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ear God, the rejection of Your love, through a life of disobedience, leads us into the darkness of sin, which produces suffering and death, as emphasized in the Gospel reading. On the other hand, the acceptance of Your love in our lives, especially as manifested in Your Son, Jesus Christ, leads to the realm of light, Jesus, in fact, is the light of the world and He came to enable us to “live in the light” by performing the “deeds of the light.” amen! Exploring god’s Word, Fr. sal putzu, sdB and louiE M. lacson Word&Life Publications • teacherlouie1965@yahoo.com
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Philippine developers on a tear
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Tuesday, March 17, 2015 D1
‘Bahay-kubo, kahit munti’ Here is the inspiration for this week’s column. My father, Boom Boncan, showed me this modern bamboo model house in Puerto Princesa, Palawan, inspired by the bahaykubo. It is for the Palawan Council for Sustainable Development. BOOM BONCAN
Urban Monologues V2.0
Nikki Boncan-Buensalido
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Filipino children’s song that has been passed down through generations inspired me to write this article. “Bahay-kubo, kahit munti, ang halaman doon ay sari-sari. “[There is a nipa hut, although very small, the plants that grow there are varied].” it goes on to enumerate the many vegetables that grow around the bahay-kubo. The bahay-kubo has figured in folk songs, legends, short stories and children’s drawings. i was one of those children who drew the philippine countryside with two mountains and a setting sun between them as the backdrop to a rice field with a scarecrow and a small bahay-kubo on one side. Growing up, the bahay-kubo became quite familiar to me, as we’d sleep in one on visits to the provinces. During my university years, it was a topic we explored in our History of
philippine Architecture subject. Today a visit to the country’s tourist destinations will not be complete without a sighting of clusters of these houses. even as we race to modernity, the nipa hut still serves as a takeoff point in philippine architecture and design, and a lot of architects have pitched their take on “The Modern Bahay-Kubo.” What makes the Filipino bahay-kubo so unique in our tropical country, and what useful design principles can be extracted from the original to come up with a modern bahay-kubo?
passiVE cooling liVinG in a tropical country has its pros and cons. We have extreme heat and humidity, along with strong winds, especially at the peak of the monsoon season. our architecture also has to deal with these types of extremes. passive cooling is about harnessing these types of energy to work for the house by means of design and construction methodologies, rather than using energy-powered cooling appliances. The bahay-kubo pictured here exemplifies this through the presence of oversized windows in strategic locations of the house for natural ventilation. other fenestrations that allow wind to flow through the house are ventanillas or louvers, and an exhaust route for hot air at the top of the ceiling, to name a few.
Furthermore, wide eaves and overhangs provide shading for the entire house, as well as its surroundings. proper orientation of the house to open up to wind directions (amihan and habagat) may also be helpful when site allows. When this is achieved, heat is deflected away from the house but light is still welcomed. The same principles can be applied to a modern house and, i promise you, you will also get the same wind flow and heat protection.
on stilts ConDiTionS in the philippines also range from rainy to sunny. Raising a house on stilts is also beneficial, as this not only allows wind to enter and circulate from under the house, but also protects it from floods. in the case of the modern bahay-kubo, if the house is raised on stilts, the lower floor acts as a social space for family and friends to come together. in older times, this space also served as an extension of the family space, or a storage for livestock or harvest. Moreover, a house on stilts also reduces the building footprint and has very minimal ground disturbance during construction.
sustainaBlE MatErials, sustainaBlE EnVironMEnt BUilDinG materials also play an important
role in the construction of a bahay-kubo. These include bamboo, sawali, anahaw and rattan, among others. Bamboo is a type of grass that has utmost strength and flexibility. it is also one of the fastestgrowing plants in the world, hence its sustainability. A typical bahay-kubo is 80-percent to 90-percent bamboo. The leaves act as cladding for the ceiling and the roof. Concrete may also be used, but only recommended for the foundations of the house and so that insects are not able to eat into the house’s foundations. Today the modern bahay-kubo uses more modern materials that are still sustainable and environment-friendly. Certain materials are also certified to be sustainable, as they are eco-friendly or made from recycled products, or those with low volatile compounds, etc.
tHE FaMilY as singlE unit A UniqUe trait among Filipinos is that we consider the family as a single social unit. The family plays an important role in Filipino society. This is something designers and planners must never forget. The spaces within a typical bahay-kubo are limited but big enough to accommodate a whole family living together. The social space adapts to the Filipino family values of being together and sharing their lives with one another.
The idea of family as a single unit dictates that the common spaces of the house are bigger than, i.e., their rooms. Usually, the bigger rooms are the dining or family areas. This is also evident in the modern bahaykubo. Filipinos love to entertain and have friends and extended families over, thus spaces have to be designed to accommodate large or small groups, and spaces have to be able to open up to each other. one might notice that the dining room opens up to the living area, and the living area may open up to the garden or an outdoor patio. Heck, in a traditional bahay-kubo community, everybody lives so close to one another that they share their big common space with their neighbors, opening the house not only to their family but also to the community. That is how social Filipinos can get. There are still a lot more design principles that i can extract from the small bahay-kubo but i will stop here and leave the rest to the imagination. The bahay-kubo, is not just a “small” house; it is a home that is very functional given the limited material choices in the provinces. But with the right choice of materials and the right construction methodology, the bahay-kubo can withstand strong storms. its elements are sustainable and its design principles are still being extracted, studied and translated into modern-day thinking.
Mandaluyong cites dMci Homes as one of its top 10 taxpayers
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Jan Venturanza (center), head of the DMCI Homes Marketing and Customer Care, with the award for DMCI Homes as one of the top 10 taxpayers of Mandaluyong City for 2015. With Venturanza are (from left) Mandaluyong City Business Permit and Licensing Department Head Catherine arce, Mandaluyong City Mayor Benhur abalos, DMCI Homes Project Development Manager april Bernal and Mandaluyong City assessor’s Office Head Gener Sison.
He Mandaluyong City government has awarded DMCi Homes as one of its top 10 taxpayers, and thanked the residential resort builder for contributing to the increased investments in the so-called Tiger City. Mayor Benhur Abalos presented the award to Jan Venturanza, head of the DMCi Homes Marketing and Customer Care; and April Bernal, project development manager, during the celebration of the Mandaluyong City’s 21st founding anniversary and 70th liberation Day commemoration, dubbed as liberation Ball, at the WackWack Golf and Country Club in February. Abalos thanked DMCi Homes and the other top 10 taxpayer awardees for enabling the city government to earn p154 billion in revenues from the business sector and p155 billion in total investment last year. “The city council, our taxpayers and our Ulirang Mandalenyo have shaped what our city is right now,” Abalos said. “We thank each and every one of you, all the
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NO LETUP IN THE COUNTRY’S RECORD-BUILDING BOOM TRIGGERS GLUT CONCERN
‘bahaykubo, kahit munti’ The light of the world
TfridayNovember 18, 2015 2014 Vol. 10 No. 159 40 Tuesday, March 17,
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industry players and investors, for all of the achievements that we have had.” Venturanza said DMCi Homes is just doing its job as a good corporate citizen. “it is our duty and privilege to try to support the City of Mandaluyong,” he said, after receiving the award on behalf of DMCi Homes. Among the DMCi Homes’s residential condominium developments in Mandaluyong City are Flair Towers, Tivoli Garden Residences and Dansalan Gardens. it is also constructing the Sheridan Towers, and the company has other residential projects lined up for the city, according to Bernal. DMCi Homes was also one of the top 10 companies that paid at least p1 billion in taxes to the Bureau of internal Revenue (BiR) in 2013. The feat won for the company the BiR’s Billionaires’ Club Award last year. it was the only real-estate company among the Billionaires’ Club awardees.
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he country is seemingly in the grip of a building boom, led by developers such as Megaworld Corp. and Ayala Land Inc., that will add a record number of apartments over the next two years.
