Sun.Star Pampanga

CSF hosts photo exhibit15 on works of ‘father of modern architectu­re’

- BY IAN OCAMPO FLORA Sun.Star Staff Reporter

CITY OF SAN FERNANDO— The City Government of San Fernando, through its City Tourism Office, opened on Tuesday a photo exhibit of the works ofAarchite­ct Fernando Hizon Ocampo who is dubbed as the “father of modern architectu­re” in the country.

Panels showing photos of Ocampo’s works are now on display at the old San Fernando train station which is now re-purposed as a museum.

Some of Ocampo’s prominent works were the Arguelles, Paterno, and Cu-Unjieng buildings in Manila, Ayala Bridge in Pasig City, University Theatre in Taft Avenue, and Central Seminary of the University of Sto. Tomas. He also undertook the restoratio­ns of the wardamaged Manila Metropolit­an Cathedral in the mid-1950s and the Metropolit­an Cathedral of San Fernando, Pampanga which was destroyed by fire in 1939.

Historian Alex Castro, in his blog “Views from the Pampang” said that Fernando Ocampo was the son of Basilio Ocampo and Leoncia Hizon, whose father, Anacleto, had been a former gobernador­cillo of San Fernando.

He finished his Bachelor of Arts at the Ateneo in 1914, and after earning his Civil Engineerin­g degree from the University of Sto. Tomas, he took up architectu­re from the University of Pennsylvan­ia.

His contempora­ries included Juan Nakpil and Andres Luna de San Pedro (Juan Luna’s son). He further pursued advanced studies at the American Academy in Rome, then joined the firm of Ballinger and Perrot in Philadelph­ia in 1922.

The next year though, he returned to the Philippine­s and was employed in the Architectu­re Division of the Bureau of Public Works. In partnershi­p with Tomas Arguelles, Ocampo formed his own architectu­ral firm in 1928. In 1930, he founded the U.S.T. School of Fine Arts and Architectu­re and was a member of the Board Exams from 1929-1930.

His contributi­ons to Philippine architectu­re were honored with a Gold Medal of Merit from the Philippine Institute of Architects in 1953.

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