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A Brief History on Architectural Education in the Philippines

The first Filipino recorded architect was Felix Roxas y Arroyo, born circa 1820 in Manila.

Prior to American colonization, the architectural profession was essentially embodied by


the maestro de obras (literally translated as “master builder”). There was no actual title
of “architect.” Instead, the maestro de obras was responsible for the construction and
supervision over the erection of public and private structures.

The nearest form of architectural education during the Spanish period was the Escuela
Practica y Profesional de Artes y Oficios de Manila, which was established by the
Spanish government in 1890. Among the first graduates of this school were Arcadio
Arellano, Juan Carreon, Julio Hernandez, and Isidro Medina.

Later, private schools, such as the Liceo de Manila, were established in 1900, granting
the academic title of maestro de obras. Francisco Agraran, Carlos Diaz, Antonio Goguico,
Angel Tampinco, and Zoilo Villanueva were among the first graduates of the Liceo.

The Liceo, together with the Academia de Arquitectura y Agrimensura de Filipinas, the
first professional organization of architects, engineers, and surveyors, founded in 1902,
offered a four-year course in civil engineering and architecture in 1904.

Beginning in 1903, the Insular government had launched a scholarship program that
allowed Filipino students to pursue university education in the United States known as
the pensionado program.

The first recipient of the (pensionado program) scholarship for architecture was Carlos
A. Barretto, who received academic training at the Drexel Institute of Philadelphia.

Antonio Toledo stood out as the youngest pensionado when he was sent to the United
States to study architecture at the age of sixteen. He was one of the pioneer professors
of Mapua Institute of Technology founded by his fellow pensionado Tomas Mapua and
taught there until 1967. He designed the National Museum of the Philippines,​ Leyte
Provincial Capitol, ​Manila City Hall, ​Cebu Provincial Capitol, ​Bureau of
Customs, ​Department of Tourism & Finance Buildings.

Tomas Mapua holds the distinction of being the first registered Architect of the
Philippines. He was a known civic leader in Manila. He once became a councilor of
Manila. He founded the Mapua Institute of Technology. Buildings ​Librada Avelino Hall,
Centro Escolar University ​J. Mapua Memorial Hall, Mapua Institute of Technology ​Pier 7.

Juan M. Arellano, was a Filipino architect, best known for Manila's Metropolitan Theater
(1935), Legislative Building (1926), now houses the National Museum of the Philippines),
the Manila Central Post Office Building (1926), the Cebu Provincial Capitol (1937), the
Bank of the Philippine Islands Cebu Main Branch (1940), and the Jones Bridge. Other
Buildings were the ​Manila Central Post Office, ​Manila Metropolitan Theater, ​National
Museum of the Philippines, ​Jaro Municipal Building ​Center for West Visayan Studies and
Museum, UP Visayas ​Cebu Provincial Capitol, ​Jones Bridge, ​Malcolm Hall, University of
the Philippines, Diliman.

These pensionados, together with the maestro de obras Arcadio Arellano and Tomas
Arguelles, formed the first generation of Filipino architects. All six had individual
distinctions to claim. Arcadio Arellano was the first Filipino to be employed by the
Americans as one of their architectural advisors. Carlos Barreto was the first Filipino
architect with an academic degree from abroad, the Drexel Institute in Philadelphia,
from which he graduated in 1907. He became one of the pioneering staff of the Division
of Architecture. Tomas Arguelles was known as a public administrator who advocated
the enforcement of the Building Code of Manila. Antonio Toledo was a master of the
Neoclassic style and was among the first architect educators.

In 1930, the University of Santo Tomas (UST) established its School of Architecture and
Fine Arts. Soon after, Adamson University opened its architecture program in 1941. That
same year, the Philippine College of Design was founded and it recruited the luminaries
of the design profession in the Philippines as its Faculty. Other schools of architecture
outside Manila would also institute architecture courses after World War II, such as the
Cebu Institute of Technology (1946) and Mindanao Colleges (1953).

The curriculum for the Bachelor of Science in Architecture at the University of Santo
Tomas and the Mapua Institute of Technology reflected this French school lineage through
the emphasis on rendered drawings and perspectives, highly symmetrical planning and
massing, and Classical Revival preferences in details and motifs.

From 1930 to 1966 the Program of Architecture was4 years . In 1967 a new 5 year
program was introduced with a total of 210 units. The first graduates of this 5 year
program was in 1972.

at October 31, 2017

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1 comment:

Todd Notch March 27, 2018 at 11:37 PM


This is really an interesting post regarding architects in the Philippines. I'm amazed by it's
history. Really cool.
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