Monday, May 30, 2011

Rustic Appeal of Bricks and Wood

Recently we went out for a swim in Calamba, Laguna and then tried this posh eatery before going home. I thought it would be boring to have dinner here, but I was excited about some of its interior design details.


I've always been excited about bricks and wood when it comes to Pinoy architecture ideas. Again, it gives you a mountain cabin feeling even while you're in the midst of the hassle and bustle of the metropolis. And it's perfect for a touch and effect of antiquity and archaic eras. With the right blend and rendition, seeing bricks and woods in design takes you back centuries ago, with an air of the good old days when lolo and lola used to be young people.

Residential Interior Design: A Guide to Planning SpacesRecently we went to this classy restaurant along C5 road where I thought old-style spaghetti alone was served. I was wrong and shocked. I saw various delectable food items in the menu lineup. And the place was terrific! The interior managed to lend the place a measure of royalty. I took time to appreciate the wall antique decors on the corners of the ceiling, and together with the bricks and wood and the subdued lighting, everything looked elegant.

For HOUSEpinoy, there is subtle beauty and attraction in the right mix of bricks and wood and lighting. If you add to that the display of other antique furnishings--like the archaic steel chairs I saw in this restaurant--there suddenly comes an atmosphere of palatial wonder, like a flash of mansion scenes from the Spanish era. I also took notice of the sword, hatchets, shield, and the mosaic lamps--nice touches for a total medieval look.


Sustainable Commercial InteriorsI love bricks and wood in houses, too. There's always a rustic appeal created by the combination of the two elements. There's a fresh ambiance and the place seems cooler. And quite amazingly, there's always a touch of mystery about. I would love to line up my wood planked wall with my favorite books on an attached shelf. Then, perhaps, a fire place below where fresh meat can be grilled? Of course, this is in the vicinity of the kitchen and dining room. I love reading while cooking or eating.


My grandmother used to have those antique steel chairs with twisted steel bars for supports. I don't know what happened to them, but when I was a kid I used to enjoy sitting on them. My uncles would pile them one over the other and step on the topmost to reach something up the ceiling. They were handy antique chairs. This restaurant applied some upholstery on the sitting surface and that added to its elegance. I couldn't help but take pictures of them.

Bricks and wood and lighting and antiques. I'd consider them the next time I design an interior. The concept is not just for restaurants. I think it's also perfect for living and dining rooms, small lobbies, and vacation houses.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Showcase in Wood

Relishing the enchanting sight of wood, especially natural and polished wood! I'd always go for wooden furnishings and interior design elements, more than steel or plastic. Wood connects your inner urge for things natural and feeds the yearning for nature within.


This summer 2011, I went to different provinces in the Philippines. I was amused by the various interior designs in wood with the amazing unique imagination of their designers. Wood is really a great relaxing sight in edifices and a great break from the usual tiring sights of the city concrete jungle. I hope you enjoy this short showcase in wood. By the way, the photo above is a wooden dining set in a posh restaurant in Tagaytay.

The beauty of wood is that it reminds you of nature, and thus of the goodness of God. And all that amounts in one's soul refreshment. Concrete reminds you of man's technology. Well, sometimes, that's also nice to remember, but then you also think of how man's technology has been destroying ecology and nature and how an all-concrete city landscape has turned our metropolis into a huge oven.



Then you see wood in a design, and it immediately refreshes your mind like you get a good splash of cool mountain spring water on your face. The beauty of wood really evokes mental relaxation in you. Thus, when I see a sightful showcase in wood I have the tendency to give it a good look and even turn my head to look at it more. Like when we were in Tagaytay and there were these makeshift shops of wooden furniture along the road. Simply fascinating!

An amazing showcase in wood backgrounded in a scene of nature is even better. I was captivated by the scene above and had it taken--a wooden mountain cabin overlooking a background scene of Taal lake and adjacent hills. The sight helped you quickly switch to a pensive mood.



There was this rest room in one of Tagaytay's businesses we saw that featured a small manual water pump on its lavatory instead of a usual modern faucet. It was simply amazing. I wish to have something like that in my kitchen and bathroom. The lavatory itself was like one of those China wares my mom and grandma used to keep in their China cabinet. All around the room were wood designs reminding you of rustic settings.




And then there was this ceiling design made of rough but varnished tree branches placed horizontally like grills covering the ceiling. It was simple and yet it easily suggested an exotic ambiance. The side railings were also of rough but varnished branches, and the whole place overlooked some mountains in Tagaytay.

If you'd look at the dining table and chairs in the picture above, they are heavy, thick planks of wooden timber, polished and varnished. The effect was a wonderful appetite for grilled native food menus and natural fruit drinks, although the latter was not available. So we settled on bottled mineral water.