However, it also threatens to lead to a glut that will weigh on returns for investors. An estimated 55,000 residential units will come to the market in Metro Manila this year, slowing growth in lease rates, according to broker CBRE Group Inc. Spending by property companies will rise 18 percent to more than P300 billion ($6.8 billion) in 2015 from last year, according to broker Savills Plc. Philippine developers have been on a building spree, as the nation’s biggest economic boom since
CHINA’S LI TO ENSURE GROWTH BusinessMirror
World The
B3-1 | Tuesday, March 17, 2015 • Editor: Lyn Resurreccion
Continued on A2 Delegates applaud as Chinese President Xi Jinping (bottom left) and Premier li Keqiang (bottom right) arrive for the closing session of the annual National People’s Congress at the great Hall of the People in Beijing on sunday. AP/Andy Wong
AGREEMENT FACILITATING U.S. PARTICIPATION IN PPPs SIGNED
China’s Li to ensure growth amid reforms
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remier Li Keqiang pledged to protect job creation in China as the leadership presses ahead with a “painful” push to cut corruption and waste by reducing the role of the state.
Policy-makers will take action if China’s growth, which the government targeted at about 7 percent this year, drifts toward the lower limit of its range and cuts into employment or wages, Li told reporters.
While stripping the government of some of its role in the world’s second-largest economy may face resistance from vested interests, it is crucial, he said. “This is not nail-clipping—it’s
wrist slashing,” Li said on Sunday at his annual nationally televised briefing, held in Beijing’s Great Hall of the People, referring to the restructuring initiative. “It’s like taking a knife to one’s own flesh.” Li’s remarks highlight the challenges China’s leaders face as they seek to wean the economy off its reliance on exports and investment, a model that’s fueled pollution, corruption and ballooning debt. At the same time, missteps risk further dragging down growth that was the slowest in more than two decades last year. “It’s a very thin needle that they are trying to thread,” said Andrew Polk, the Conference Board Beijingbased economist. “The downward
pressure on the economy is very strong. All the main drivers of economic growth are decelerating.” The economy expanded 7.4 percent last year. Bloomberg’s gross domestic product (GDP) tracker, which draws on measures, such as electricity production, shows the pace weakened to 6.28 percent in February. Li’s comments on Sunday echoed ones he made at his annual briefing in 2013, when he said China would open the economy to more market forces. At the time, he said doing so would be “very painful and even feel like cutting one’s wrist.” As in years past, he vowed tougher measures to combat pollution, saying controls, so far, had fallen
short of people’s expectations. Asked whether two companies— China Petroleum and Chemical Corp. and China National Petroleum Corp.—had stymied antipollution controls, he said no one should “use his power to meddle with law enforcement in this regard.” Yet, much has also changed since 2013, when property prices advanced and GDP would expand at 7.7 percent for the second straight year. The value of property sales fell 15.8 percent in the first two months of 2015, while China saw a “relatively big” decline in newly created jobs during that time, according to the human resources ministry. The yuan has depreciated 0.9 percent against the dollar this year.
Expansion of 7 percent would be the nation’s slowest pace since 1990. Li said it won’t be easy to reach even that target. The challenge of making structural adjustment, while maintaining growth is similar to weiqi—a Chinese game that in Japan is known as go—where players must plan for the big picture and also get individual moves right, Li said. “The good news is that in the past couple of years we did not resort to massive stimulus measures for economic growth,” Li said. “That has made it possible for us to have fairly ample room to exercise macroeconomic regulation, and we still have a host of policy instruments at our disposal.” Bloomberg News
Vietnam targets record year Beijing now world’s 3rd-biggest arms exporter of stake sales in state firms
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EIJING—China has overtaken Germany to become the world’s third-biggest arms exporter, although its 5 percent of the market remains small compared to the combined 58 percent of exports from the US and Russia, a new study says. China’s share of the global arms market rose 143 percent during the years from 2010 to 2014, a period during which the total volume of global arms transfers rose by 16 percent over the previous five years, the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (Sipri) said in a report released on Monday. Its share of the world market was up from 3 percent in the 2009 to 2014 period, when China was ranked ninth among exporters of warplanes, ships, side arms and other weaponry, Sipri said. The data show the growing strength of China’s domestic arms industry, now producing fourthgeneration fighter jets, navy frigates and a wide-range of relatively cheap, simple and reliable smaller weapons used in conflicts around the globe. China had long been a major importer of weapons, mainly from Russia and Ukraine, but its soaring economy and the copying of foreign technology has largely reversed the trend, except for the most cuttingedge designs and sophisticated parts, such as aircraft engines. China supplies weapons to 35 countries, led by Pakistan, Bangladesh and Myanmar, Sipri said. Chinese sales included those of armored vehicles and transport and
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PaKistaN air Force personnel sit in front of their JF-17 jet fighter at the eigth China international aviation and aerospace exhibition (Zhuhai airshow) in Zhuhai, southern coast of guangdong province, China, in this photon in 2010. AP/Kin Cheung
trainer aircraft to Venezuela, three frigates to Algeria, antiship missiles to Indonesia and unmanned combat aerial vehicles, or drones, to Nigeria, which is battling the Boko Haram insurgency in its north. China’s comparative advantages include its low prices, easy financing and friendliness toward authoritarian governments, said Philip Saunders, director of the Center for the Study of Chinese Military Affairs at the US National Defense University. “Generally speaking, China offers medium-quality weapons systems
at affordable prices, a combination attractive to cash-strapped militaries in South Asia, Africa and Latin America,” Saunders said. Notable successes include a coproduction deal with Pakistan to produce the JF-17 fighter, widespread sales of the basic but effective C-802 antiship cruise missile, and an agreement to sell the HQ-9 air defense missile system to Turkey that has run into controversy over its incompatibility with North Atlantic Treaty Organization weapons systems.
