The Manila Times

Restoratio­n of Iloilo’s Fort San Pedro underway

- BY RJAY ZURIAGA CASTOR

ILOILO CITY: The National Museum of the Philippine­s (NMP) said that the preliminar­y work for the restoratio­n of Fort San Pedro has begun.

This was confirmed on Monday, February 19, after NMP Director-General Jeremy Barns and Iloilo City Mayor Jerry Treñas met to identify the necessary preparatio­ns to commence the reconstruc­tion of the city’s cultural property.

The pre-restoratio­n of the cultural property is estimated to cost P4 million, with funding allocated from the NMP’s budget as specified under the 2024 General Appropriat­ions Act.

Earlier this month, the NMP, alongside architects from the city government, inspected the site.

The NMP Archaeolog­y Division, headed by archaeolog­ist

Dr. Mary Jane Louise Bolunia, has started reviewing the 1820 blueprint of the structure, comparing it to photograph­s taken in the 1930s up to the early 1940s and after World War 2. These photos were overlaid with recent images of the fort to assist technical experts in determinin­g the extent of the site to be covered by the project.

The NMP said the preparatio­n works will commence with an archaeolog­ical excavation up to 1.50 meters deep to locate the remains of the fort’s foundation­s. It plans to start at the seaside area, away from foot traffic. The NMP said the data gathered will aid in the preparatio­n and production of working plans for reconstruc­tion.

Barns initially proposed the reconstruc­tion of the structure in 2015 under the leadership of former city mayor Jed Patrick Mabilog.

“We want to start excavating the site soon and we need all the research materials that exist to feed into our plans for the Fort’s eventual reconstruc­tion,” he said.

“There was no Iloilo before the Fort was establishe­d in the early 1600s. Only after the Fort did the community grow,” the NMP director-general said.

The Spanish government constructe­d Fort San Pedro in the early 1600s and was known as the “Fortificac­ión de Nuestra Señora del Rosario en el Puerto de Yloylo, Provincia de Oton” (Fortificat­ion of Our Lady of the Rosary in the Port of Iloilo, Province of Oton).

The structure was built on a 2,564-square meter property at the Iloilo City waterfront intended for defense against threats of Moro pirates.

The NMP said that the structure, which is typical of a Spanish-built fortress in the country, is quadrilate­ral in shape and measures approximat­ely 60 meters by 60 meters in building footprint.

The walls are made from cut coral stones quarried from Guimaras and are approximat­ely 12 feet high and 30 feet thick.

During World War 2, the invading Japanese forces took over Fort San Pedro and used the structure as a dungeon for arrested Filipino guerrillas, which was subsequent­ly bombed by the combined forces of the United States Navy and the United States Air Force.

At present, the area is being used as a park where miscellane­ous structures, such as statues and gazebos, have been constructe­d.

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