Marcos Mansions in Baguio: Future Tourism Sites?
Perhaps every original
Baguio City resident marveled at the once-grandiose mansions of the
Marcoses here. By all indications, they were posh. What is to become of
these mansions? Some local government officials here are considering the
idea of turning these into tourism sites.
BY ACE ALEGRE
Bulatlat

DETERIORATING: The “Ferdinand-Imelda” mansion in Baguio City
PHOTO BY ACE ALEGRE
BAGUIO CITY – Perhaps
every original Baguio City resident marveled at the once-grandiose
mansions of the Marcoses here. By all indications, they were posh.
Four mansions owned by the Marcos family are clustered in the vast rolling
hills of around five hectares, one for the Marcos couple Ferdinand and
Imelda; one for Imee, now Ilocos Norte congresswoman; one for Ferdinand
Jr. or Bongbong, now Ilocos Norte’s governor and another for Marcos’
mother Doña Josefa. They are nestled along a scenic hill overlooking the
mining town of Itogon along Outlook Drive here and only a stone’s throw
away from the Mansion House, the president’s official residence.
But little did Baguio residents know of these mansions – they know only
that these were sequestered in 1986 by the Presidential Commission on Good
Government (PCGG) and have been lying there idle, almost ruined. Only
security guards “take care” of these mansions, said Beatriz Balugas who
since 2000 has been living in Imee’s mansion with the PCGG guard, her
son-in-law, across number 44 – the “Ferdinand-Imelda” mansion.
Although these mansions then looked grand amid the pine trees, they are in
a state of deterioration 20 years after Marcos was ousted. “Sayang”
(What a waste), was Balugas’ ready comment on what had happened.
Lawyer Ernest Jay Miguel, director for legal affairs of the PCGG, said
they too had misgivings about how government took care of the sequestered
assets of the Marcos family here.
One of the mansions, that of Doña Josefa, has reportedly been sold to San
Miguel Corporation’s Eduardo Cojuangco, but the other three are gathering
moss and are simply rotting.
On the eve of the 34th anniversary of the declaration of martial law, City
Councilor Perlita Chan-Rondez wrote the PCGG through Miguel asking for the
status of the Marcos mansions in Baguio.
She told Miguel that the tourism committee that she heads at the city
council is thinking of several proposals for the use of these mansions “in
line with the city’s goal to provide family-oriented tourism.” Several
months ago, Rondez proposed that the city council request the PCGG to
“transfer ownership of all sequestered Marcos properties” in Baguio to the
city government.
The woman councilor, also a lawyer, observed that these properties,
particularly the mansions, “are just being sold to private entities, which
for the most part will only personally benefit them and not the whole
Baguio City.”
Balugas said these mansions worth millions of pesos are just rotting. But
one cannot just enter the mansions, said Balugas, without the permission
of the PCGG.
Rondez had invited Miguel to visit Baguio City to conduct an ocular
inspection of the mansions and to have a dialogue regarding the
possibilities of turning these over to the city.
Baguio Tourism Council head Anthony de Leon, manager of the posh Baguio
Country Club, agreed with the proposal of Rondez.
De Leon is upbeat about adding more to the list of “must-see” sites in
Baguio City. Although the city remains the “vacation and summer capital of
the Philippines,” De Leon said, there is stiff competition between
destinations nowadays, thus a challenge for stakeholders in Baguio’s
tourism business to improve and innovate. “We need more tourist
destinations,” he said.
Acquiring the mansions will compliment the rehabilitation of parks
including the popular Mines View Park, which is just a stone throw away.
These are all part of rebuilding Baguio City’s image as “vacation
capital,” he explained.
Although Rondez admitted that she has yet to come up with definite plans
regarding the mansions if and when it is turned over to the city, she
wishes that in the future the so-called “opulence” that characterized the
Marcos lifestyle could redound to the benefit of the city’s tourism.
Bulatlat
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