But this is not to say that wood is only good for a rustic and rural look. Wood also goes well with modern design, as we enjoyed it in our stay in one of Tagaytay's posh conference hotels--what I call Confetels. One look and the overall design made us feel at ease, ready to plunge on the cushioned beds. The darkly varnished wood furnishings matched with the light colors of the room. It created a light ambiance suggesting that you forget about the job you left behind in the city for a while.



Umm, that's my Word disciple, Toots, wondering why I was taking pictures of the toilet entrance. The rest room was comfy enough and the inserted study nook in the picture was perfect for conference delegates. Oh, and yes, I was delighted to see the wooden cabinet that smelled of mountain pines.

Wood is charming, more so when treated with artistic finesse. We should appreciate its quality more and apply it in Pinoy architecture designs, of course with a mind to continually preserving our forests. With structural members embedded in concrete or in ceilings and which are hidden from our sights, we need to opt for steel design. But with design elements naked to the eyes, we need to consider more the elegance of solid, polished wood.

Sunday, May 8, 2011

Bamboo's Refreshing Appeal

Whenever I see bamboo--tree, furnishing, or house--it has a refreshing appeal. There's an inner urge to go closer  to see it or try it if it's something built or constructed. Like a bamboo house. Bamboo houses are considered more an entertainment than an actual human abode in most places, but I think more bamboo human habitats ought to be built. Bamboo's refreshing appeal ought to change lots of moods for the better. And that means a better community.

It is observed that bamboo's refreshing appeal creates an atmosphere of:

  • Relaxation. At a glance, it powerfully suggests easement of activities, if not utter cessation. It quickly develops an atmosphere of resting, releasing positive energy and enhancing mental de-stressing. 
  • Putting defenses down. We're often alert about intellectual and emotional aggression against us, so more people have developed an always-ready defense mechanism wherever they are. But seeing bamboo furnishings or houses like the ones in the pictures sometimes can make us put down our guards for a while in appreciation. It is advisable to get some attractive bamboo furnishings in your areas of leisure  study, or where you meet clients.
  • Nationalism. Bamboos in the tropics can begin to cultivate a sense of nationalism in you, a quick pride in your heritage and culture, especially in Pinoy architecture ideas. And the good news is, it often brings out a positive kind of Filipinism.
  • Meditation. I note most people, when they step into a livable bamboo house or try a bamboo furniture, they immediately assume a pensive mood and then say, "Beautiful!" In that short moment of time they transform from being too mundane or material to being spiritual. At that short interval, they become artists appreciating intangible values.
  • Play. Even adults become children with their children.

Bamboo creates a sense of lightness in you and transfers that to your life experience in a glimpse. If you have a heavy heart and come in touch with bamboo, the heaviness often lifts up. I remember the cluster of bamboo in our school premise near a creek when I was a pupil. We'd often go there to refresh after a hectic class. Chemistry was a daunted subjected, and we wished we had it there by the bamboo cluster.


If you can't get along with your spouse, I suggest you both stay in a bamboo house built right beside your house. Spend your nights there. If your kid seems to have problems you cannot understand, get him a bamboo play house. If you have teens you have difficulty understanding, spend overnight camp outs with them in your bamboo house within your property. 

However, problems or no problems, bamboo is among God's gifts to make life happily simpler.

Rich Design Variations
It has lots of varying possible designs you can experiment with. You may render it arched, diagonal, vertical, horizontal, raw, polished, varnished, stripped, logged, matted, or treated with fire for durability and permanence. Some bamboo experts bend, arch and form bamboo in certain forms and make it stay permanently like that by treating with fire.

Some imaginative designers subtly combine bamboo with modern embroidery or upholstery, and the result is a more relaxing and beguiling look raised to the tenth power. I love a bamboo bed or sofa with thick white cushions on them. And if you render the pillows in native tropical design patterns, you have a superb relaxer home furnishing.

Every boy and girl loves bamboo play houses, and I plan to have one in my yard one day--for my boys and their future boys, Godwilling. And I can imagine a huge bamboo house with a large veranda a perfect place for holding my bible studies with my disciples.

25 + GIANT MOSO BAMBOO SEEDSIt's also advisable to grow bamboo trees in your yard. Having a small cluster would do. It's perfect for relaxing the mind and meditating especially when there's a gentle breeze blowing. Bamboo trees in harmony with the wind creates soothing chuckles.

