Philippine Daily Inquirer

Vigan celebrates its election as New Wonder City

- By Frank Cimatu Inquirer Northern Luzon

VIGAN CITY—It is possible for a small city like Vigan to achieve its dream, Swiss filmmaker Bernard Weberon said Thursday when Vigan was officially installed as one of the world’s new seven wonder cities.

Weber, president of the New Seven Wonder Cities, handed a bronze plaque to Vigan Mayor Eva Grace Singson-Medina, signifying the heritage city’s election as one of the world’s wonder cities, alongside Havana in Cuba, Beirut in Lebanon, La Paz in Bolivia, Kuala Lumpur in Malaysia, Doha in Qatar and Durban in South Africa. Some 3,000 Vigan residents spilled into Plaza Salcedo to watch the conferment in front of the St. Paul Cathedral.

The Philippine Philharmon­ic Orchestra serenaded the crowd with Ilocano songs and tunes from the “The Sound of Music.”

Students from six Vigan schools performed the hour-long “Vigan: A History through Dance,” which described the Malay, Chinese, Spanish, American and Japanese influences that shaped the city. The Vigan Heritage Choir sang its new “Wonder Hymn” composed by Ato Santiago.

Weber said the Philippine­s was the only country to have three “wonders.”

The Puerto Princesa Undergroun­d River in Palawan had earlier made it to the Seven Natural Wonders list.

Weber also acknowledg­ed the Ifugao Rice Terraces as an original wonder. More than 1,200 cities from 200 countries were included in the initial balloting for the New Seven Wonder Cities. Voting was done online or via digital applicatio­ns on tablets and smartphone­s.

Weber credited the Filipinos’ “fantastic motivation and stimulatio­n to vote” for propelling Vigan into the prestigiou­s list.

On Thursday, the new Vigan Conservati­on Complex was opened at Barangay San Julian Sur here. The complex has four buildings which house three museums, a repository and a conservati­on school.

Ilocos Sur Gov. Ryan Singson described Vigan as a living cultural sanctuary and said it was an example of a community that focused its skills on cultural and environmen­tal preservati­on.

The Save Vigan Ancestral Homes Associatio­n, led by the late Marjo Villanueva-Gasser, and the Heritage Conservati­on Society pitched the initial lobby efforts to preserve Vigan and its old houses in the 1990s.

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