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Intramuros Administration
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Logo of the IA | |
| Agency overview | |
|---|---|
| Formed | April 10, 1979 |
| Jurisdiction | Intramuros, Manila |
| Headquarters | Palacio del Gobernador, Intramuros, Manila |
| Employees | 45 (2024)[1] |
| Annual budget | ₱107,961,000 (2021)[2] |
| Agency executive |
|
| Parent department | Department of Tourism |
| Website | intramuros |
The Intramuros Administration (IA) is an agency of the Department of Tourism of the Philippines that is mandated to restore, administer, and develop in an orderly manner the historic walled area of Intramuros, which is situated within the modern city of Manila, as well as to ensure that the 16th- to 19th-century Philippine-Spanish architecture remains the general architectural style of the walled area.[4]
It operates autonomously from the municipal government,[citation needed] although the mayor of Manila is a member of its board. It was established on April 10, 1979, as under the now-defunct Ministry of Human Settlements by virtue of Presidential Decree 1616 issued by President Ferdinand Marcos.[5] Executive Order No. 120 reorganized the Ministry of Tourism which became the Department of Tourism (DOT) on January 30, 1987. The order also designated the IA as an attached agency of the DOT.[4]
Its office is located at Palacio del Gobernador in Plaza Roma.[6]
History
[edit]On October 30, 2015, the Association of UNESCO World Heritage Cities of Spain awarded the IA the Heritage Prize 2015 for its efforts in preserving Spanish colonial architecture in Intramuros.[7] IA, however, was flagged by the Commission on Audit for its delayed implementation of an ₱18 million branding campaign that was awarded way back in 2017. ₱450,000 has been used so far. None of the project components: events and special projects, branding materials, online campaign, walking tour brochures and maps, and other printed media, were completed at all.[8]
Register of Styles
[edit]The Intramuros Register of Styles is the main architectural code of Intramuros, the historic core of the City of Manila, Philippines. It became part of Presidential Decree No. 1616, as amended, when it was gazetted by the Official Gazette of the Philippines on June 17, 2022.[9] The Intramuros Administration is the agency of the Philippine Government responsible for the implementation of the Register of Styles.
Intramuros in Manila is the only locality in the Philippines where, for cultural reasons, the use, height, scale, and aesthetics of all new constructions and development are pre-determined and strictly regulated under the force of a national law. The Register of Styles, as an integral part of Presidential Decree No. 1616, is the main legal document prescribing and guiding the implementation of pre-war architectural colonial styles in Intramuros.[10][11]
The Register of Styles is the first document to detail the historical styles of Intramuros. It was authored by Rancho Arcilla, who was then the Archivist of the Intramural Administration, and under the initiative of Guiller Asido, the former Administrator of Intramuros.[10] Being an integral part of Presidential Decree No. 1616, the Register of Styles is the only architectural stylebook in the Philippines with the force and potency of a national law.
By form, the urban landscape of Intramuros mostly lacked setbacks, with buildings that were mostly terraced (rowhouses). Courtyards or backyards were exceptionally well adapted to the climate. By style Intramuros was described as both vernacular and cosmopolitan. While its Church and State buildings were European in orientation, albeit adapted and localized, most of the buildings enclaved within its walls embraced tropical vernacular constructions as exemplified by the Bahay na bato. Churches, fortifications, and palaces fashioned in European styles, though few, became icons and objects of popular imagination. In contrast, the vernacular Bahay na Bato, which was adopted in majority of buildings, prevailed in terms of number of constructions.[11]
The Register of Styles prescribes the Bahay na bato as the default style for new constructions in Intramuros. It explicitly recognized the Bahay na Bato as the dominant architectural typology of Intramuros during the Spanish colonial era until the destruction of the Walled City in 1945 during the Second World War. Pursuant to the Intramuros Register of Styles, new constructions in Intramuros that do not follow the Bahay na Bato typology may only be allowed only in specific locations where a Non-Bahay na Bato structure (e.g. a Neoclassical building) was known to exist. Otherwise, new constructions are required to follow the Bahay na Bato type.[11]
Administrators
[edit]| Administrator | Term start | Term end | Appointed By | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Jaime C. Laya | April 10, 1979[a] | April 16, 1986 | Ferdinand Marcos |
| 2 | Eustacio Orobia | November 14, 1986 | July 31, 1989 | Corazon Aquino |
| 3 | Jose Capistrano | August 1, 1989 | April 19, 1990 | |
| 4 | Edda V. Henson | April 1990 | October 1995 | |
| 5 | Carlo Q. Butiong | February 15, 1996 | February 17, 1997 | Fidel Ramos |
| 6 | Dominador Ferrer | August 12, 1998 | August 13, 2007 | Joseph Ejercito Estrada |
| 7 | Anna Maria L. de Harper | March 17, 2008 | July 8, 2010 | Gloria Macapagal Arroyo |
| 8 | Jose Capistrano | August 27, 2010 | August 5, 2013 | Benigno S. Aquino III |
| 9 | Marco Antonio Luisito V. Sardillo III | August 5, 2013 | June 30, 2016 | |
| Merceditas de Sahagún | June 30, 2016 | March 23, 2017 | Interim Officer-In-Charge | |
| 10 | Guiller B. Asido | March 23, 2017 | June 30, 2022 | Rodrigo Duterte |
| 11 | Joan Padilla | January 17, 2023 | Incumbent | Bongbong Marcos |
Notes
[edit]- ^ Served as Action Officer of the Intramuros Administration from April 10, 1979 to April 16, 1986.