China also has exploited niche markets—such as North Korea and Iran—that the West won’t sell to, emphasizing its attractiveness to impoverished countries and pariah states, said Ian Easton, research fellow at The Project 2049 Institute, an Arlington, Virginia-based Asian security think tank. Both those US foes appear to have received satellite jamming and cyber warfare capabilities from China, along with technologies to break into private communications and spy on government opponents, Easton said. AP
ietnam will offer to sell a record amount of shares in state-owned companies this year, with the government planning to publicize a list of assets available to accelerate a program that has repeatedly missed targets. “With about 280 companies, mostly large conglomerates on the list, this will be a record year for the value of state stakes to be sold,” Dang Quyet tien, deputy general director of the finance ministry’s corporate finance department, said in an interview in Hanoi on march 13. “making the list public with the size of stakes on offer will help attract more investors.” Vietnam is trying to quicken a share sale program that began in the 1990s, as the government seeks to spur economic growth to a four-year high of 6.2 percent this year. the complexities of the privatization process has hindered plans to overhaul inefficient state companies, whose borrowings have burdened the banking system with bad debt and strained lending. “there’s a genuine desire and effort from the government to speed up the process as much as possible, but delays are inevitable given that current laws make the privatization process rather lengthy from a procedural standpoint,” said michel tosto, head of institutional sales at Viet Capital Securities in Ho Chi minh City. “it’s impossible for the government to achieve it’s privatization goals as originally planned.” the list of state-owned stake sales will be finalized this month and announced soon after, tien said. the government’s privatization plan last year fell short of its target, even as the number of companies that sold stakes
doubled from 2013. in total, 143 stateowned companies sold shares in 2014, compared with a goal of 200. to quicken the process, “they would need to simplify the privatization procedures. too many people need to be involved in the process,” tosto said. “they need to modernize the initial public offering [iPO] and listing procedures, so that the two are simultaneous rather than months or years apart. Reasonable valuations would help.” the stake-sale process will change this year, tien said. Companies won’t “necessarily have an iPO first, but need to find and sell shares to suitable strategic partners who can make long-term commitments for mutual growth, avoiding the situation where our companies could end up being taken over.” Prime minister nguyen tan Dung has set the end of this year as the deadline for state enterprises to sell noncore investments and banks to reduce bad debt to below 3 percent. Regulators last year said they would form a working group, including officials from the finance ministry and Ho Chi minh City and Hanoi stock exchanges to help state companies sell stakes more successfully. the dong weakened 0.2 percent to 21,422 against the US dollar as of 12:08 p.m. in Hanoi. the benchmark Vn index of stocks fell 0.3 percent. Vietnam has sold 49.5 million shares in state companies this year, representing 59 percent of the total shares offered since the start of 2015, according to figures from the stock exchanges. the government issued a 2014 regulation requiring state companies to list shares quickly following iPO. Bloomberg News
world
By Lorenz S. Marasigan B3-1
On “Kasangga Mo ang Langit sa DWIZ” “One hundred percent or more than 100 percent, hindi po kami humahawak ng Malaysian passport; Philippine passport ang hawak namin....”—Prof. Mohaguer Iqbal, Moro National Liberation Front chief peace neotiator
www.dwiz882.com