Here in the Philippines, I think more people should have these houses in their yards. They're perfect not just for relaxation but also for all occasions. And I think interiors should have more of this wood as design feature. In an age of bolstering nationalism in Filipinos, this wood can greatly contribute to this end. If you have growing kids, it's good to expose them to things Filipino, even in the furnishing designs they see around them. We cannot under estimate the power of recall in kids' minds. The more they see native crafts and design elements, the better for their patriotism. These are Pinoy architecture ideas we should consider more.

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Bamboo and Wood in Design

Luring you to relax to the max.
I so love bamboo incorporated in architectural design. In fact, I prefer bamboo sofa sets to urban modern ones. I love bamboo anywhere in the house, even in toilet and bath, and especially in the kitchen. I also love it in bedrooms, especially mixed with modern furnishings. Bamboo and wood design are excellent accents for heavy-concrete architecture.

Architectural philosophy encourages balance and symmetry with contrast. This makes the overall impression stick to the mind and the recall effect impresses on people and makes them repeat the design in their own home projects. Contrast eliminates boredom and puts spice and life to the composition. Here, bamboo and wood in design proves very effective.

All-concrete is always an eye sore for me. When mixed with metal, it becomes a bit tolerable, especially if the metal is colored strikingly contrasting. But a triad mix of concrete, wood, and metal is altogether something else. It makes me want to rush into the edifice to see what's inside. It sparks up active interest.

Bamboo creates a vacation mood, an idea of rustic relaxation even if one is amid the hassle and bustle of city life. Better if the hardness of bamboo is made pliant by the sight of soft cushions or its simpler rendition to lengthy strips. Bamboo and wood in design lends life to the coldness and rigidity of concrete and metal.

A mix of concrete, metal, and wood is often the spice of design.
I would like to have my city house retain an out-of-town atmosphere, always having the air of a resort. To attain this, I would consider the presence of bamboo and wood in design, no matter how they are susceptible to termite attacks. I would even have an actual bamboo tree in a corner of my property, as well as other partially wooded corners. Bamboo trees create whispers of sounds indicative of rural breeze gently passing by. And I definitely would like to enjoy that in my city habitat all year round.

I believe city architects should well consider the above when designing urban abodes for the busy and stressed urbanite. To lessen the toll of work pressure and tension, architects have the duty to re-produce the peace and calm of the countryside in the work place and at home, or at least recommend the same to their clients, stressing their importance.

How to Build with Bamboo: 19 Projects You Can do at HomeAnd in this task, bamboo and wood in design would prove invaluable. In Deep Asia, bamboo always brings back time to the simple old days of our ancestors at the same time that we realize the needs of the present. Seeing bamboo puts us somewhat in a meditative mode. Deep Asians find the sight of bamboo and wood in design quite conducive to healthy and beneficial rumination of what is real, needful, and soul-satiating.

That's my ideal HOUSEpinoy--always putting hints of the province in your daily routine. Thus, I like gathering Pinoy architectural ideas I see around and composing them into a blog.

Friday, March 25, 2011

Varnished Wooden Post and Braces

It was simply beautiful!--smoothen wooden posts and braces in natural varnish supporting a native roof. I was in Rizal, Laguna the other day and I chanced upon this lovely open hut. It's overall impression was refreshing to see.

The wooden posts were unmilled tree timber. They were a great idea. They just cleared them of  nudges and branches and then cut the round timber in four. The one-fourth cuts were used as lateral posts and those with three-fourth cuts were used as corner posts.

The timber surface was smoothen and varnished and used as it is, mounted on a concrete pedestal and secured with machine bolts. Then, the braces were angled at the top supporting the bamboo roof rafter and beams. What really attracted me was how the wood finishing was treated. It looked romantically tropical, refreshing to the eyes and mind after you've been bored by modern city structures.

Homax 80099 No-Sag EasyGate Bracket Kit

We stayed there beneath the hut for 2 days, enjoying the cool mountain breeze freely coming in and out of the open rustic structure. Later, when it was raining so hard on that mountain top, the same hut gave us sufficient cover and warmth.

In the early morning, we were greeted by resident wild mountain birds and some mayas who lived in the nook and crannies of the hut bamboo ceiling. They played around, flying to and fro corners and small openings in the hut. How I wished all house pinoy concepts would have the feature.

Nearby was a huge three-level tree house, also of bamboo and nipa, but no varnish applied. Can we have this in the city? I hope so. These are things that calmed the soul. I hope the senseless cutting of huge mature trees in the city would stop. My friend, Dennis, told me of a recent attempt to cut down another mature mahogany tree somewhere in our area in Project 8 to probably give way to a townhouse or condo construction. Thank God in never materialize.

