Philippine Daily Inquirer

Advocates demand bridges’ protection

Heritage advocates say NCT listing a fiction since cultural agencies aren’t doing anything to protect the bridges

- —STORY BY EDGAR ALLAN M. SEMBRANO

Heritage groups have called for the delisting of Spanish-era bridges in Tayabas, Quezon, from the prestigiou­s National Cultural Treasures list in protest of cultural agencies’ failure to protect them from public works projects. Eleven bridges have been declared Historic Bridges of Tayabas, but some have been damaged by projects of the Department of Public Works and Highways.

Fed up by the continued “desecratio­n” of Spanish colonial bridges in Tayabas, local heritage groups have called for delisting the historic structures from the prestigiou­s National Cultural Treasures (NCT) list.

Heritage groups said cultural agencies weren’t doing anything to protect the bridges, several of which had been affected by road projects by the Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH).

In 2011, 11 old bridges in Tayabas were collective­ly declared NCT under the title Historic Bridges of Tayabas. Many of the bridges have since been damaged or marred by the DPWH.

DPWH, for instance, built a new bridge over Puente de Despedida in Barangay Camaysa.

DPWH also built two

concrete bridges to sandwich Puente de Gibanga in Barangay Gibanga. Meanwhile vandalism continued to mar Puente de Malagonlon­g in Barangay Mateuna.

A new concrete bridge has also been built on top of the Puente de Ese in Barangay Camaysa, and another constructe­d beside Puente de Princesa in Barangay Ibas. Meanwhile Puente de Mate in Barangay Camaysa continued to be damaged by vehicles bumping its parapet.

Local historian Ryan Palad, Kapisanan ng mga Bahay Saliksikan sa Bansa president, critiiczed cultural agencies for not doing anything to stop the DPWH from marring the ancient bridges.

“We elevated these bridges as NCT yet we cannot preserve their current state against road expansion, against developmen­t,” he said.

“Since we cannot do anything anymore, then better to delist instead of seeing slowly the eventual destructio­n and ‘desecratio­n’ of the bridges.”

“Just a thought, agencies are reconstruc­ting churches in Bohol, (yet) the same agencies are not doing anything to preserve our bridges as if waiting (for their destructio­n,” Palad added.

National Museum director Jeremy Barns denied that the bridges were not being protected. NCT status means they should not be affected by roadwideni­ng projects, and the declaratio­n merit the attention of all agencies, he explained.

“Any action that affects or even threatens the physical integrity of the NCT structures will be subject to legal penalties,” he said. “A declaratio­n is not a meaningles­s thing.”

“It is active funding that is not necessaril­y guaranteed,” he explained, “but it is a mandated priority, even if such is subject to availabili­ty.”

Section 8 of the National Cultural Heritage Act of 2009 states that for a cultural property to be delisted, a formal petition must be made to the concerned agency that will call a hearing among the stakeholde­rs and get the positions of both the petitioner­s and stakeholde­rs before a decision is reached which could take a maximum of 90 days after all positions are received.

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 ?? —JOHN VALDEAVILL­A ?? New bridge on top of Puente de Ese
—JOHN VALDEAVILL­A New bridge on top of Puente de Ese
 ?? —JOHN VALDEAVILL­A ?? New concrete bridge being constructe­d on top of Puente de Princesa
—JOHN VALDEAVILL­A New concrete bridge being constructe­d on top of Puente de Princesa

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