the park as it almost closes at 10:00 P.M.


Tourists and nationals from the developed and highly-industrialized countries love to stay in this part of Makati as its world-class amenities give convenience to them.

HOW TO GET THERE

Ayala Triangle can be accessible through buses and taxi cabs from any point of Metro Manila. For public transport like buses, coming from the North of EDSA (Epifanio de los Santos Avenue), they should have a signboard of LRT/Ayala/Leveriza and lift in front of the Philippine Stock Exchange Tower along Ayala Avenue. Coming from the South or Baclaran, one has to take buses which has a route of Gil Puyat Avenue, which will pass through Gil Puyat LRT Station and has to lift in front PNB or formerly Allied Bank Corporation building and has to use the underpass to cross to the Philippine Stock Exchange.

On the other hand, it is just a walk away from Greenbelt and Glorietta Shopping Malls. It also across the Mandarin Oriental Hotel in the corners of Makati Avenue and Paseo de Roxas. Likewise, it is just across Manila Peninsula Hotel in the corners of Ayala Avenue and Makati Avenue.

Wednesday, April 30, 2014

BACOLOD CITY

Location: Bacolod City, Negros Occidental, Philippines
Coordinates: 10°40'N 122°57'E
City Land Area: 162.67 km2 (62.81 sq mi)
Metro Land Area: 578.65 km2(223.42 sq mi)
No. of Districts: Lone District of Bacolod
No. of Barangays: 61
Time Zone: PST (UTC+8)
Zip Code: 6100
Dialing Code: 34
Date of Cityhood: June 18, 1938
Income Class: First Class

Descriptive Summary:Bacolod is dubbed to be the "city of smiles" because of its people's friendly faces. It being famous of its yearly Masskara Festival and the home to the prestigious Bongbong’s Piyaya, Inasal na Manok Bisaya


View Bacolod in a larger map


This is a part of my April 11 – 15, 2014 Mount Kanlaon – Negros Occidental Trips which includes: Mount Kanlaon Climb; Mambukal Mountain Resort; The Ruins of Talisay; and Balay Negrense.

The Lagoon at the forefront with the Negros Museum at the background


BALAY NEGRENSE OF SILAY CITY

Location: Silay City,Negros Occidental, Western Visayas (Region VI), Philippines
Postal Address: Cinco de Noviembre Street, Barangay III, Silay City 6115, Philippines
Coordinates: 10.799539°N 122.973291°E
Descriptive Summary: The Balay Negrense was originally the ancestral house of Victor Fernandez Gaston, a son of Yves Leopold Germain Gaston and Prudencia Fernandez. The elder Gaston is a native of Normandy in France where he married a Filipina from Batangas where he initially began experimenting with sugar production before relocating to Negros. Balay Negrense is a museum in Silay City which showcases the lifestyle of a late 19th-century Negrense sugar baron. This museum was the first to be established in Negros Occidental in October 6, 1990.

View Balay Negrense in a larger map


This is a part of my April 11 – 15, 2014 Mount Kanlaon – Negros Occidental Trips which includes: Mount Kanlaon Climb; Mambukal Mountain Resort; Bacolod City Tour; and The Ruins of Talisay.

The Victor Fernandez Gaston Ancestral House in Silay City


The Balay Negrense (Hiligaynon for Negrense), an ancestral house of a wealthy Victor F. Gaston, is a museum in Silay City, Negros Occidental which showcases the lifestyle of a late 19th-century Negrense sugar baron. Victor is the son of Yves Leopold Germain Gaston who is a native of Normandy in France and Batangueňa Prudencia Fernandez. The elder Gaston where he first experimented sugar production in Batangas before he relocated to Negros.

By looking at the following pictures, it's worth like touring inside it. Read on . . .



This house which was built in 1897 served to be the residence of Victor Gaston and his twelve children from 1901 until his death in 1927 and was vacated by his bereaved family. It was abandoned in the mid-1970s and fell into deterioration until it was managed by the Negros Cultural Foundation.



The year 1975 was a significant date when the house was donated by Msgr. Guillermo Ma. Gaston to the Philippine Tourism Authority which is now known as the Tourism Infrastructure and Enterprise Zone Authority. Its repairs and restorations were taken from both the funds provided by prominent individuals and a counterpart of P5,000,000 from the Philippine Tourism Authority.



After completing all the repairs and restorations which include the provision of period furniture and fixtures, the old house was officially inaugurated as a museum on October 6, 1990. Further, it was listed as a heritage house on March 8, 1994 pursuant to Board Resolution No. 1 of the National Historical Institute of the Philippines (National Historical Commission of the Philippines).