How to Build Treehouses, Huts and Forts

Dennis also told of mature Narra trees cut down somewhere just to give way to the construction of a subdivision gate.

I dream of a subdivision of varnished wooden posts and braces supporting nipa structures beside which lay 3-floor tree houses.

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Termite Tips

No, these are not tips for termites. These are tips on how to shoo them off. The Philippines, being a tropical country, has ubiquitous problems with termites. Here are some suggestions on how to interfere with termite activity:


  • Call a termite expert to treat your property BEFORE constructing any structure.
  • If structures already exist and they're infected, just the same, call in the experts for their advices and service. Ask for guarantee of their service.
  • Apply anti termite treatments on wooden structural materials.
  • But calling in termite experts is not enough. Watch out for tree branches connecting to your roof. They often serve as bridges where termites cross over. Prune such trees every 3 to 6 months.
  • Termites can also travel on concrete. They do this by making tunnels out of plastered soil at the corners of your wall. The tunnels are aimed towards a wooden portion of your structure. 
  • The trick is to expose termite passages to sunlight and air. They hate sunlight and air freely passing through their tunnels. Once you destroy and expose their tunnels they will abandon them.
  • To effectively prevent termites, use steel construction for your structural members, especially for ceiling and roof studs and frames. Make full use of concrete and PVC materials, too (like PVC door jambs). 
  • Avoid using immature, light-weight lumber. 
  • Keep your paper stocks, pictures, albums, stamp collections, and other items of paper or cardboard in sturdy Tupperware boxes that can be sealed. Don't keep them in your cabinets a long time. My sister lost a substantial amount of rare stamp collections to the termites last year because she kept it in her cabinet for years, forgetting about the possibility of termites.
  • Check your library often for termite signs.
Premise Foam Termiticide,termite Spray
Some people cut all the trees in their surroundings just to get rid of termites. Others cover the entire ground with concrete pavements. These are not advisable. We need Eco system balance to make our place really habitable. That means the existence of green and trees which neutralize excessive heat bouncing off from concrete walls and pavements.

A better alternative is to keep trees along the perimeter fence and to keep your structure in the center of your property, free from any contacts from trees. This, of course, along with safe soil anti termite treatments.

Friday, March 11, 2011

Gardens in Mass Housing

I'm not just talking about gardens in plazas or community centers. I'm talking about gardens right in the middle of crowded mass housing. We need to see more of this. Gardens not only accentuate concrete jungles but freshens and greens the scenery as well--the green that put life into the whole picture.


Garden and herbs can be started in simple hanging pots or makeshift plant boxes of wood crates or plastics or concrete. They can be placed on ledges at window jambs, or blank walls or any available space. The best option is to hang earthen or plastic pots or empty coconut shells on walls or sheds.

Urban gardens like this can alter somewhat the congested look of crowded mass housing and also refreshen the air a bit, besides being an added income earner or getting more veggie meal dishes on the family dinner table. If the pots or plant boxes holding them are painted, so much the better.

The sight of healthily spreading green shrubbery or spreading low vines or trees puts life into spaces and can even effect positive moods for people around them. Scientifically, plants add more oxygen and absorbs carbon monoxide in the air. Big, mature trees are highly responsible for this, but where they are impossible to be kept, small plants and low vines and spreading shrubbery can take their place.


Community Coops or associations can start this on their own and promote the project for others to follow. Then, the urban garden will bloom in no time. The local government can enter in to provide tips on how better to grow the plants and what organic methods of enriching them may be applied. In our times of terrible and often lethal air and environmental pollution, urban gardens are not anymore a choice. They are a must.

Indoor gardens are also encouraged, just make sure there are no extra water left in plant pots and inner leaves where mosquitoes can hatch eggs and propagate. Indoor gardens can be planted to herbs and veggies.

For trees--and you're really desperate to have them--bore a hole in your ground pavement until you reach the soil underneath. Then plant the tree there. Make sure the hole is wide enough to fit a mature trunk. Ipil trees or aratelis, bayabas, caimito, avocado, and the like are possible for this purpose.

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Zen Design for Mass Housing?

I love the concept of Zen design for houses in the Philippines, how the character of quietude and relaxation are impressed on the design. I hope they apply that to HOUSEpinoy or Pinoy architecture. Imagine cheap row housing or crowded neighborhoods having Zen designs.


Zen design is not just Japanese architecture. It's particularly interested about the Zen mindset. Zen is a meditative predisposition in Buddhism. While I was aiming for a first dan black belt in karate (in my high school years) I learned about Zen from the books of Masutatsu Oyama, the legendary karate master. Zen builds the power to overcome difficulties with a quiet spirit. This is done through Zen meditations. Thus, the Zen design in architecture fosters a meditative life. You look at it and you feel calm and relaxed.

