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Palafox vision: Safer towns and communities

When calamities strike, the name “Palafox” resurfaces in the news. TV anchors have always pictured him to the public as a visionary architect and urban planner the government won’t listen to. Palafox has often lamented about a poorly-planned metropolis and the dire consequences. Most of the time, he’s right.

From seminary to construction sites

Architect Felino Palafox Jr. attended high school in Christ the King seminary to prepare for priesthood. But his interest in the arts, math and science took him to a different field. He studied architecture in the University of Santo Tomas. His interest in architecture was inspired by his visits to the construction sites of his late uncle who was also an architect. Later on, the young Palafox finished his master’s degree in environmental planning from the University of the Philippines as a UN scholar and Advanced Management Development Program for Real Estate at Harvard University.

A sterling resume

Mall and retail tycoon, Henry Sy, got the services of Palafox as a consultant for various SM properties. He was also the architect and urban planner for Ayala Land real estate projects. Other developers from abroad have also sought his services. In Dubai, he headed a department that transformed the dessert land into a vibrant community that we see now. He was also involved in rebuilding projects in tsunami-stricken areas like Indonesia and Sri Lanka.

Today, his company, Palafox and Associates, has become the top architectural firm in the country and in Southeast Asia. His company also made it to the top 100 architectural firms in the world as compiled by the World Architecture magazine.

Answers to a calamity-prone Philippines

Palafox has been sending the Philippine government copies of his proposal “Urban Planning, Architecture and Engineering to Address Hazzards: Towards Safer Towns, Cities and Communities”. But somehow the government has shown less to zero interest as we all continued to be hammered down by worsening climate and environment.

In an interview with Jessica Soho in light of the recent earthquake in Japan, which was the biggest to strike them in 130 years, Palafox told how, in his latest conference in Mumbai, the government of India now plans to demolish 32,000 of its poorly-constructed buildings. He also outlined how unprepared and unreliable the Philippine government is when disaster, like a major earthquake, strikes the country. Metro Manila is densely populated with 14M residents squatting on every square inch and sits on the Marikina Valley Fault Line. Palafox estimates that “of the two million buildings and residential structures in Metro Manila, down to informal settlers, 25 percent would be vulnerable to earthquakes, liquefaction due to earthquakes, flooding and tsunamis at the waterfront.”

Below is a copy of his proposal “Urban Planning, Architecture and Engineering to Address Hazzards: Towards Safer Towns, Cities and Communities”. Read on while I’m out sourcing for jewelry making supplies.

Palafox Associates: Urban Planning, Architecture, and Engineering to Address Hazards

Haiti: History and mystery

When people say “Carribean”, the first things that come to mind are sunny skies, blue seas, beach huts, Marvin Gaye, voodoo and cruises. Haiti may share those blue sunny skies with their Carribean neighbors, but situation on the land surface is not at all picture-perfect.

I couldn’t pinpoint where Haiti exactly was until the January 12 earthquake caught us all in shock. Haiti went back to spotlight no longer carrying bad news of ousted or exiled presidents, but photos of a country in ruins. International support came pouring in, but we just don’t know how long it will sustain the lives of 3 million Haitians badly hit by this calamity.

Perhaps, for most Haitians, life has not been better for the past 200 years. Their history was marked by colonial rule, slave revolts, dictatorship, military juntas and economic sabotage. Haiti was considered as one of the richest colonies of France in the 19th century, but that was a reputation made on the backs of African slaves. Then there was their first taste of independence, a couple of years ahead than the United States. But the glory was short-lived. France asked Haiti to pay back 90 million francs as reparations for the damages on properties and loss of slaves the uprising caused them. It forced the young republic to take on high-interest loans to pay off that debt, eating up a huge chunk on their yearly national budget that should have been allocated to social and economic programs. Having two unpopular voodoo doctors turned presidents-for-life didn’t help either. Haiti sank in deeper as most of its people thrived under fear and poverty.

It was Voodoo that allows them to escape their harsh reality. So don’t wonder if it shares the same altar with Catholicism. For an average Haitian, lines to heaven are busy he might just need an alternative. A back up just in case the white man’s god has been sleeping.

We do all face the same music of suffering inspired by wars, greedy governments, debts, Outer banks foreclosures, family strife, loss of lives, battles with nature, etc. But life isn’t all magic. People need to get their acts together.

Things to do when the earth shakes

If there’s one piece of news that act like an appetite suppressant on a sunny Monday morning, this is it. The Big One is not here yet but here’s something to keep you on your toes. After all, I might be doing you a huge favor.

If you’re indoors:

- Stay inside
- Duck and take cover under a piece of heavy furniture or stand against an inside wall.
- Wait for the shaking to stop before you exit
- Stay away from doors and windows. It may either slam at you or suffer injuries when glasses break.
- Don’t take the elevator.

If you’re outside the house or building:

- Stay away from buildings, trees and power lines. Go to an open spot.
- Drop to the ground.

If inside the car:

- Drive to the nearest clear space
- Turn on emergency flashers on and slow to a stop. Don’t park over or under the bridge, nor beside any infrastructure that might fall on you.
- Beware of falling debris and loose live wires.
- Turn off the ignition and set the parking brake.
- Stay inside the car until the shaking stops.

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