References
[edit]- ^ Department of Budget and Management. "Staffing Summary Fiscal Year 2024" (PDF). Retrieved April 24, 2025.
- ^ "III.A - IA Approved Budget 2021". Intramuros Administration. Retrieved May 16, 2021.
- ^ Adel, Rosette (March 23, 2017). "New Intramuros administrator sworn in". The Philippine Star. Retrieved November 15, 2017.
- ^ a b FY OPIF 2009 (PDF). Department of Budget and Management. 2009. p. 494. Retrieved November 15, 2017.
- ^ "The IA Charter". Intramuros Administration. Retrieved November 15, 2017.
- ^ "Contact Us". Intramuros Administration. Archived from the original on November 30, 2020. Retrieved November 15, 2017.
- ^ "Intramuros Administration honored by the Group of UNESCO World Heritage Cities of Spain". Philippine Embassy Madrid. November 5, 2015. Retrieved November 15, 2017.
- ^ "COA flags much-delayed P18-M Intramuros project". Inquirer.net. May 22, 2018. Retrieved September 5, 2018.
- ^ Intramuros Administration Website. Rules and Regulations in Intramuros May 1, 2023.
- ^ a b Intramuros Register of Styles. Intramuros Register of Styles May 1, 2023.
This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
- ^ a b c Lawphil. Lawphil Intramuros Register of Styles May 1, 2023.
This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
Intramuros Administration
View on GrokipediaHistory
Establishment under Marcos Administration
The Intramuros Administration was established on April 10, 1979, by Presidential Decree No. 1616, issued by President Ferdinand Marcos during his tenure.[11] The decree created the agency as a government entity under the direct control and supervision of the then-Ministry of Human Settlements, formalizing centralized oversight of the walled city's management amid ongoing post-World War II reconstruction needs.[11] This move addressed the deterioration of Intramuros, which had suffered extensive damage from wartime bombing in 1945, leaving much of its Spanish colonial structures in ruins and necessitating coordinated preservation efforts.[11] The decree's core provisions empowered the Administration to restore and administer Intramuros' development as a monument to the Hispanic era in Philippine history, with explicit requirements to maintain its physical appearance in conformity with traditional Philippine-Spanish architectural styles and character.[11] Key responsibilities included acquiring real properties within the walls for restoration, regulating land use and building permits to prevent incompatible modern developments, and coordinating infrastructure improvements like utilities and access roads.[11] Funding was initially drawn from national government appropriations, loans, and potential revenue from administered properties, reflecting Marcos' broader policy emphasis on cultural heritage rehabilitation under martial law governance structures.[11] Implementation followed swiftly, with Letter of Instructions No. 843 issued on an unspecified date in 1979 to organize the Administration's operations, establishing a Board of Administrators chaired by the Minister of Human Settlements and appointing an Administrator to handle day-to-day execution.[12] This structure enabled initial projects focused on clearing informal settlements and rubble, setting the stage for systematic reconstruction while prioritizing historical authenticity over rapid urbanization.[13] The establishment marked a shift from fragmented local and private initiatives to a dedicated national body, though challenges persisted due to limited initial resources and the site's complex legal tenures from pre-war claims.[11]Evolution and Reattachments
The Intramuros Administration was established on April 10, 1979, through Presidential Decree No. 1616, signed by President Ferdinand Marcos, as an agency under the Ministry of Human Settlements responsible for the restoration and development of Intramuros as a monument to the Hispanic period of Philippine history.[11] This decree empowered the administration to formulate policies, regulate land use, acquire properties, and enforce guidelines on architecture and urban planning within the walled city, addressing post-World War II decay and informal settlements that had proliferated since the 1945 destruction.[11] On December 10, 1980, Presidential Decree No. 1748 amended the original charter to expand the administration's authority, including enhanced fiscal autonomy through revenue generation from rentals and concessions, and the ability to impose fines for violations of development rules. These changes aimed to accelerate restoration efforts, such as reconstructing historic structures and walls based on pre-1945 configurations, while integrating archaeological expertise to preserve authenticity. Following the 1986 EDSA Revolution and government reorganization, Executive Order No. 120, issued on January 30, 1987, by President Corazon Aquino, restructured the former Ministry of Tourism into the Department of Tourism and designated the Intramuros Administration as an attached agency under its supervision, transferring it from the defunct Ministry of Human Settlements.[14] This reattachment aligned the administration's mandate with tourism promotion, enabling coordinated efforts in cultural heritage preservation and visitor infrastructure, while retaining its core responsibilities under PD 1616.[14] The status as a Department of Tourism attached agency was reaffirmed in Republic Act No. 9593, the Tourism Act of 2009, which strengthened institutional support for heritage sites.[15] In 2021, the administration adopted revised Implementing Rules and Regulations for PD 1616, updating operational guidelines to incorporate contemporary standards for sustainable development, digital mapping of heritage assets, and public-private partnerships, without altering its departmental attachment.[16] These evolutions reflect adaptations to shifting governance priorities, from urban rehabilitation in the martial law era to integrated tourism and heritage management post-1987.[17]Key Milestones in Preservation