Calm and relaxed should not be the prerogative of the rich alone, those with more than enough money to afford a Zen house design. The masses deserve them, too. It will be a great service if the Zen character could be applied in community planning and in each individual house design. The Zen look commands a tranquil response from the soul and spirit, a powerful suggestion to respect peace and quiet. If you put that quality into a crowded neighborhood, imagine the change in people's character and attitude.

Pinoy architecture ideas like this needs more careful study. Architecture should not be a privilege enjoyed only by the rich and moneyed (which is what Philippine architecture is often about), offering best design options to a clientle able to pay the price. It's time to sit down and formulate something beneficial to mass or crowded housing, and I don't mean just providing the masses with mere walls and roof.

A Zen atmosphere promotes study, discipline, and an inclination to arts and the humanities. No, it has no power to force these on us, but it helps set the mind to think deeper about life.

Life attitude is mostly about what we see around us, how our environs influence our surroundings. Tattered houses and dirty surroundings can affect the community mindset. But with a little bit of Zen design--plus other design concepts we usually give to the rich--our crowded communities can have a meaningful transformation, no matter how slight.

How to start this? There should be new model communities built, even "crowded" ones, with design concepts possessing a touch of the sophistication that the moneyed enjoy--like Zen design. Make them affordable, but make them truly model communities--not a deteriorating quality that only ends up tattered, just the same. Some special projects are made to look thus only at the start, for the sole purpose of impressive press releases. It should be something we can truly call Pinoy architecture, HOUSEpinoy, and Asian, not just an architecture of the few.

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Tip for Perfect Ventilation

There are rooms that lack sufficient ventilation, especially in compact houses where you find rooms sandwiched between rooms or built in the middle of the house. How do you make air circulate well so that such rooms wouldn't feel too hot to be in?

Install electric fans? You may get air that way but without enough openings to circulate fresh air in, you may end up getting sick with a respiratory ailment. Air conditioning? Yes, but brownouts will be your next problem. I've seen bedrooms like that and it's like hell in them especially during summer. No matter how small a bedroom is or how sandwiched by other rooms, try your best to have it well ventilated.

A well ventilated room is very important. If you're planning to put up a new bedroom make sure two of its walls face an open space where you can open windows. A room should have at least two windows. This is the best tip for ventilation.

Two openings on different sides of a room make air pass through it. The ideal condition is to have two windows opposite each other so air can easily enter your room and exit to the other opposite window. The next best thing is to have a window on a wall adjacent (but not on the same side) to a wall with a window. Having two windows on the same side will defeat the purpose of ventilation. Air will not pass through to enter your room.

If your room has only one window because all other walls are walls of another room, you may use the window of the room next to it. Apply an opening at the top of your windowless wall so that air can pass through and exit out the window of the other room. Just put wooden louvers or other decorative barriers on the opening.

The principle here is as simple as a can of liquid milk. If you put just one hole on the can and try to pour the milk out, it won't. But put two holes opposite each other and the milk flows out easily. The same with air in a bedroom. You need two windows on different sides.

For building small bedrooms in limited house areas, I recommend allowing small cut corners in each room to make way for a small opening for a window, aside from the main window--so you'd have two windows each room. It will reduce the area of the room, but it will mean better ventilation. In a bedroom, good ventilation is among the priority.

Poor Ventilation, Poor Life Quality

Poor ventilation means you get poor air circulation whenever you are in the room. If you sleep there, you'd feel lousy in the morning. Poor oxygen supply means less oxygen in the brain, and that means poor brain performance in school or at the office. It may also mean bad temperament--like, you'd get easily angry or disappointed.

Much later, poor ventilation affects your lungs and your overall health.

So, make sure your bedroom--and every living area in your house--gets perfect ventilation. Never mind if your house isn't the best looking in the neighborhood--as long as you breathe well in it.

Monday, March 7, 2011

Why Subdivisions are Getting Warmer


Paved Jungles And Tree Sheds


A growing number of townhouse and condo builders are hacking away at all the full-grown trees in subdivisions. I went to three subdivisions in Cavite and you wouldn't believe how extremely hot it was there--and Cavite is supposed to be a province! I noticed how there was not a tree in sight, save some small gardens in cute plant boxes here and there and hanging plants in pots. No wonder subdivisions are getting warmer.

Photo by Dillon Kydd on Unsplash.

