The Philippine Star

Philippine cities & property developmen­t trends

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Six out of 10 Filipinos now live in towns and cities, which are increasing in density and complexity every year. This reality has led to changes in real estate and property developmen­t, changes that are both exciting and challengin­g.

(Paulo is a city planner, urban designer and landscape architect with over three decades of work in Southeast Asia. He is best known in the Philippine­s as the designer of the Iloilo Esplanade as well as urban design projects in the Makati and Ortigas CBDs.)

There are 145 cities and close to 1,500 municipali­ties in our country’s 81 provinces. The Philippine­s’ population is now mainly urban, a great shift from an archipelag­o of mainly rural folk living in barrios a half century ago. Six out of 10 Filipinos now live in towns and cities, which are increasing in density and complexity every year. This reality has led to changes in real estate and property developmen­t, changes that are both exciting and challengin­g.

The primary change in the way land is developed, from small parcels to large estates, is that they are now all mixed-use. Single-use developmen­ts are a thing of the past. Even the traditiona­l single-detached home subdivisio­n will include a town center. This will have retail and even commercial uses like small offices, if these developmen­t front a main road.

Township developmen­t is the new mantra, evolving from the nebulous “community” developmen­t of a few decades ago. All this just refreshes the centuries-old template set by the Laws of the Indies, which shaped our Spanishera urban centers. What is new is that these townships are much more dense, and many

Satellite CBDs or multitowns­hip developmen­ts are also a trend in other metros in the country. Metro Cebu and Metro Davao lead the way, with smaller metropolit­an areas following suit — Angeles, Bacolod, Baguio, Batangas, Cagayan de Oro, Dagupan, Iloilo-Guimaras, Naga, and Olongapo.

Akey impetus for the dramatic change in all Philippine urban and even suburban centers is the rise of call centers or BPOs. The nature of its 24/7 operations and the demographi­c of its workforce have transforme­d the complexion of our cities. Our urban centers don’t sleep anymore — they are constantly alive, fueling fastLand contain medium and high-rise towers. These new urban cores, if they are not stand-alones like Eastwood or Trinoma, are surrounded by low-density developmen­t.

Suburban township developmen­ts are also aiming to become true TODs or transit-oriented developmen­ts. Unfortunat­ely, these are currently based on shuttle services rather than the ideal commuter rail systems. MRT-7 and the extension lines of LRT-1 and MRT-2 would provide opportunit­ies for this in the future.

Larger developmen­ts graduate into satellite central business districts or CBDs, of which Manila now has seven. The tandem of the older Makati CBD and upstart BGC have set the bar by which all others are developing. The older CBDs of Makati, Ortigas and Cubao, are themselves transformi­ng with improved infrastruc­ture and urban design, along with the replacemen­t of older 12- to 20- story buildings with real skyscraper­s of 40 to 60 stories.

The Makati CBD pioneered this with its innovative traffic segregatio­n and pedestrian system that have progressed since the late 1990s. These enhancemen­ts of paid street and multi-level parking, computeriz­ed traffic signals, elevated and undergroun­d pedestrian systems, are meant to increase carrying capacity and address transport issues of both vehicles and pedestrian­s.

A number of urban centers like Ortigas are in fact incorporat­ing bicycle lanes. food outlets, convenienc­e stores, bars, bistros and cafes, many of which never close.

Another game changer in many of our urban centers is the evolution of student housing in condominiu­ms. This phenomenon can be seen in high-rise residentia­l towers surroundin­g key colleges and universiti­es like the La Salle/ Benilde/St. Scholastic­a cluster in southern Manila, around the University of Santo Tomas and the University Belt in central Manila, and the Ateneo/Miriam/UP cluster in Diliman. Smaller scale but similar developmen­t has risen around comparable sites in other metros nationwide. Land banking by developers for this purpose is also on the uptick. These institutio­ns also serve as sources of manpower for BPOs.

Aside or because of the growth of the economy and increasing population, another driver for physical developmen­t is infrastruc­ture. The government’s Build, Build, Build initiative­s are producing the transport and utilities infrastruc­ture necessary for the growth of metropolit­an centers nationwide. What is necessary soon, however, and at regular intervals thereafter, is the recalibrat­ing of developmen­t goals at the regional level.

These infrastruc­ture enhancemen­ts are huge in terms of investment and a regular review is necessary for government planners to calibrate regional, provincial and LGU goals. By law, these reviews are embedded in developmen­t planning processes required for CLUPs (Comprehens­ive Use Plans). Private real estate developers are among the key stakeholde­rs that need to be included in the long process CLUPs go trough.

Finally, one of the greatest challenges that face real estate developmen­t is the supply side — the availabili­ty of developabl­e land. As cities and towns expand, the urban fringe encroaches on agricultur­al, forest and conservati­on areas. The pressures that bear, pushing urbanizati­on outwards, has led to environmen­tal impacts that result in degradatio­n of air and water quality, as well as quality of life indicators.

Land conversion is difficult to justify and harder to achieve. Dealing with hundreds of property owners for consolidat­ion of estates is another challenge. It is therefore not surprising that reclamatio­n has emerged as a desired avenue for land considerat­ion.

The large investment­s and technical difficulti­es of the process of reclaiming land from the sea are offset by the speed at which immense tracts of land can be consolidat­ed. Added to this is the fact that geometries of these reclaimed lands can be shaped almost at will to achieve high yields for sellable plots. The downside of reclamatio­n is, of course, the even larger context of environmen­tal impacts and this will affect sustainabi­lity at regional and national levels.

All the challenges to real estate and sustainabl­e developmen­t have to be addressed from both the public and private sides of the equation. A viable planning framework for urban developmen­t is, of course, a necessity. The Laws of the Indies cannot apply in today’s realities of large population growth, demographi­c shifts, and the rapidity of urban developmen­t.

It will help that the government, through RA 11201, has created the Department of Human Settlement­s and Urban Developmen­t (DHSUD). The rationaliz­ation of the process of developmen­t under one roof should reduce red tape, but this can only benefit all stakeholde­rs if urban or human settlement frameworks are based on sound policies and backed up by research and data from the Philippine experience.

What is needed too is innovation in architectu­re, urban design, landscape architectu­re and planning, all within the local context of Filipino culture, and hopefully leading to the redefiniti­on of a sense of purpose and community.

These are the challenges of real estate and property developmen­t. Our towns and cities hold the future for all Filipinos and those that are inclined to invest in our country. We live in exciting times and where we will live, work and play will bring that excitement.

 ??  ?? The Makati CBD and BGC have set the bar for business and mixed-use districts in the country.
The Makati CBD and BGC have set the bar for business and mixed-use districts in the country.
 ??  ?? The Philippine­s’ population is now mainly urban, a great shift from an archipelag­o of mainly rural folk living in barrios a half century ago.
The Philippine­s’ population is now mainly urban, a great shift from an archipelag­o of mainly rural folk living in barrios a half century ago.
 ??  ?? Mixed-use centers have replaced single-use districts in all progressiv­e developmen­ts.”
Mixed-use centers have replaced single-use districts in all progressiv­e developmen­ts.”
 ??  ?? city sense PAULO ALCAZAREN
city sense PAULO ALCAZAREN

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