History of Architecture 4 Reviewer
History of Architecture 4 Reviewer
History of Architecture 4 Reviewer
CAVE DWELLINGS • The Tau't Batu, or 'People of the Rock' live here
and they are the last discovered tribe in the
• Prehistoric Cave shelters were the earliest Philippines
form of human habitations. • Singnapan Valley in southern Palawan
• Predated the emergence of Homo Sapiens • Fear of thunder
• Require minimal site-works and modification. • Believe that their world is inhabited by a vast
• Made from excavation rather than population of of forest, rock, and water
construction. spirits.
Pleistocene People • Datag - The basic sleeping platform. Made
from tree branches and dried leaves and built
• Earliest dwellers of caves in the Philippines. inside the cave, raised slightly above the
• Offsprings of Iced Aged. ground.
• Theory of Land /Tulay na Lupa. • modular sleeping platform incorporated with
TABON CAVE a fireplace.
ABORIGINAL IVATAN - made up of wood, bamboo According to William Henry Scott in his book “of
and thatched. igorots and independence”
CORDILLERA PEOPLE
Dominican Friars introduced the Cal y Canto • NORTHERN STRAIN SOUTHERN STRAIN
technique IGOROT (Mountain chain dwellers).
• THE NORTHERN STRAIN
• Stone and Mortar Construction • Consists of houses made by the ISNEG &
• In row on the steep terrain of mountain hill KALINGA
slopes • Isneg With rectangular plan covered by high
• A Fireplace was built at one end of the house. gabled roof.
• COGON GRASS - is the main roofing • Kalinga having Octagonal plan & three
material. divided floorings.
• Villages located on the slopes or peaks of • Roof framing is independent of the floor
hills. framework.
• Huts were low, partly because high structures
would easily topple by the strong winds. THE SOUTHERN STRAIN
• Walls are made of stones held together by • Consists of houses made by the IFUGAO,
FANGO, a mortar formed by mixing mud BONTOC, IBALOI AND KANKANAY.
and cogon.
• With Square plan covered by high gabled
roof.
THE SOUTHERN STRAIN
• Roof framing is dependent of the floor
framework. BONTOC
THE NORTHERN STRAIN • Bontoc Ili – Bontoc Village
• ILI’S 3 BASIC RESIDENTIAL STRUCTURES
ISNEG
• ATO men's meeting place / council house /
• The Isnag people (also referred to as the dormitory for the young and old unmarried
Isneg and Apayao) are an Austronesian males.
ethnic group native to Apayao Province in the • ULOG/OLOG - Dormitory for female. A
Philippines' Cordillera Administrative Region. public structure where young women of
marriageable age go to sleep at night.
BINURON
AFONG
• Windowless
• Low walls & roof, which keep the inhabitant • Family Residence or Bontoc House.
warm. • House within a house
• 0.9 raised above the ground. • Windowless
• Distinguishes itself from the typical cordillera • Shelter for people, rice, chicken, pigs
house by its boat like appearance. • With attic
• Apayao is the only region in cordillera with a
KATYUFONG
NAVIGABLE RIVER.
• Located in Apayao Province. • For the poor
• rectangular plan. • Smaller & enclosed
• high gable roof bowed to a shape of a boat • Stone-walled
(BARANAY).
• The largest among the most substantially KOL-LOB - is the residence for widows and
constructed houses in the cordilleras. unmarried old women.
• Binuron practical feature is its ROLL UP FAYU
FLOOR made from long reeds.
• Binuron platform can be converted, to be • For the Rich
used for rituals, ceremonies and meetings. • Open and Relatively Large
• TARAKIP - Binuron extension structure. • 3.6 – 4.5 Meters
• .4m Door Opening
ALANG • Windowless
• Rice storage/ granary AKHAMANG - Rice Granaries
• House as womb; Space Concept.
AL-LANG - Repository of food and other supplies.
KALINGA
FALINTO-OG – Pigpens
BINAYON
PABAFUNAN - Open court where people gather to
• octagonal in plan perform rituals.
