We went there with a mission. I wanted to have an updated version of this old photo of Rizal Avenue Malabon as seen from the second floor of the old Municipio:
Circa 1962 (photo from Arch. Richard Bautista)
We succeeded not only in updating that 1962 street scene photo, we were able to take great pictures of the other vistas of Malabon as well.
RIZAL AVENUE MALABON TODAY. On the right side are two places I remember fondly from my St. James days: Betsy's Cake Center (with the red roof) and Nels-Ofel School Supplies (now Nels-Ofel Building with the red stripes). It just doesn't show up too well on this photo, but when we were up there, looking straight on Rizal Avenue, we were able to make out the building of Puregold in Monumento in the horizon. And on clearer days, our guide told us you could even see the condominium buildings being constructed by SM at North EDSA (Quezon City) as well as the SM Valenzuela mall.
The TANONG ELEMENTARY SCHOOL building on Leono Street is dwarfed by the Star J Mall beside it.
SAN BARTOLOME CHURCH with the Parish Office and Multipurpose buildings to its right, and ST. JAMES ACADEMY to its left -- two places that occupy a special corner in my heart for starting me on the road to learning and spirituality. In the distance you can also see the IGLESIA NI KRISTO Lokal ng Malabon located on General Luna Street.
The SAN BARTOLOME PARISH CEMETERY looks quite crowded already. I didn't know that one half of the cemetery is also allocated for the IMMACULATE CONCEPTION PARISH.
The newly constructed ORETA SPORTS CENTER at PLAZA RODRIGUEZ behind the City Hall. The Malabon Public Library is no longer located at the Plaza; it has transferred to the Barangay Catmon area. We heard that a general hospital will soon be constructed where the Puericulture Center was located. Across the river, you can also see the Navotas City Hall.
A close-up of the familiar arch of PLAZA RODRIGUEZ. This appears to be the only original structure and the only patch of green left in the Plaza.
SHIPYARDS across the river create an interesting tableau.
The MALABON-NAVOTAS BRIDGE. It's amazing to see that after you cross the river there's just a sliver of land and it's the Manila Bay already beyond it.
The MALABON PUBLIC MARKET. I have not been to this market in nearly two decades since we transferred residence from Bayan to Barangay Potrero. I should come back one of these days and find out how it has changed in 20 years.
At the MALABON CITY HALL ROOF DECK.
Thanks to Mr. Bong Padua, Chief of the Public Information Office of Malabon, and Mr. Ronnie Gumatay who accompanied us to the roof deck, we were able to experience seeing Malabon from a great vantage point.
I have to admit -- being up there and seeing a grand panorama of Malabon made me feel even more that, inspite of everything, this is the town my heart will always call "home."
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Great Pics Cecile! I wish more bloggers would come out and capture the towns and cities of Metro Manila. More details and clear and vivid pictures of historical and present day conditions surely help
ReplyDeleteThanks! It helps that our new City Hall gives us a good vantage point where we can enjoy a panoramic view of the city and my son was able to take great pictures.
DeleteI agree that such pictures will help future generations see how our towns and cities have evolved over the years. The old picture shown above, for instance, lets us see how Malabon's town center has changed in the past five decades.