Philippine Daily Inquirer

A peek into biggest food strip in PH

- By Norman Lee Benjamin Riego

THE BIGGEST village in Asia just might have the biggest food strip as well.

BF Homes in Parañaque is composed of 23 subdivisio­ns, 17,959 households, and 87,612 people. Such number of residences naturally entails as much, if not more, appetite.

As such, according to city government, Brgy. BF Homes registered the most business permits of all barangays: 2,230 in total, most of which were food establishm­ents. Traveling along Aguirre Ave., the village’s main artery, one could not beg to differ.

One landmark in the food strip is Conti’s Bakeshop and Restaurant located in the intersecti­on of Aguirre and President’s Aves. What began as a home-based pastry business is now a 15-year strong company that has branched out all over the metro.

Still, the store in BF is the flagship. “The BF community is close to the owners since they are from here,” Conti’s vice president Quintin Sumulong says. With such sentiments, Conti’s formally opened its doors in 1999. Conti’s bakeshop offers a variety of bread and cakes while the restaurant serves breakfast until dinner from 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.

According to Sumulong, the choice of location was not influenced by costs, but the opportunit­y to serve the community. Such dynamic is the come on of Aguirre that is lacking, if at all, in malls and other commercial districts.

With eight other stores located in Greenbelt, Alabang, Katipunan, Robinson’s Magnolia, Trinoma, Greenhills, Serendra, and Nuvali, Sumulong still sees the Conti’s in Aguirre as the top performer. “People still fill up the place even if we have other branches,” the company vice president says.

But the situation along Aguirre has not always been rosy. The United BF Homeowners Associatio­n, Inc. (UBFHAI) clashed with Parañaque city hall on land use inside the village. The friction started in 1997, when local government passed ordinance 97-08 which

reclassifi­ed Aguirre from residentia­l to commercial zone.

The Parañaque Comprehens­ive Land Use Plan (CLUP) characteri­zes a residentia­l zone as having multi-family housing such as duplexes, townhouses, or row houses. The CLUP defines commercial zone as an area with commercial and trade activities on a district scale.

The UBFHAI, umbrella organizati­on of 72 homeowners associatio­ns in BF, then pushed a petition to rescind ordinance 9708, citing:

In a survey conducted among homeowners, 86 percent was against reclassifi­cation from residentia­l to commercial;

Homeowners were outraged by the prospect of having multistory structures, restaurant­s, liquor stores, supermarke­ts, and banks as neighbors; and

Homeowners bought their properties on the premise they will be in residentia­l neighborho­ods away from centers of commerce or more populous districts.

City hall did not heed the petition. UBFHAI then filed a court case claiming reclassifi­cation is unconstitu­tional because it amounts to violation of contracts. In their defense, local government asserted the ordinance is a valid exercise of police power.

The municipal trial court and Court of Appeals ruled in favor of city hall. And with finality, Supreme Court upheld their rulings, citing:

Aguirre is a main thoroughfa­re which has long been commercial­ized; local government therefore responded by enacting the ordinance

constituti­onal guarantee of nonimpairm­ent of contracts is limited by exercise of police power in the interest of public health, safety, morals, and general welfare.

Since then, Aguirre, in the heart of the biggest residentia­l village in Asia, has been a commercial area.

“The owners are homeowners themselves, but we have to abide by the decision of the court,” Sumulong says.

The UBFHAI vs Parañaque city hall case also ruled that local government can enact police power in reclassify­ing areas that have evolved. Such precedent has allowed the Quezon City hall, for example, to forward its central business district which reclassifi­ed several areas into commercial zones.

But what has become an ongoing bane for UBFHAI is now food lovers’ boon. With food establishm­ents popping up left and right in Aguirre, the 3 km long road is now a 3 km long food strip. “Much like islands, the food in Aguirre is not Boracay; it’s less expensive, but still better,” long-time resident Karen says.

Indeed, Aguirre has fulfilled the reclassifi­cation. “It has evolved; it is commercial,” Rosemarie Rafael, chief executive of Manna Bakery and Café along Aguirre, says.

Manna opened in 2012. It offers a variety of more than 150 bread types and is open from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. Despite rabid competitio­n along the food strip, Rafael claims it is getting to be known for its bread. “Because BF is residentia­l, bread is a staple product,” she says.

The business began in 2008 as a commis- sary that harnessed the skills of a baker who failed a language test to go to Australia. But having a niche in the market was not what drew the Alabang-residing owners to Aguirre. “Being here, you get the support of BF. They have loyalty to the establishm­ents they like,” Rafael says.

Rafael appreciate­s the community dynamics of BF. “People come in, you get to know them, you get to build rapport with them. Being able to serve the community is already fulfillmen­t,” she says. Soon, Rafael eyes Manna becoming a household name.

In terms of household names, Manna need not look any farther for inspiratio­n than the road it is located in. After all, the biggest village in Asia just might have the biggest food strip as well.

 ??  ?? BREAD products sell well in the village.
BREAD products sell well in the village.
 ??  ?? BF HOMES residents don’t have to go far to relax.
BF HOMES residents don’t have to go far to relax.
 ??  ?? CONTI’S Bakeshop and Restaurant is a favorite hangout in the village.
CONTI’S Bakeshop and Restaurant is a favorite hangout in the village.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines