A new look for Araneta Center
April 8, 2002 | 12:00am
Long before the term "malling" became integrated into the Filipinos lifestyle, the Araneta Commercial Center in Cubao, Quezon City, loomed large as a pioneer in affordable shopping, leisure and entertainment. During its halycon days, it was as society columnist Maurice Arcache might have described it the place to see and be seen in.
In the last two decades, however, the 35-hectare Araneta Center seems to have been left behind as malls swiftly mushroomed elsewhere in Metro Manila and in key provincial cities.
"Plans for the Centers renovation were made as early as two decades ago," said Jorge Araneta, chairman and president of the Centers developer, Progressive Development Corp.. "The process of planning was delayed for one reason or another like Ninoy Aquinos death and the series of coups staged by Gringo Honasan."
Based on the Centers redevelopment master plan, the first phase will involve the construction of interconnected pedestrian bridges, the upgrading of existing facilities into state-of-the art shopping and entertainment venues and the construction of a multi-storey mall beside a renovated Coliseum, all within an integrated, IT-oriented garden city environment.
The redevelopment will be undertaken within the framework of Quezon Citys Metro Centro project. Metro Centro aims to change the face literally and figuratively of the nations densest city. (There are 11,970 persons per square kilometer living in Quezon City). It envisions Cubao as a central business district that will host corporate offices as well as support facilities such as hotels, residential condominiums, entertainment and shopping centers.
"Were looking for seven- to 10-year money. We are looking at various options, part local and part foreign, to fund the redevelopment," said Araneta.
The redevelopment started two years ago with the P250-million renovation of its landmark, the Araneta Coliseum, in 2000. Today, the Coliseum features world-class facilities from its stage grid, which has a load capacity of 74,000 pounds, to its detachable American maplewood basketball flooring to its $250,000 electronic scoreboard.
Next on the agenda was the transformation of the Farmers Plaza from an old-line type shopping center into a vibrantly colored mall.
Ongoing are a new air-conditioned building where the old Automatic Centre used to be. The new building will operate like Tutuban in Divisoria where great buys can be had. New Frontier Theater and Ali Mall are being renovated. An area will be set aside for 12 trained elephants which customers can ride, pet and feed.
"The middle class will like the upgrade," said Araneta of the 800,000 customers who visit the Center daily. "Ive always told people that Araneta Center is inflation- and recession-proof because of our middle-market clientele. Ive noticed that in an economic crisis, the first people to get hit are the rich people and the buyers of high-end luxury goods. The next to be hit are the very low-end market."
Araneta, who took over the family business in 1972, knows what hes talking about. During his watch, PDC saw its profits go down only once the year after the 1997 Asian financial crisis.
"Weve always had an idea of leaving a legacy," Araneta said of the ongoing redevelopment that hopes to create the worlds largest shopping center by adding 600,000 sqms. to the existing facilities of Araneta Center. "It was just a question of timing."
In the last two decades, however, the 35-hectare Araneta Center seems to have been left behind as malls swiftly mushroomed elsewhere in Metro Manila and in key provincial cities.
"Plans for the Centers renovation were made as early as two decades ago," said Jorge Araneta, chairman and president of the Centers developer, Progressive Development Corp.. "The process of planning was delayed for one reason or another like Ninoy Aquinos death and the series of coups staged by Gringo Honasan."
Based on the Centers redevelopment master plan, the first phase will involve the construction of interconnected pedestrian bridges, the upgrading of existing facilities into state-of-the art shopping and entertainment venues and the construction of a multi-storey mall beside a renovated Coliseum, all within an integrated, IT-oriented garden city environment.
The redevelopment will be undertaken within the framework of Quezon Citys Metro Centro project. Metro Centro aims to change the face literally and figuratively of the nations densest city. (There are 11,970 persons per square kilometer living in Quezon City). It envisions Cubao as a central business district that will host corporate offices as well as support facilities such as hotels, residential condominiums, entertainment and shopping centers.
"Were looking for seven- to 10-year money. We are looking at various options, part local and part foreign, to fund the redevelopment," said Araneta.
Next on the agenda was the transformation of the Farmers Plaza from an old-line type shopping center into a vibrantly colored mall.
Ongoing are a new air-conditioned building where the old Automatic Centre used to be. The new building will operate like Tutuban in Divisoria where great buys can be had. New Frontier Theater and Ali Mall are being renovated. An area will be set aside for 12 trained elephants which customers can ride, pet and feed.
"The middle class will like the upgrade," said Araneta of the 800,000 customers who visit the Center daily. "Ive always told people that Araneta Center is inflation- and recession-proof because of our middle-market clientele. Ive noticed that in an economic crisis, the first people to get hit are the rich people and the buyers of high-end luxury goods. The next to be hit are the very low-end market."
Araneta, who took over the family business in 1972, knows what hes talking about. During his watch, PDC saw its profits go down only once the year after the 1997 Asian financial crisis.
"Weve always had an idea of leaving a legacy," Araneta said of the ongoing redevelopment that hopes to create the worlds largest shopping center by adding 600,000 sqms. to the existing facilities of Araneta Center. "It was just a question of timing."
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