• three divided floorings, lowest in the center
FORUY
IFUGAO
• The square shaped plan
• Roof is made from 8-10 layers of cut bamboo • 12 to 30 houses, situated amid rice terraces
laid one above other and often near a spring or grove.
• Removable wall panel for ventilation • FALE/BALE
• Elevated wall along perimeter of the wall • For wealthy family
• Three Layer Structure
• Square Plan ISLAM IN THE PHILIPPINES
• Pyramidal or conical roof
• The earliest evidence of Muslim presence was
• Windowless
in Sulu during the 14th century.
• 12-15 SQM
• Islam was established to the rest of Mindanao
• HALIPAN – rat guard, 1.2 to 1.8m from
during 15th Century
ground
• Religion Congregational Worship
BUL-UL - Carved granary guardians • Permanent and Separate Architecture
• “Twahid” means Unity of Allah
ABONG - House for the poor
• PHILIPPINE MOSQUE
KANYAW • Five Pillars (pattern of a quincunx)
• Architecturally derived from early Christian
• Collectively refers to any ritual dancing by Churches.
indigenous peoples of the Cordillera.
• Part parcel of the Ifugao ritual life. Pig and Two Types
Carabao skulls, the remains of sacrificial
1. Masjid
animals are proudly displayed.
2. Langgal (Tausug and Yakan) & Ranggar
HAGABI - prestige bench of upper class (Maranao)
FALE CONSTRUCTION
• Two-year construction and can be dismantled in a • Chinese Pagoda and Japanese Temple
day Inspired.
• These mosques have eight, five, or three tiers.
• 5-6 generations • Pathways to heaven.
• The pagoda-style mosque building is
currently an endangered art form in the
KANKANAY Philippines, as most mosques are now built in
• A typical village with 700 inhabitants the Domed/Arabian- style.
• Slopes of hills or mountains are flattened so There is a dearth knowledge regarding the evolution
that houses can be built. of mosque typology in the Philippines.
• Main types of dwelling
• Binangiyan – Kankanay Abode 1. Much of the earliest types of mosques
• Apa/Inapa & Allao - dwellings for poorer constructed by early missionaries were made
family of temporary materials like wood, bamboo,
and cogon which do not last for years.
BINANGIYAN 2. The remaining earlier types were either
• Has a resemblance to Fale demolished, destroyed during earthquakes,
• Pyramidal in form or were reconstructed / remodeled to
• Box-like compartment – a single-room conform to modern architectural types
dwelling with spacious attic (baeg) sourced from Middle- Easter designs.
• BABAYAN BAEY - An elevated, square, one- 3. The yearly pilgrimage to Mecca radically
room house of the Kankanay and Ibaloi, with changed all earliest types.
four thick posts supporting a timber upper FEATURES
floor and steep hip type roof of cogon grass.
The lower end of the roof flared out similar to • CRESCENT AND STAR ORNAMENT - Information
the roof of the Bontocs and Kalingas houses. on the origins of the symbol are difficult to confirm,
but most sources agree that these ancient celestial
symbols were in use by the peoples of Central Asia
MUSLIM SPACE and Siberia in their worship of the sun, moon and sky
gods.
• OKIR CARVING AND BURAK - (a mythical winged 1. Kota of Raja Sulayman in Manila
creature, half-human, half-horse). 2. Kota of Sultan Kudarat in Lamitan
• Oldest mosque in the Philippines • Distinct archipelagic features of Sulu and the
• Barangay Tubig Indangan, Simunul, Tawi- Mindanao
Tawi • Terrestrial and Naval Architecture
• Built on 1380
3 HOUSE CATEGORIES OF MUSLIM COMMUNITY
• MASJID AL-DAHAB OR GOLDEN MOSQUE
• Modernized Style of Mosque 1. Land Based Stilted Dwellings – Situated along
• Built on 1976 shoreline
• Maranao Okir Patterns 2. Oceanic Dwellings – built completely over the
• MASJID sea and entirely detached from shoreline
• Place of Worship 3. Houseboats – serves as both home and
• Bulbous Dome – vault of heaven fishing boat of Badjao
• Minaret
• Ablution Area or Wudu
• Large and Permanent Construction MARANAO
• Stone Foundation
• Near bodies of Water where the faithful Maranao Houses
perform rituals of ablution. • “People of the Lake”
• Originally a multi-tiered bamboo • The largest indigenous group in Mindanao
• To accommodate light and air
THREE TYPES OF MARANAO HOUSE
CONCLUSION
WATERWORKS AND UTILITIES
• The legacy of Spanish Colonialism gave
Carriedo Water Works- a piped-in water system Filipinos built forms and architecture
opened in 1882. • New concepts of space
• New forms of identities • Formally established with the proclamation of
• New power relations the Malolos Constitution on January 21,
• New ways of orchestrating the everyday 1899, in Malolos, Bulacan.
colonial experience
Philippine- American War
• One of the 1st multi storey concrete buildings in the ANTONIO MAÑALAC TOLEDO
Philippines. • Graduated from Ohio State University in
RALPH DOANE 1910
• William Parson’s Draftsman
• Took full charge as Consulting Architect • Master of Classist Style
• Capitols Buildings, composed of court house,
jail, garage, storeroom, hospital and WORKS
residence of Provincial Governor and • Philippine Normal University – Women’s
Provincial Treasurer Dormitory – Collaborated with Parsons.
WORKS • Manila City Hall
• Agrifina Circle: Old Department of
• Pangasinan Provincial Capitol Agriculture & Finance
• Leyte Provincial Capitol o Tourism Building
• Legislative building o currently the National Museum,
o intended for National Library of the Museum of Natural History.
Philippines • MANILA-BUREAU OF CUSTOMS OFFICE
• Malacañang Executive House • UP MANILA-COLLEGE OF MEDICINE,
o On May 27, 1936, President Manuel CALDERON HALL
L. Quezon gave instructions for the • CEBU PROVINCIAL CAPITOL
installation of an air-conditioning
system in Malacañang Palace. TOMAS B. MAPUA
• Cornell University
• First Registered Architect in the Philippines • Casino Español de Manila
• Founder of MIT • Salvador Araneta and Victoria López
• First Chairperson of the Board of Examiners Residence
for Architects in the Philippines
TOMAS FERNANDEZ ARGUELLES
WORKS
• Advocate of the enforcement of Building
• Philippine General Hospital, Nurses Home Code of Manila.
• De La Salle University Manila • Manila City councilor
• Librada Avelino Hall, Centro Escolar
WORKS
University
• Pier 7, Manila • Heacock Building – one of the 1st department
• Mapua Institute of Technology store in the Philippines
• Elizalde and Co. Building
JUAN DE GUZMAN ARELLANO
ARCHITECTURE SCHOOLS AND PROFESSIONAL
• Brother of Arcadio Arellano
ORGANIZATIONS IN THE PHILIPPINES
• Drexel Institute 1911
• University of Pennsylvania, Graduate School • 1890- Escuella Practica y Profesional de Artes
• Beaux Arts School of New York y Oficios de Manila, established by Spanish
• Vernacular Classist & Modernist Government the First school for Maestro de
Obras or Master Builder
• 1900- Liceo de Manila, First Private school for
WORKS Maestro de Obras
• 1902- Academia de Arquiteqtura y
• Banco Español de Filipinas de Reyna Isabela Agremensura de Filipinas (AAAF) the first
or Bank of the Philippine Islands (outside the professional organization of architects,
walls) engineers and surveyors inthe Philippines,
• Legislative Building (National Congress and offered a four-year course in civil engineering
Senate of the Philippines) and architecture founded by Carlos Alejandro
• Jones Bridge (Former Puente de España) Barretto.
• Central Post Office, Manila • Offered four-year course in civil engineering
• University of the Philippines, Villamor Hall, and architecture.
College of Conservatory of Music and Fine • 1921, the First Engineering and Architecture
Arts Act No. 2895 was passed by Philippine
• University of the Philippines Diliman, Benitez Assembly, licensure examination, board
Hall College of Education exam for engineering and architecture.
• Metropolitan Theater Manila • Licensed Maestro de Obras will automatically
• Rizal Memorial Stadium (1st Stadium in Asia) grant the title architect.