Preservation efforts for Intramuros received initial legislative protection on June 21, 1951, through Republic Act No. 597, which designated the district as a national historical monument, prohibiting alterations to its structures without government approval.[18] The creation of the Intramuros Administration on April 10, 1979, via Presidential Decree No. 1616, represented a foundational milestone, empowering the agency to systematically restore, redevelop, and preserve the walled city's pre-war buildings, fortifications, and Hispanic-era features as a national monument.[10][3] In the 1980s, the Administration initiated comprehensive restoration campaigns, focusing on reconstructing lost elements and rehabilitating surviving structures to reflect their original colonial design, amid ongoing post-World War II recovery.[19] Notable project completions included the 1992 restoration of Baluarte de San Diego, converted into an archaeological park showcasing original fortifications. The reconstruction of the Ayuntamiento de Manila, serving as the Bureau of the Treasury headquarters, culminated in 2010 after extensive rehabilitation of its ruins.[20] More recently, the Intramuros Tourist Center opened in 2024, enhancing public access and heritage interpretation within a restored colonial-style building.[21]Mandate and Legal Framework
Presidential Decree 1616 and Core Responsibilities
Presidential Decree No. 1616, signed by President Ferdinand E. Marcos on April 10, 1979, created the Intramuros Administration as a government agency tasked with restoring and administering the development of Intramuros, Manila's historic walled district, which had suffered extensive destruction during World War II.[11] The decree positions Intramuros as a monument to the Hispanic period of Philippine history, emphasizing the need to perpetuate its cultural and architectural legacy from the 16th to 19th centuries through systematic reconstruction and regulation.[11] The Administration's core responsibilities center on the orderly restoration of key physical elements, including the Intramuros Walls, ravelins, moat, Sunken Garden, plazas, streets, and public areas, using authentic Philippine-Spanish architectural styles, materials, and designs to recreate the district's pre-colonial and colonial character.[11] This involves reconstructing destroyed structures, maintaining existing ones, and ensuring all developments conform to historical specifications to prevent modern encroachments that could dilute its heritage value.[11] Regulatory powers form another pillar, granting the agency authority to enforce zoning ordinances, approve building designs and permits, manage traffic, and oversee property uses within Intramuros boundaries, with provisions for modifying or demolishing non-compliant structures to uphold aesthetic and historical standards.[11] The decree also empowers property acquisition through purchase, lease, donation, or eminent domain for public purposes, alongside the sale or lease of acquired assets to fund operations.[11] To support preservation financially and culturally, the Administration may operate museums, theaters, and commercial facilities; conduct festivals, exhibitions, and guided tours; and enter partnerships for tourism promotion, with revenues directed toward ongoing restoration while prohibiting activities that harm the site's integrity.[11] These mandates, supervised initially by the Ministry of Human Settlements, underscore a policy of self-sustaining heritage management without reliance on indefinite general appropriations.[11]Architectural and Developmental Guidelines
The architectural guidelines of the Intramuros Administration mandate that all buildings and structures within the walled city conform to Philippine colonial architecture prevalent in the 1890s, emphasizing the Bahay na Bato style as the default typology, characterized by stone or brick lower levels for earthquake resistance and wooden upper stories for ventilation and flexibility.[22] This requirement stems from Presidential Decree No. 1616 (1979), which directs the Administration to regulate building architecture to preserve the district's historical appearance reflective of 16th- to 19th-century Philippine-Spanish influences, with the 2021 Implementing Rules and Regulations (IRR) specifying adherence to a Register of Styles (Annex B) that includes variants such as Board and Batten, Flowers in Trellis, and Horizontals and Verticals.[11] [22] Facade designs must faithfully replicate 1890s precedents, incorporating features like capiz shell windows, decorative grilles (rejas), ventanillas for airflow, and wrought-iron lamps, using authentic materials such as adobe, brick, wood (e.g., narra or molave), and lime mortar where possible, though simulated equivalents are permitted if they maintain visual and tactile authenticity.