As described from its website, www.balaynegrense.com the mansion-turned museum is of house called bahay na bato, literally “house of stone”, however, it reflects American colonial influences where the lower storey is not constructed of stone but of concrete. The foundation posts are made out of trunks of the balayong tree, a local hardwood; the floorboards are of the same material. The house’s upper storey is constructed of wood topped with a roof of galvanized iron instead of tile.



The aforementioned website further describes the house to have a four-meter high ceiling and large windows with ventanillas, smaller windows beneath the large windows with sliding panels that can be opened to admit the wind. The lower storey itself is elevated from ground level by a meter-high crawlspace, allowing the wooden foundations to be aired, preventing dampness from rotting the wood.



Balay Negrense which is located in Silay City is just 4.7 kilometers from the airport in the name of Silay International Airport. It is 6.2 Kilometers from Talisay City where the famous The Ruins is located and 14.3 kilometers from Bacolod City. Silay, Talisay and Bacolod comprises the cities of Metro Bacolod.



When you visit the mansion, see to it that you are able to tour inside it. In-house guides are available where they will explain to you in detail the parts and the contents of the house. For an entrance fee of P50, you will learn a lot of what it is to live as a wealthy person in the late 19th century in Negros.



While in Silay, try to visit also El Ideal, Silay’s Original Bakery since 1920. Try their wide array of delicious cakes and pastries and some other delicacies. They can be good as “pasalubong”.



Of course, don’t miss also to visit the complete paradise of Mambukal Mountain Resort where you can enjoy their natural hotsprings, lagoon, water falls and other attractions. Of course, for a mountaineer, Silay is just two hours away from Guintubdan, the jump-off point of Mount Kanlaon.





HOW TO GET THERE:

From Bacolod, you can take a jeepney for 20 minutes travel at P18 fare one way. But if you want to relax and travel in convenience, you can take a taxi cab where Negrense drivers are honest in the truest sense of the word. Being in Bacolod, you can take the three cities for a day trip by hiring a taxi cab. For twice we have been to Bacolod, we only hired a certain Mr. Dante Nono for touring services where you can contact him through his mobile number at 09394494041.

THE RUINS OF TALISAY CITY (NEGROS OCCIDENTAL)

Location: Talisay City,Negros Occidental, Western Visayas, Philippines
Postal Address: Hda. Sta. Maria, Zone 15, Talisay City, Negros Occidental, 6115 Philippines
Coordinates: 10°44′N 122°58′E
Descriptive Summary: The Ruins of Talisay City is ranked 12th of the most fascinating ruins of the world (of more than 1,000 known ruins) in Oddee at http://www.oddee.com/item_96671.aspx is a blog with over 2.5 million visitors worldwide a month that “features the odd, strange and bizarre things of our world, Be amazed!”, its home page says. The rankings are as follows: 1-Machu Picchu (Peru), 2-Babylon (Iraq), 3-Palenque (Mexico), 4-Ruins of Ayutthaya (Thailand), 5-The Colosseum (Italy), 6-Tikal Ruins (Guatemala), 7-Chichen Itza Ruin (Mexico), 8-The Parthenon (Greece), 9-Jesuitical Ruins of Trinidad (Paraguay), 10-Copan Ruins (Honduras)and 11-Palmyra Ruins (Syria) .

View The Ruins in a larger map


This is a part of my April 11 – 15, 2014 Mount Kanlaon – Negros Occidental Trips which includes: Mount Kanlaon Climb; Mambukal Mountain Resort; Bacolod City Tour; and Balay Negrense .

The Magnificent Ruins taken at 6:30 P.M.


The Ruins is awarded to be the best landmark in the Philippines and is considered to be the Taj Mahal of Negros. It is just 10 kilometers from Silay International Airport. Talisay City where it is located is a part of the Metro Bacolod along with two other cities, namely: Bacolod City and the historical Silay.

The romantic fountain with the Mansion's ruins at the backdrop


Visiting this place early in the evening where it closes at 8:00 P.M. daily and likewise opens at 8:30 A.M. is such a rewarding experience as the whole place turns to be romantic. After all, Mariano Ledesma Lacson, a sugar magnate, built this mansion in 1911, where he designed it to be a monument to his enduring love to his wife, Maria Braga, a Portuguese lady from Macau. Mariano met Maria in Macau in some of his travels and deeply fell in love with her. Their marriage gave them 10 children and in 1911, while Maria was nearing the full term of her 11th pregnancy, she met an accident where it led to her death as well as the baby in her womb. Heartbroken and inconsolable, Mariano decided to build a mansion in remembrance of Maria, right in the middle of his 440-hectare sugar plantation here in Talisay City.

This is how The Ruins looked like when it was taken at 6:00 P.M.


