The Freeman

Sto. Niño Chapel at Senior Citizens’ Park now open to public

Cebu City has opened a new landmark, the Santo Niño Chapel at the Senior Citizens’ Park.

- — Caecent No-ot Magsumbol/ GMR

The chapel, which has a 30foot Santo Niño image on top of it, is located near the Cebu City Hall’s Executive Building and Carbon Market.

The chapel itself covers an area of 300 square meters, inspired by both the shape of Santo Nino’s crown and the fluid motion of the Sinulog dance.

It can accommodat­e around 150 people through the space leading to the park which also serves as an extension of the chapel's main seating area.

The surroundin­g Senior Citizens’ Park, on the other hand, has a 3,704 square meter serene landscape for devotees and guests to stroll or meditate.

Chapel and park-goers also have a good view of the waterfront and the majestic Cebu-Cordova Link Expressway while enjoying some food from different food outlets around it.

Cebu2World chairman Louie Ferrer said that there is no symbol of faith more evocative in Cebu than the Santo Niño, similar to how Carbon has represente­d Cebu like no other, adding that Cebuanos’ devotion to the Child Jesus has grounded the aspiration­s of the Carbon community itself, and it is an honor to have built a new place to worship him and bring this faith to the world.

“The Sto. Nino, 500 years since its arrival to Cebu, has become the core of Catholic Cebuano identity. Our relationsh­ip with the Señor is very personal for us Cebuanos. You can see a likeness in almost every home. Even in Carbon, you will see the Sto. Nino in many stalls,” said Ferrer.

The chapel, which was blessed yesterday together with the signing of the Memorandum of Agreement between the Archdioces­e of Cebu, the Cebu City government, and the Cebu2World, a subsidiary of Filipino engineerin­g and infrastruc­ture developer Megawide Corporatio­n, is part of the Carbon Modernizat­ion Project.

With the signing of the MOA with the Archdioces­e of Cebu through Archbishop Jose Palma, the holding of regular masses and weddings at the Sto. Niño Chapel is now being permitted.

Amidst some opposition, the said chapel is also being hoped to bring unity in Carbon and the rest of Cebu.

Cebu City Mayor Michael Rama assured that as long as he remains the mayor of the city, the modernizat­ion project of the Carbon Market will continue, all for the Cebuanos' sake.

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