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he government presented its flagship Public-Private Partnership (PPP) Program at a forum in New York City to encourage US-based firms to channel their funds into the $272-billion economy’s key infrastructure thrust. At the recently concluded Eighth Global Infrastructure Leadership Forum in New York City, Philippine Ambassador to Washington Jose L. Cuisia Jr. and Public Works Secretary Rogelio L. Singson presented several PPP deals that are currently in the tender process. “Tremendous opportunities exist in the Philippines for infrastructure development,” Cuisia told the more than 300 participants in the forum. Among the projects presented were the P122.8-billion Laguna Lakeshore Expressway-Dike; the P370-
PESO exchange rates n US 44.2710
billion Mass Transit System Loop; and the Batangas-Manila Natural Gas Pipeline. The Laguna Lakeshore Expressway-Dike will help mitigate flooding along the western coast of the Laguna Lake running from Taguig to the town of Bay in Laguna. It will also serve as an alternative transport route to the congested South Luzon Expressway and enhance the hydrology for the ecosystem of the Laguna Lake. The project involves the construction of a 47-kilometer floodcontrol dike—on top of which will be a six-lane expressway—on an offshore alignment 500 meters away from the western shoreline of the Laguna Lake. It includes interchanges, bridges, floodgates and pumps, from Taguig City to Los Baños in Laguna. It also involves the reclamation of 700 hectares of raw land adjoining See “Agreement,” A2
PAL FLIES TO NEW YORK US Ambassador to the Philippines Philip Goldberg (second from right) cuts the ceremonial ribbon together with Philippine Airlines (PAL) Chairman and CEO Lucio Tan (fourth from right) to mark the inaugural flight of the flag carrier to New York on March 15. Joining them are Tan’s wife, Carmen (fifth from right), PAL President and COO Jaime Bautista (third from right) and Beda Badiola (right) from the Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines. RECTO MERCENE
ALI spending ₧25B for Balintawak project By VG Cabuag
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yala Land Inc. (ALI) said on Monday it will spend some P25 billion in the next 10 years to redevelop an 11-hectare shuttered textile property in Balintawak, Quezon City. The company said the development, called Cloverleaf, will become one of ALI’s “pocket developments” in Metro Manila. The site is the former Central Textile Mill plant that spans Edsa and A. Bonificio Avenue in Quezon City, one of the busiest streets used by truckers and other motorists, as it leads to the North Luzon Expressway (Nlex). Part of Balintawak market is known among locals as Cloverleaf market. “Our vision is to create a pocket
urban development that will give people access to refreshing retail, business, lifestyle and residential possibilities—elements that create an ideal urban lifestyle,” said Ana Ma. Margarita Dy, ALI senior vice president for Strategic Land Banking. The first phase of the project, which will be undertaken in five years and will cost P15 billion, involves the construction of eight buildings, including the 250-room Qualimed Hospital. Company officials said the hospital will serve as the flagship of Ayala Land’s venture with the Mercado family. There will also be a community mall and five residential towers—600 units will be allocated for Alveo Land Corp. for two towers and 2,000 units for Avida Land Corp.
for three towers. The second phase, which costs about P10 billion, will include office spaces involving seven more buildings. No other details were given. “The mall is positioned to be a melting pot [of] Asian cultures, offering gathering and dining concepts not only for residents of Balintawak, but also for locals of Ca-loocan, Malabon, Novaliches and Valenzuela,” ALI said. The mall and hospital are set to open by 2017, while the Avida and Alveo towers are set to be finished by 2019 and 2020, respectively. ALI said the completion dates are just in time for the operation of the Skyway Stage 3, an elevated expressway that connects the Nlex and the South Luzon Expressway. Continued on A8
n japan 0.3648 n UK 65.3042 n HK 5.6996 n CHINA 7.0726 n singapore 31.8084 n australia 33.6943 n EU 46.4624 n SAUDI arabia 11.8059 Source: BSP (16 March 2015)