Some people favor cutting tall, old trees to reduce the incidence of termite colonies. Okay, given that trees sometimes give sanctuary to termites. But there's got to be other better options than cut down old trees that took years, even centuries, to grow. I believe pest extermination is in possession of some modern science that simplifies the process and saves trees using organic substances. An example is using orange oil and aloe vera to kill termites without harming plants or trees. See here for more.


Here in Project 8 (QC), there were a lot of patches of forests with tall trees and bamboos when I was a kid. The streets here used to be cool even at noon and early afternoons because of the shade alongside roads provided by huge fruit trees, especially mango and coconut. Every frontage, sidewalk and backyard were planted with trees. We enjoyed this for years until the condo and townhouse developers came in and cut all the vegetation, foliage, greenery and what-have-you. There was a huge, towering and beautiful Nara tree at our street corner where wild birds nested and tweeted sweet, early morning songs to the neighborhood and early morning joggers. Now, I terribly miss that tree. I'm not surprised why subdivisions are getting warmer.

Our neighborhood used to be a haven for fruit-bearing trees, especially mangoes, caimitos, and coconuts. There was even a big Duhat tree. We regularly snacked on them when we were kids and they were easily accessible because all backyards had some kind of thickets bearing local fruits. Now they're gone and all kids today know is snack on junkfood. Most condo and townhouse developers think of is make money out of subdivisions. Not all of them, but a lot are just business people who do not care one bit about the environment. As a result, it's becoming so hot here in our area.

It's so ugly how concrete jungles have cleared out tall trees so that today the only protection from fierce sunlight are what shadows tall buildings cast in the hot mornings and afternoons. But even if you have these protections, the concrete walls and slabs all around create oven-like conditions that keep heat in and circulating till early evening, making the air and wind hot. Trees can neutralize the hot atmosphere where gases are trapped and produce cooler air for us because of their natural transpirating cooling effect--fresh oxygen is produced in addition to the vapors released from the leaves, creating a surrounding of cooling and protective sheds, so to say.
Trees also cool the air by a process known as ‘transpiration cooling‘. As trees release water into the atmosphere from their leaves via transpiration, the surrounding air is cooled as water goes from liquid to a vapor. The process is similar to evaporation pads used to cool greenhouses — except in trees, water moves into the tree’s roots from the soil and travels through the tree’s water-conducting system, eventually being transpired from the leaves. The water that is released in its gas vapor form has a cooling effect on the surrounding air. Source.
It's deadly how the concrete jungle mixes with the fumes coming out of vehicles. The result is tripled incidence of asthma and other respiratory diseases in our time, some experts extrapolate. Fumes and other air pollutants can be neutralized if there are lots of big and spreading trees around, but some developers hate all these. They want all the trees out of their sights. They put down what God creates and puts up their creations in place of it.

They think planting lawn grass and small shrubberies will compensate for all the mature trees they have killed. There's one mini subdivision here where the streets are so cleared of any tree. The only green living things you see are the manicured grass and small flowering plants in pots. The whole place looks and feels so hot in the day and night time, especially during summer.

And what I hate most about concrete jungles is the fact that wild birds lose their natural habitat. There aren't many butterflies and bees either nowadays. When I was young, our place was practically a haven for droves of butterflies of all sizes, shapes, and colors, of grasshoppers, dragonflies, and even strange insects. Now they're all gone. There used to be lots of frogs and bats, too.

It used to be when you could walk the streets here comfortably even during hot noontime. All you had to do was seek refuge in tree sheds which were present outside each house you passed by. Today, you have to bring an umbrella, and even with that, the heat still pesters a lot, even threatening a sunstroke. I miss those trees very badly.

What Should We Do?

Plant trees again? Probably, for the next generation. It takes at least 10 years to grow a tree to full maturity. And by all means, let's STOP all senseless cutting of trees, especially mature ones. I miss that Nara tree at our street corner. And if you're buying a new house, opt out of those which senselessly cut all the trees. It's a way of protesting against concrete jungles. Let's boycott treeless real estate. It's a way of teaching senseless developers lessons--because they understand only the language of money and profits. If they lose sales because we refuse to buy properties in concrete jungles, they will change strategy and start to preserve mature trees.

To fight global warming locally,  planting orchids and lawn grass and flowering plants in pots is NOT enough. What we need are full grown trees planted in our surroundings. We should wake up to the fact why subdivisions are getting warmer each time townhouse or condo units are put up. If not, what would happen to the lives of our kids in the future?

Friday, March 4, 2011

How About Feng Shui?

As Architecture students we were told to always consider counting the steps of our stairs when designing buildings. We must be particular that no step fell on mata when we checked the stair sequence using the oro, plata, mata formula. We were also reminded to consider superstitious beliefs of folks, like deciding where to face doors and windows and passageways.