• Negros Provincial Capitol • THOMAS MAPUA – The 1st Registered
Architect in the Philippines
ARCADIO DE GUZMAN ARELLANO
• 1925, MIT was the 1st Architectural School
• Maestro de Obras
Rev. Fr. Roque Ruaño - O.P. opened the UST College
• Established the 1st surveying office
of Architecture and Fine Arts in 1930. Ruaño was the
• 1st Filipino employed by the Americans’
designer of the 1st earthquake shock resistant
adviser
building in Asia.
WORKS
1941 – Adamson University opened its architecture
• Gota de Leche program
• Mausoleum of the Veterans
1946 – Cebu Institute of Technology
• Ariston Bautista House
1953 – Mindanao Colleges • Revivalist Style
WORKS
Module 4: Post-World War II Era
• Boulevard-Alhambra Apartments (Bel Air)
• Capitan Luis Gonzaga Building • The 1945 battle for liberation witnessed the
• Far Eastern University massive decimation of Manila’s urban-built
• Galaxy Theater heritage and the irreplaceable treasures of
• Life Theater colonial architecture.
• Ideal Theater • In the midst of postwar destitution and economic
• White Cross/Boy’s Town, San Juan City limbo, shantytowns mushroomed sporadically in
• Manila Polo Club the urban areas in response to shortage of
housing.
WAR AND NOSTALGIA FROM THE NATION • Despite the shaken state of the country, the US
1934 -Commonwealth of the Philippines and the Philippines decided to proceed with
plans for independence.
1941-Manila was declared as open city to spare the • US sponsored the rehabilitation of the
city from damage from the advancing Japanese Philippines with a condition: That the Philippines
Imperial Army. grant the American parity rights to enable them
to enjoy the same rights the Filipinos have
• The citizens were caught in state of shock as the
1. to develop and exploit the natural
realized that the Americans had abandoned the city
resources
to Japanese.
2. to operate public utilities in the country.
On February 5, 1945, the American were set to • The US War Damage Rehabilitation Fund was
reclaim Manila Imperial dedicated to rehabilitation of public buildings,
roads, and bridges.
• Last days witnessed the whole destruction of • It was also instrumental in resurrecting to their
Manila’s Built Heritage and irreplaceable original splendor the prewar neoclassic
treasure of colonial treasures government buildings such as Manila City Hall,
• Manila as the 2nd most devastated allied city Post Office Building, Agriculture and Finance
in the war Buildings, Legislative Buildings and group of
• Japanese Occupation launched several Buildings in the University of the Philippines
programs designed to rechanneled Filipino Manila following faithfully their original plans.
loyalty from US to Japan • In 1946, the independent Philippines expressed
• No significant Architecture was built during its identity by implementing modernism through
the period the utilization of reinforced concrete, steel and
• Takeover of private and public buildings for glass, the pre-dominance of cubic forms,
military purposes geometric shapes and Cartesian grids, and the
• Manila experienced the horrors of Urban absence of applied decoration.
Warfare
• “Defensible Architecture”
1. Piles of Sandbags
• The 1950s and 1960s staple architectural elements
2. Glass windows protected by tape
were the brise-soleil (sunbreaker), glass walls,
3. Darkened Windows – Total Blackout
pierced screens and thin concrete shells.
Conclusion
• The post-war doctrine was “Form follows function,”
• American Administration molded the professed by the “Third Generation Filipino
architecture in the Philippines and the Architects”, who readily addressed the demands of a
Filipinos itself
clientele who were eager to embrace modern life and CESAR CONCIO
ideas.
