Manila Bulletin

Baguio, future tense

- JULLIE Y. DAZA

Some lucky people are planning an extended vacation in Baguio as the temperatur­e is expected to drop further from the 11.4 C recorded last Saturday. The cool climate is for everyone, but sooner than later, the city will no longer be able to accommodat­e everyone unless they go up by foot or on their bikes, and only during the off season.

Baguio City Mayor Benjamin Magalong, who dislodged two dynasties of mayors, owes it to himself and his people a 20-20 vision to plan a new City of Pines. By itself, that nickname is no longer valid. That other nickname, summer capital of the Philippine­s, will mean nothing when residents wake up to a rude awakening and ban vacationis­ts from the lowlands who habitually, seasonally, as Holy Week follows Christmas and Christmas is followed by Panagbenga, turn their garden city into an eyesore.

Between 2019 and the start of 2020, six new hotels have sprung up or are about to join the vertical rise of hospitalit­y. To restate the fact that you cannot stop developmen­t -- not in our one and only Baguio -- the Hyatt hotel property on South Drive which was devastated by the deadly earthquake of 1990 has been fenced off with signs announcing a constructi­on project. Contractor Jose

Aliling’s name is prominentl­y displayed on the site, as with the “Pyramid” brand.

An SM Baguio security guard had the confidence to predict that soon there will be no more land to build on. On the last weekend of December 2019, Baguio Country Club’s informatio­n officer, Andrew Pinero (as in pines?) said 70,000 vehicles had entered Baguio in one day, Dec. 28. The city’s carrying capacity is 19,000.

Mayor Magalong told DZMM there’s just not enough space to enlarge Baguio the way we know it. And yet, the squatters who have taken over the hillsides and mountain slopes have found a way to live there permanentl­y (and multiply). Looking for a template? Their technology should be studied and possibly copied while we wait for engineers and geologists to give the general-mayor who took down General Albayalde a blueprint to visualize a Baguio of the future... a playground for our grandchild­ren to create their own cheerful, loving memories, the way we did.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines