The Philippine Star

Manny Villar is changing the game in retail

In the fifth year of his second wind as a developer, Villar ventures into retail with CoHo Lifestyle and is building ‘the most beautiful’ coffee shops, cinemas and supermarke­ts.

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At first, he just wanted a coffee shop where he could hold meetings with his company’s executives, but he found these places too plain and cookie cutter. So, developer and former Senator Manny B. Villar set out to build “the most beautiful coffee shop in the country” and the Coffee Project was born. Each one is different in design and character, as if trying to top the last one, but what the 25 branches have in common is that these are spaces conducive for co-working and meetings; they have long wooden tables, sockets everywhere for laptops, leather sofas and armchairs, and they’re decorated with a lot of greens and quirky details. “I love coffee, I don’t like tea. Naaawa

ako sa mga tea drinkers because of what they’re missing. Di ko maintindih­an,” Manny Villar says with a laugh.

When he says the Coffee Project serves as his office, he isn’t kidding. “I’m a very non-traditiona­l person. When I’m cooped up in the four walls of an office, nasisira ang creativity ko. My office is Coffee Project, that’s why I have a branch in all the CBDs, even in some provinces.”

Then he wanted to watch movies not too far from his house in Las Piñas. A movie buff, he would take his wife Senator Cynthia Villar to Rockwell every Sunday to catch the latest film. After all those weekend dates, he thought, “Why not put up good theaters in Las Piñas or Bacoor? These markets are ready and they deserve it.”

So he built them in his malls — four to six or eight theaters in each location. “We have the best cinemas in the country, bar none. I made it a point to do that. People think the only place to enjoy quality theaters is in Makati or BGC and they’re wrong. Pinaka-maganda rin ang

mga comfort rooms in our cinemas — and they’re in the suburbs.”

Next, he resurrecte­d his childhood dream of becoming a baker. When he was a young boy, Villar learned to bake

pandesal and dreamed of putting up a bakery — “I love food, I love bread and coffee” — but he got into real estate instead. Frequent travels, especially to Paris and enjoying the city’s boulangeri­es and patisserie­s, made him think, “Why do we need to franchise bakeries when we can put up our own? Bakit kailangan

mamahalin ang tinapay? I wanted to create my own brand because I like being the author of things.”

And that’s exactly what he did: he put up Bake My Day.

You’re probably thinking that such actions are just whimsies afforded to the very rich, but Villar would tell you it’s a business strategy, one that’s worked for him all these decades — you don’t go into business looking where you can make money, rather, you take what you love and make a business out of it.

It’s now the fifth year of his second wind as a developer, and Villar has ventured into retail with the intention of changing the game, not just locationwi­se but also with a business model that requires a lot more investment in the aesthetics — in markets that are traditiona­lly looked at as low to middle and never really high-end.

He’s also doing it at a speed even he found surprising after 21 years in politics, which he retired from after his presidenti­al run in 2010 and his last years as a senator ending in 2013. “Iba ang pace ko ngayon. When I came back to the business,

medyo kinakalawa­ng pa ako, but now we have so many projects and are far more active than ever. I guess I’m inspired by

the change in administra­tion. Si PNoy naman mabait sa akin pero siyempre nakalaban ko siya (in the presidenti­al election), so defensive ang expansion ko. In the last three years, we’ve been expanding fast in retail and malls.”

As chairman of Vista Land, Villar heads Brittany, Crown Asia, Vista Residences, CoHo Lifestyle, Camella Homes, Communitie­s Philippine­s and Lumina. Under his leadership as well is the retail arm All Value, which includes All Home, All Day Supermarke­t and Convenienc­e Store, Coffee Project, Bake My Day, All Shoppe and All Toys.

“Before I joined politics, ito na yung

nakita ko, pagbalik ko, pareho pa rin. To be fair, other developers and retailers’ business model is profitable, but I want to create a change in lifestyle. Don’t confuse it with luxury, we’re not selling Rolex watches, pero pwede naman

maganda at efficient kahit hindi mahal. I think people deserve that.”

So he’s introducin­g Camella’s Condo Homes or CoHo Lifestyle nationwide. “Going forward, people want to live in condominiu­ms, even in the countrysid­e. We are the only one operating in 135 cities and municipali­ties nationwide. People want to live in vertical structures, they want a lock-and-go lifestyle. We have Vista Residences that’s purely vertical, from mid- to high-end, and focused mainly in Metro Manila and Cebu. Camella Homes is basically horizontal and nationwide.”

And now with Camella’s CoHo Lifestyle they’re going vertical. “And with it is a set of retails shops that are all beautiful, like our supermarke­t All Day, which has a

paluto section. I’m creating a culture that’s new. I want to mix food, supermarke­t and restaurant. Puro tayo di-kahon. Why not combine all three and give people fresh food while they’re doing their groceries? What can be fresher than buying from the supermarke­t and having it cooked right there? You want fresh shrimps? You can get it from the tanks.”

Villar admits that this is his second shot at the supermarke­t business. “In 1983 I put up a supermarke­t pero nalulugi ako because I didn’t expand. So this supermarke­t is ‘take two.’ It’s like love, it’s lovelier the second time around and it’s very fulfilling.”

Then there’s All Home, a one-stop shop for home improvemen­t that includes furniture, tiles, appliances and linens. The store combines things that are traditiona­lly sold separately in appliance centers, constructi­on depots and furniture stores.

“The idea is to elevate the lifestyle of Filipinos in home improvemen­t. All Home is unique, we’re not in competitio­n with the constructi­on warehouses. My primary goal is to provide a new level of offerings. In the last 10 years, there’s been a sharp increase in the per capita income of Filipinos. They have seen retail shops and malls abroad and they’re asking,

bakit tayo naiiwan? It doesn’t have to be upscale, but it has to be beautiful. Here, we only have huge, plain and efficient.

“Ayoko nang pangit. We have lived so long on the assumption that everything around us must be mass-produced. There’s nothing wrong with efficient but I want it to be pretty as well.”

Whether it’s his retail projects or his real estate developmen­t — or his upcoming hotel brand called Mi Vida — Villar says he wants to be different. “I don’t want to compete to be the biggest, I want to be the best. Ever since I was young, I was never afraid of competitio­n or what’s establishe­d na. I believe in the principle na pag malaki ang kalaban mo, wag kang babangga nang diretso. You find your niche, and I think we’ve found ours.”

* * *

For more informatio­n, visit www.camellacon­dohomes.ph. Visit the author’s travel blog at www.findingmyw­ay.net. Follow her on Instagram and Twitter @iamtanyala­ra.

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 ??  ?? Vista Land and All Value chairman Manny Villar: “My primary goal is to provide a new level of offerings. It doesn’t have to be upscale or expensive, but it has to be beautiful.”
Vista Land and All Value chairman Manny Villar: “My primary goal is to provide a new level of offerings. It doesn’t have to be upscale or expensive, but it has to be beautiful.”
 ??  ?? The 25 Coffee Project branches — each one with a different character — are some of the most beautiful coffee shops in the country, which was Villar’s goal when he created the brand.
The 25 Coffee Project branches — each one with a different character — are some of the most beautiful coffee shops in the country, which was Villar’s goal when he created the brand.
 ??  ?? Manny and Cynthia Villar with their children, Paolo, Mark and Camille. Villar says he and his daughter Camille work closely with the in-house design team for each of their retail store and coffee shop. Some furniture pieces and decorative items in the Coffee Project branches are available at All Home.
Manny and Cynthia Villar with their children, Paolo, Mark and Camille. Villar says he and his daughter Camille work closely with the in-house design team for each of their retail store and coffee shop. Some furniture pieces and decorative items in the Coffee Project branches are available at All Home.
 ??  ?? All Day Supermarke­t, apart from filling your pantry and fridge, also has a paluto section for the freshest meals, either to eat there or to take home.
All Day Supermarke­t, apart from filling your pantry and fridge, also has a paluto section for the freshest meals, either to eat there or to take home.
 ??  ?? Bake My Day is a fulfillmen­t of Villar’s dream as a boy — to own a bakery. And he does know how to bake pandesal.
Bake My Day is a fulfillmen­t of Villar’s dream as a boy — to own a bakery. And he does know how to bake pandesal.
 ??  ?? The Verdant in Puerto Princesa City
The Verdant in Puerto Princesa City
 ??  ?? The Olvera in Bacolod City
The Olvera in Bacolod City
 ??  ?? The Crest in Cagayan de Oro City
The Crest in Cagayan de Oro City
 ?? TANYA T. LARA ?? crazy quilt
TANYA T. LARA crazy quilt

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