[22] Building heights are capped at 11.50 meters, equivalent to three stories plus a mezzanine, with upper floors featuring cantilevered overhangs of 0.20 to 0.90 meters over sidewalks to maximize space without setbacks, aligning with the gridiron urban plan's narrow streets designed under the Leyes de Indias for shade and defense.[22] Any reconstruction or modification requires primary historical sources for accuracy, supervised archaeological work, and issuance of a Certificate of Appropriateness by the Administration, prohibiting alterations that disrupt scale, proportion, or the tropical adaptations like slanted roofs and inner courtyards.[22] Developmental guidelines promote mixed-use zoning, allowing ground floors for commercial or institutional purposes (e.g., specialty shops, inns) and upper levels for residences, while designating special zones around landmarks like Fort Santiago or San Agustin Church for heightened preservation, restricting uses to those compatible with historical precedents.[22] Prohibitions include pollutive industries, modern signage such as neon lights, plastic billboards, or jukeboxes, with exterior advertisements limited to 1890s-style wrought-iron or wooden fixtures to safeguard the district's aesthetic integrity.[22] All new constructions demand prior Development Clearance from the Administration, ensuring compliance with these standards to prevent anachronistic intrusions and sustain Intramuros as a living monument to its Hispanic colonial heritage.[22]Organizational Structure and Leadership
Administrative Hierarchy
The Intramuros Administration operates under a Board of Administrators, established pursuant to Section 2 of Presidential Decree No. 1616, which serves as the policy-making body responsible for formulating guidelines on restoration, development, and preservation within Intramuros.[11] The board is chaired by the Secretary of Tourism (or designee), with ex-officio members including the Mayor of Manila, the Executive Director of the National Historical Institute, the Administrator, and up to three additional members appointed by the President from the private sector or relevant expertise areas.[11] This composition ensures coordination between national heritage preservation, local governance, and tourism objectives, with the board holding authority to approve development plans, zoning regulations, and major projects as of its convening on April 7, 2025. The Administrator functions as the chief executive officer and secretary to the board, holding the rank equivalent to a Deputy Minister and reporting directly to the board for execution of policies, including oversight of restoration activities, property acquisition, and regulatory enforcement.[11] Appointed by the President, the Administrator manages daily operations and delegates authority to subordinate units, with a focus on aligning activities with the Intramuros Development Plan updated and approved periodically.[11] Subordinate to the Administrator, the agency is structured around functional divisions aligned with its mandate, comprising approximately six divisions as of 2021, handling general administration, planning, property conservation and development, commercial leasing, tourism promotions, and regulatory programs.[23] These divisions support operational budgets, such as the 2025 allocation of PHP 108.5 million for property conservation and PHP 69.3 million for regulatory enforcement, ensuring hierarchical implementation from board directives through specialized teams.[24]List of Administrators
The Intramuros Administration was initially directed by a board under Presidential Decree No. 1616, but evolved to feature a primary administrator role.[25] Dr. Jaime C. Laya served as the first administrator, overseeing early restoration efforts following the agency's establishment in 1979. Eustacio Orobia Jr. succeeded Laya as administrator, appointed under President Corazon Aquino and focusing on correcting public perceptions of Intramuros beyond its colonial associations.[26] Dominador C. Ferrer Jr. administered the agency from 1998 to 2007, during which period documents related to heritage structures bore his name as head. Jose Capistrano Jr. led the administration from approximately 2010 to 2013, managing initiatives such as the relocation of informal settlers to support heritage preservation.[27][28] Marco Antonio Sardillo served as administrator from 2013 to June 30, 2016, advancing tourism projects and development plans for the walled city.[29] Atty. Joan M. Padilla was appointed administrator on January 17, 2023, by President Ferdinand Marcos Jr., and continues in the role as of 2025.[30][31]| Administrator | Approximate Term | Key Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Jaime C. Laya | 1979–1986 | First administrator; initiated restoration post-PD 1616. |
| Eustacio Orobia Jr. | 1986–1989 | Focused on cultural recontextualization under Aquino. |
| Dominador C. Ferrer Jr. | 1998–2007 | Oversaw heritage documentation and compliance. |
| Jose Capistrano Jr. | 2010–2013 | Handled settler relocation and urban revival. |
| Marco Antonio Sardillo | 2013–2016 | Emphasized tourism and updated development frameworks. |
| Joan M. Padilla | 2023–present | Current head; appointed by Marcos Jr. |
