Category Archives: Structure

City Towers

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Seoul’s landmark with American spirit

A prominent city tower becomes a modern landmark, an observation tower, a city icon. Except for the Empire State Building in NYC, I’ve never been inside those city towers, nor have they been intentionally included in my itinerary. I was just contented to gaze from afar, and occasionally marveled its height. Most often I’d use it as point of reference, a lighthouse on land.

In Korea, the surrounding park and the path leading to Namsan peak in Seoul is excellent for walking, even at winter. So we walked to the top and then walked back down using a different route. It just so happen that Seoul Tower is on Namsan, close enough for me to take a snapshot at dusk – to document my walk.

Korea’s Phone Booth

Maria Cristina’s Power

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Maria Cristina Hydroelectric Plant

Maria Cristina Falls, a mainstay in Filipino textbooks as a favorite example of waterfall in the Philippines being among the tallest in the country. Now from a civil engineer’s point of view, it’s a great accomplishment to harness the power of Maria Cristina while retaining its majestic beauty.

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The majestic Maria Cristina Falls from afar

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Philippine Institute of Civil Engineers (PICE) Landmark Award in recognition of the capability of Filipino Civil Engineers in harnessing the full potential of Maria Cristina Falls through its construction of the hydroelectric plant

Sunday Snapshot: Oroquieta Bandstand

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Municipal bandstand in Oroquieta City

Apart from the statue of Jose Rizal, there is one other structure that I usually see in city/town plaza — the bandstand. The plazas in Bacolod City, Roxas City, and Oroquieta City for example have bandstands that are a standout.

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Culvert as Sun Shade

Bamboo Scaffolding

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Bamboo scaffolding is widely used in Hong Kong and that is why this attracts my attention more than the IFCs or Bank of China Tower type of buildings.

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One must be amazingly skilled in tying and connecting bamboo poles together at the right places to ensure stability for construction men and materials. How I wish bamboo scaffolders will continue to pass on this ancient skill for generations as bamboo scaffolding takes away the look of dullness of modern infrastructure construction activity happening constantly here and there.

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Hospital Ship & Hellship Memorial

Mountain School

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Mt Pulag Primary School at 7,748 feet above sea level

This primary school is situated 7,748 feet above sea level in the mountain town of Kabayan. There’s a sign out front that says “It takes a village to raise a child and a community to take care of the mountain. ” The school also has creative toilet signs depicting gender in traditional dresses.

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Toilet signs

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Just believe...ok?

Of Old Structures & Respectful Silence

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Plenty of old style buildings are still being used in this island where folks are respectfully silent in public places namely jeepneys, boats and eating places. Felt wonderful to dine where conversations in other tables do not reach you – finally, the perfect scenario for eating out in this country­­ but only in Marinduque.

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Ainokura Village

Ainokura is one among the three villages with gassho-style houses that was inscribed on the World Heritage List (two others are Shirakawa-go and Suganuma ).

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Ainokura is home to about 80 residents who are working together to preserve their priceless cultural properties. This village and the gassho-style inn where I stayed has now become my most favorite place outside Philippines.

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Map given to visitors

 

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Ainokura has 20 gassho-style houses

 

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Illustration of a gassho-style architecture

 

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The inn. I’d rather stay a night here than a thousand nights at The Peninsula Tokyo

 

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The walk to the bus stop on a snow covered road on the day I left the inn

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Ainokura bus stop

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Bus schedule

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Signage on the highway as seen from the bus stop

 

Shirakawa-go Farmhouses at Winter

Deep in the valley of Northern Japan Alps lies this mountain village where farmhouses have equilateral triangle thatched roof. This traditional house design known as gassho-style allows snow to slide off easily from the roof.

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To access the Shirakawa-go village is to cross this footbridge

 

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Gassho-style farmhouse

 

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Winter is so beautiful in this village

 

Population Explosion

Some Structures in Melaka

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Shophouse

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More shophouses

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Bank

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Low rise building

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Melaka’s landmark. And that tower behind the Stadthuys should have been erected somewhere else instead

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Sidewalk

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Museum

Unintentional Greenery

Melaka Murals

Rizal in Dumaguete

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‘Rizal was here’ marker in Dumaguete plaza

Dr. Jose Rizal’s exile in Dapitan came to an end when he was permitted to serve as surgeon of the Spanish armed forces in Cuba. Leaving Dapitan City for Manila on board the steamer España on July 31, 1896, with Josephine Bracken, sister Narcisa and others, España temporarily stopped by Dumaguete at sunrise on August 1, 1896. There he met with the governor of Negros Oriental Emilio Regal and his former classmate Faustino Herrero Regidor.

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In the afternoon of the same day, Rizal performed eye operation for the kapitan ng konstabularya of the province. At 10 PM of the same day, Rizal left Dumaguete on board the same ship. (Reference: National Historical Institute).

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Rizal’s Ultimo Adios in English, Spanish and Visayan

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I wonder which zone of the Rizal Boulevard now did the steamer España exactly docked on August 1, 1896

 

Hero

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Jose Rizal statue in Zamboanga City

Not only the streets in Luzon, Visayas and Mindanao were named “Rizal”, to give tribute to the national hero, but one can also notice a statue of him in the plaza, government offices, schools, village, in almost every town and cities in the country. Rizal has become a symbolic hero of the present.
Meanwhile, I’m still in Zamboanga City and the members of the Philippine Military deployed here including the Marines that are on their way to provide security are truly the present heroes. The anniversary of last year’s seige is coming up, the reason why it’s on everyone’s mind including the memories of fear.

Snapshots: Ciudad de Zamboanga

Some snapshots of the structures in Zamboanga City.

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Local government building with watchtower

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The most good looking BPI in the country

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Fort Pilar: A very sacred fort worshipped by locals. Apparently there was an apparition here

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Bullet holes from the urban warfare last year and doves near Fort Pilar

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Concrete ventilation design. There is beauty in decay

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Near the mercado (palengke)

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Universidad de Zamboanga

City Agriculture Office

Kanonization of Education

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43 years ago, my mother graduated from Central Philippine University (CPU), a school founded in 1905 by American Missionaries in Jaro, Iloilo.

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My mother in the picture was reminiscing her classroom days at Valentine Hall. Reverend William Valentine is the founding father of CPU

CPU is just one of the many institutions in the country founded by the Americans. The structures in the campus are just some of the many structures built or architecturally influenced by the Americans during their time.

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University of the Philippines, my alma mater, exists because of American colonization, which makes education as my favorite Americanization in the country.

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It was late afternoon when I accompanied my mother in her visit, hence the reason for the dusky look in all snapshots

Today, July 4, 2014, is a big day in USA, and the reason why I thought about CPU and the kanonization* of our education system.

*Kanonization is the term I used for Americanization in a local way. I do have that good book by Scott Garceau titled “Kano-nization: More Secrets from the X-Pat Files”. It’s about Filipino way of life that’s something of a bewilderment or humorous in the eyes of an American.