• U.P. Diliman ‘s Palma & Melchor Halls
• Through the third-generation architects continued
• Protestant Chapel & Fellowship Center, U.P.
to promote the modern and progressive ideas of their
modernist idols in the first half of 1960s, for better or (Church of the Risen Lord,)
worse, a hegemonic modernism in the Philippines
began to take form. • U.P College of Forestry Bldg., Los Banos
FELIPE MENDOZA
THE TROPE OF TROPICALITY Felino Palafox Jr. - Nueva Ecija Capitol Building
• Veterans Memorial Medical Center Dewey Santos & Felix Ngo - Metrobank Branches
• People’s Homesite and Housing Corporation
Jose Siao Ling & Associates – SM’s Stores Architecture of Global Multinationalism
F-shelters 1. Preservation
2. Restoration
• Designed by Dr. Florence Soriano -fast-to- 3. Reconstruction
build and foldaway emergency shelter --uses 4. Rehabilitation (Adaptive Re-use)
wood-wool cement board (WWCB).
Rio Dome
• PRESERVATION - means maintaining a place
- use of “earthbag construction systems” in its existing state and retarding
developed by Nader Kahlili deterioration.
- made of rice sacks packed with waterproof • RESTORATION - means returning a place to
earth mixture and cement a known earlier state by removing accretions
or by reassembling existing elements without
the introduction of new material.
• RECONSTRUCTION - means returning a
BASIC OF ARCHITECTURAL HERITAGE place to a known earlier state and is
CONSERVATION distinguished from restoration by the
introduction of new material.
REPUBLIC ACT NO. 10066
• REHABILITATION - Defined as the act or
An act providing for the protection and Conservation
process of making possible a compatible use
of the national cultural Heritage, strengthening the
for a property through repair, alterations, and
National Commission for Culture and the Arts
additions while preserving those portions or
(NCCA) and its affiliated cultural Agencies, and for
features which convey its historical, cultural,
other purposes
or architectural values.
ARCHITECTURAL HERITAGE CONSERVATION o Adaptive- Reuse
• World Heritage site, any of various areas or The Convention was adopted together with a Protocol
objects inscribed on the United Nations in order to prevent the export of cultural property
Educational, Scientific and Cultural from occupied territory, requiring the return of such
Organization (UNESCO) World Heritage List. property to the territory of the State from which it was
The sites are designated as having removed.
“outstanding universal value” under the WHY DO WE NEED TO PRESERVE OUR HERITAGE?
Convention Concerning the Protection of the
World Cultural and Natural Heritage. Conservation of heritage buildings is very important
• This document was adopted by UNESCO in because it provides a sense of identity and it
1972 and formally took effect in 1975 after represents the past history and culture of a nation.
having been ratified by 20 countries. It
“Our heritage is the shared meaning of our past”
provides a framework for international
cooperation in preserving and protecting And it is in that meaning that as a community we
cultural treasures and natural areas understand our identity and shape our legacy. Our
throughout the world. heritage shows how far we’ve come as a race, what
we’ve experienced and overcome. It is an important
What is a WORLD HERITAGE SITE?
thread that links our history to our present and adds
According to UNESCO, there are 3 types of heritage value to our future. To lose our shared meanings,
site: memories and narratives is to deny a sufficient
answer to ‘who’ and ‘what’ we are as people.
1. Cultural
2. Natural
3. Mixed
RESTORATION- It is bringing the object back to its William Morris (1894-1936)
former condition. The process of reverting the
• Founder of Society for the Protection of
building to its original condition requires the use of
Ancient Buildings (SPAB)
original materials and techniques. In restoration the
• Morris was particularly concerned about the
most important requirement is the final appearance.
practice of attempting to return buildings to
PRESERVATION- Involves keeping an object from an idealised state from the distant past
destruction and seeing to it that the object is not (Viollet-le- Duc’s approach) he saw this as
irredeemably altered or changed. Priority is lying.
maintaining the fabric and mitigate the damage. • He proposed that ancient buildings should be
repaired, not restored, so that their entire
CONSERVATION- All the processes involved to retain
history would be protected as cultural
its cultural significance. Includes maintenance,
heritage.
preservation, restoration, reconstruction and
• He proposed that its important features
adaptation. Commonly a combination of one of
should be preserved, even if a building’s
these.
function changed.
ADAPTATION- any work in a building to change its • The important attitude of SPAB were “to put
function or make minor modifications to suit its protection in the place of restoration” and “to
proposed use. stave off decay by daily care”
THEORIES OF CONSERVATION