Things like this--what others call feng shui considerations--are really the prerogative of the rich few. They are not Pinoy Architecture. As I have discussed in another article here, Pinoy Architecture should be defined more according to what the majority Filipinos--the masses--are apt to do with their houses and environs. Middle class and especially lower middle class Pinoys do not care about the number of steps they have at home, or where their doors and windows face. More so the marginally poor, the segment that dominates Filipino communities. As long as they have stairs to get them to the next higher floor, or doors to enter in and windows to get some air, they're content.

We should study these things more than pay much attention to construction superstitious beliefs that only a few care about. To really serve the greater majority--and formulate a truly Pinoy Architecture that masses of Pinoys really need--we should look for ways how to better improve what home features most Pinoys are limited to. We should conceptualize how to make them better, put some art into it, and offer it at a reasonable cost to them.

Have you been to really congested areas in the country where every nook and cranny is used up for residence purposes? If they have a mere 4X4 meter square area, they'd build a tall, lean tower of 5 to 6 floors on that space just to house all their family members and their furnishings in. Sometimes, they'd crowd in 5 to 6 different families there, with each family having some 5 to 6 members. An authentic Pinoy Architecture (HOUSEpinoy) should find ways to make this living condition better so that people would have more decent and comfy shelters.

How about feng shui considerations in design? Better yet, how about comfy considerations for the greater majority?

How to Solve a Windowless Room

With the lack of space almost everywhere, townhouses are often faced with the problem of a windowless room. Some in the real estate business are businessmen, not real architectural designers, so they don't bother thinking about how to solve a windowless room. They just want to make the whole thing look beautiful to make it sellable.

A windowless room happens when all sides of a room is adjacent to another room or a dead end. It has no side facing an open area. What most developers do is put air-conditioning. Now, when a brownout happens, or when the air conditioning unit breaks down, that's the only time the owner realizes the flaw of the room, and it's too late to complain about it. What do we do?

For rooms already there, the best thing to do is install a blower getting air from another room that has an ample window. Blowers are better than electric fans. During a brownout, make sure the blower is operational other than by electricity. Power it with a generator or car battery. So, that's one way how to solve a windowless room.

If you don't like that, how about converting that room into a storage area and then having another room constructed elsewhere facing an open area? In Quezon City, I saw someone convert his garage into a room and park his car on the sidewalk just outside their house. The problem is if the subdivision management suddenly decides to ban parked vehicles in the streets at night.


If a windowless room faces a dead end, like the property line, you may opt to cut back a little from your room  (something like 2X2 meters) just to provide space for an opening. Then you may place a window there. This works for both existing windowless rooms and rooms just about to be constructed. It's definitely a better way how to solve a windowless room.

Better yet, if you're still on planning stage and a windowless room seems inevitable, assign that room another function (like a storage or music room) and then construct your bedroom, in lieu of it, on a new floor. A better HOUSEpinoy tip. It's a little added expense, but you'd have better results than dealing with a windowless bedroom or converting your garage into your bedroom and kicking out your car into the streets.

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Amazing Dowel House

Wood dowel construction.
We were surveying land in Indang, Cavite in 1993 and we stayed there for 5 days. Indang was an amazing town, still rustic at the time we were there, with some houses dating back to the Japanese occupation. We enjoyed visiting lots of pineapple plantation where very old huts and wooden houses still stood, some of them built even in  Spanish times. I marveled at them.

We stayed in this old house, actually a two-level cabin, supposedly built during the Spanish occupation. The ground floor was of stone, the second floor of wood. The wood construction was fascinating. Everything was of dowel construction--no nails were used. Pretty much like tongue and groove construction. My engineer companion, owner of the ancestral house, told me to check for nailed joints, if I could see one. So I did.

I was so amazed! I didn't see any. It was my first time to see a house constructed without nails. Carpenters of old were experts at it, my engineer friend told me. The coming of the nail technology only made houses inferior, he added. I guess metal and wood don't mix well. They can only do temporarily, and sometimes with damaging effects eventually.
Dowel construction is an ingenious way of putting together construction members by means of dowels or wood pegs into holes in lieu of nails or screws. For instance, a hole is bored into member A. Member B is equipped with a dowel which is inserted into the hole made on member A. The fit must be accurate--not too loose, not too tight. The dowel is gradually inserted into the hole by gentle hammering, preferably with a rubber cushioned hammer head.

The cabin we stayed in was built near the end of the Spanish regime in the Philippines, almost during the American Period, but the house still stands firm. Even the window and door jambs, and the windows and doors themselves, were done using dowel construction. It was a shame that digital cameras were not yet around to take pictures of them.

