Ayala Triangle Gardens

Coordinates: 14°33′23″N 121°1′25″E / 14.55639°N 121.02361°E / 14.55639; 121.02361

Ayala Triangle Gardens

View towards the northwest of Ayala Triangle Gardens
Type Urban park
Location Makati, Philippines
Area 2 hectares (20,000 m2)
Created 2009
Operated by Ayala Land
Status Opened
Website Ayala Triangle Gardens

The Ayala Triangle Gardens is a 2-hectare (4.9-acre) landscaped urban park in Makati, Metro Manila, Philippines. It is a triangular public garden and courtyard in the center of the Makati Central Business District. It was named after its owner and developer Ayala Land, and opened to the public in November 2009.[1] Inspired by Hyde Park in London, the park, which is dotted with palms, acacia trees, and tropical foliage, is considered as one of the few "green" areas in Makati.

The Triangle has become a focal point for social events in the business district, and is popular at Christmastime for its extravagant light-and-sound display.[2] It is also home to the Tower One and Exchange Plaza and Makati Stock Exchange Building, as well as the old Nielson Tower which houses the Filipinas Heritage Library.

History

The land of the present-day Ayala Triangle Gardens was once the 42-hectare (100-acre) Nielson Field, Manila's pre-World War II airport, located in the vast Hacienda de San Pedro de Macati of the Zóbel de Ayala family. When the airport was decommissioned in 1948 and transferred its present site in Nichols Field, the site was returned to the Ayalas and redeveloped as a commercial district.[3] The runways were converted into roads which now form the Triangle's boundaries: Ayala Avenue along its southwest; Paseo de Roxas along the north-northeast; and Makati Avenue to the east-southeast. Only the airport's control tower was preserved, and has since been converted into the Filipinas Heritage Library.

By 1971, the Ayala Corporation moved to its new headquarters in the Triangle at the Makati Stock Exchange Center building designed by National Artist for Architecture Leandro Locsin.[4] The rest of the Triangle was then transformed into the football field known as Ugarte Field, named after the Filipino football legend of the 1930s, Sebastian Ugarte. In the 1980s, Ugarte Field was the site of regular protests against the Marcos dictatorship.

Description

The Makati Avenue entrance of Ayala Triangle Gardens.

The Ayala Triangle Gardens is located in the Salcedo Village portion of Bel-Air Village by its border with San Lorenzo and Urdaneta Villages. Buildings on the Triangle include the old Makati Stock Exchange Center and Ayala Tower One (home of the Philippine Stock Exchange) along the Ayala Avenue side, and the old Nielson Tower that has since been converted into a library on the Makati Avenue side.

The park has over a hundred trees of several different types, including rain trees, golden palms, fire trees, kamuning and podocarpus. It contains several public art pieces created by Filipino artists Ovvian Castrillo-Hill and Ral Arrogante. At the northwest corner of the Triangle is a monument to assassinated opposition leader Benigno Aquino, Jr., designed by Anastacio Caedo and erected in 1986. Two other monuments can be found on the other corners of the Triangle: the Gabriela Silang monument at the southwest tip erected in 1971, and the Muhammad Kudarat monument at the northeast tip erected in 1973, both designed by sculptor José M. Mendoza.

A recent addition to the Triangle is the row of al fresco restaurants behind the Makati Stock Exchange building. The southwest corner of the Triangle also contains a parking lot just beside the old Nielson Tower. An 80,000-square-metre (860,000 sq ft) high-grade office is also planned to be constructed on one corner of the Triangle, as well as the new Mandarin Oriental Hotel to be built on the corner of Paseo de Roxas and Makati Avenue, opposite its old location.[5]

References

  1. "Ayala Triangle Gardens to be unveiled". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Archived from the original on 26 June 2012. Retrieved 8 June 2015.
  2. "Ayala sparkles with a million Christmas lights". Manila Bulletin. Archived from the original on 16 November 2014. Retrieved 8 June 2015.
  3. "Nielson Airport". Filipinas Heritage Library. Retrieved 8 June 2015.
  4. "Towers of power: Makati as financial center". Philippine Star. Retrieved 8 June 2015.
  5. "Ayala Land to spend add'l P65B to further develop Makati". Rappler. Retrieved 8 June 2015.
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