How come that this magnificent mansion just ended up to be a ruin? Actually, this mansion has been the residence of Mariano and his 10 children where he set the rule that as soon as his children are married, they should leave the mansion. Mariano himself would abide by it, moving to a cottage nearby when he decided to remarry years later. But not until the eve of the World War II that it was burned down by the recruited guerilla soldiers so that it will not be used as headquarters by the Japanese forces.

The Ruins as taken at 9:00 A.M.


It has been recounted by the eyewitnesses that this mansion in the middle of a sugar plantation has smoldered continuously for three days, but the fire would not consume all of it leaving behind reminders of a glorious past.

As seen from the pictures above, the mansion has European architectural influences as introduced to Mariano by his father-in-law, who is a ship captain. Its over all design has an Italianate inspiration to the shell details on the roof. The structure of the house was of solid concrete and the interior floors were dressed either in tiles imported from Spain or 20-meter-long hard wood planks that were cut a meter wide.

The imposing and elevated side entrance of the mansion


After it was consummated by fire in 1942, it remained to be totally abandoned and served to be the place of refuge at day time for some sugarcane farmers while having rest from work as well as some livestock animals who made this as their shelter at night. It was only then when Mariano's great grandson, Raymund Javella, has initiated to rehabilitate the the ruins so that it can be opened to the public as part of a monumental museum in January 2008. This realization has been triggered by some of his travels abroad particularly in Europe where ruins are preserved and made to be tourist attractions.

Lovers find this place very romantic


As the place has been rehabilitated, some amenities were put in place as additional perks for visiting guests like a fine dining restaurant which sits 70 guests comfortably with Chef Michelle Lynn Lacson and Chef KC Lacson whipping up palatable family recipes, Mediterranean dishes that date back to the time of Mariano and Maria; 18-hole mini-golf course, laden with blue grass; a 500-square-meter garden of fruits and vegetables which afford the guests with freshly picked organically-grown produce without pesticides; plants and ornamental flowers shop; a souvenir shop that sells items such as t-shirts, key chains, memo magnets, hand-painted fans, postcards, eco-friendly bags and many more; and the luscious Spanish Garden equipped with tramvia for guests to move around the place.

This is a part of the spacious and verdant Spanish garden


By the way, there is of course an entrance fee to The Ruins. As far as I can recall, I paid P40 using my student ID but adults have to pay P80. I just don't know with the kids and senior citizens. Cars and vehicles brought inside are also charged with an entrance fee.

Relaxing at the cool Spanish Garden


When is the perfect time of the day to visit the place to capture perfect pictures? Personally, I was advised by the in-house guides that I have to be there from 5:00 P.M. until at least to 7:00 P.M. My first visit was around 6:00 P.M. Thus, I did not see the scenery of the sunset picture which gives a golden sky background to the mansion. With this, the following day I visited again the place but it was around 9:00 P.M. and I have no choice because I have to be timely for my flight in going back to Manila. This time, my four friends where with me in the name of: Rome Frias, Alan Valenzuela, Cesar Garcia and Benedick Manalang.

This is still a part of the Spanish Garden


If you visit Negros Occidental, do not miss to visit this amazing ruins as you can not claim you have been in this province. Either as an amateur or professional photographer, your sense of sight will really feast on its magnificent scenery. No wonder, it is becoming a favorite location for photography and filming, whether documenting special occasions, sharpening a skill, or just enjoying a hobby. Other interesting sights to include in your photography subjects are the original fixtures of the property like the four-tier water lily fountain and the muscovado sugar mill smokestack.

My in-house guide called this tramvia? where guests can ride around the Spanish Garden with a fee


The abandoned muscovado sugar mill smokestack was erected outside the mansion compound since this large hacienda ran then its own maquina de vapor de horno economico or steam-powered muscovado sugar mill or simborio where it clearly proves that once this technology has existed and now it just remains to be a relic of the past.

HOW TO GET THERE

First, if you are coming from Manila, you can take any daily flight to Bacolod via Silay International Airport. While in Bacolod City proper, you take a cab ride with a sign board of "Bata" for P8 as of this writing which will take about 30-45 minutes depending on the traffic. Ask the jeepney driver to drop you at the tricycle terminal to the ruins which you will pay for P15 per head and you will be dropped there. In going back to Bacolod City proper, just reverse the routes you have.

Alternatively, if you are driving then you can proceed to Bata (PEPSI bottling plant) and turn east. About 600 meters, you will see a cellsite above a two-storey building on the left. Opposite that building you will see a big sign that reads as "THIS WAY TO THE RUINS". You will enter that narrow street leading to Rose Lawn Memorial Garden. Follow the small red and yellow signs on the electrical posts which will lead you all the way to The RUINS.