Recently, I asked how the house was, and it's been dilapidated, one of the owners said. They might demolish everything and sell the property. I sighed deeply. I'm going to miss that house. I remember how it was awesome seeing its joints and frame members connected together by dowels. I never tired of looking at them.

Well, of course, the wood used then were sturdy and solid woods from mature timber. As I ran my fingers on the smooth wood surface, they felt like solid concrete. You can hardly make a dent or mark by scratching even with a sharp metal tool. It's near impossible to do the same construction quality now-a-days, my engineer friend opined. But I sure would like to own a mountain cabin made using dowel construction.

Later, I also saw furniture made on the spot without nails. Also jambs and doors and windows. Only dowels and tongues and grooves were used. It's fascinating to see carpenters use manual labor to make accurate dowels and holes to fit them in. No electric drills or anything like that.


Construction using welding is also good, so is the use of nails and screws, but I'd rather have my house done with the wood dowel system--if I had the money for it. There's a touch of mystery and history about houses of dowels, old or new.

Pinoy Architecture at the Grassroots


Despite the lack of space and limited budget, Pinoys are still able to build nice and cozy houses with fascinating interior designs. The first thing I take note when visiting homes is the spiritual ambiance, and then the ingenuity of the house design. Not just the design per se but the mood the design puts on you. It's easy to come up with good house designs. But I like watching how limited conditions were remedied with ingenuity and artistry, resulting in a nice and practical architecture. To me that's Philippine Architecture.

Photo above by Dianne Cabahug, Bantayan Island, Cebu, on Unsplash.

I also like seeing grand and posh edifices which people have come to know as Philippine Architecture. Master pieces of the renowned Pinoy masters. But what I like better is how Pinoys solve habitat problems, and habitat is not just house design but life that happens inside, and revolves around, the place of habitat. Things like family, religion, tradition, customs, spirit and character, relations, intimacy, neighborhood camaraderie (or kapitbahay culture) and the like, aside from the usual challenges in design like space, circulation, movement, and of course, the ubiquitous budget challenges. All that is Pinoy architectural ingenuity.



Like the extended family. A lot of people insinuate the impropriety of extended families, how one property should be habited by one family only, and that being the practice in the US, Pinoy families should follow suit. But like it or not, Pinoy family is often extended. That's how the typical family here is, at least at the grassroots. The wealthy minority can afford the 1:1 ratio, but that's not the "typical" Pinoy family. Being wealthy is not typical here. Grassroots is the typical.

But I do understand 1:1 advocates, those that espouse one house to one family. They'd rather preserve houses in their original look than have them extending yearly to give way to an expanding family. But Pinoy architectural ingenuity is exactly that attitude of inclusiveness, expressing itself in an inherent architectural character of ingenious and exhaustive space utility with extreme budget stretches. That's very Pinoy.

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Kapitbahay Culture

The kapitbahay culture is something other countries, especially the developed ones, cannot replicate, even in their Filipino communities. The culture is almost exclusive to the Philippines, finding something similar to it in other Asian countries. In few developing countries like the Philippines can this culture thrive because we have a lot of free time--we are genuinely freedom loving people. Free time with loved ones is so important to us which few companies here appreciate. And true Pinoy architectural ingenuity should always have the kapitbahay culture, or neighborhood camaraderie.

I love seeing this Pinoy culture blending with Pinoy life in Pinoy neighborhoods and homes, sometimes even given leeway in raw, innate, and unsophisticated architectural designs. Have you seen how houses are interconnected by alleys and narrow passages (iskinita) or secret rooms? Or family or clan houses clustered in compounds? I've seen how houses are so closely built together that residents on the second floor cross over to the other houses by merely stepping out of their windows, walking on a roof and then into their neighbor's window. It seems crude and ridiculous, but if given enough study, philosophy, and art--or sophistication, in other words--it can turn out a good, even modern 21st century, architectural design uniquely Pinoy.

It's like football, or baseball, or soccer. They seem classy sports to play because of their sophistication, with uniforms, gears, rules and teams. But you strip them of their complexities and you'd find them no different from our native piko or shato or patintero. If we just love our Pinoy-ness more and give our native games more study, philosophy, organization and art (give it uniforms, rules, playing field, showbiz backing, and commercial sponsors), they'd easily rank with internationally acclaimed sports like basketball. The same is true with Pinoy architectural ingenuity--and Filipino martial arts.

Some people say our crude construction methods are only good for squatter colonies. They say we should learn how to build properly. By how to build properly, they mean doing what they see westerns are doing. Well, that's western, and they have indeed brought western architecture to the Philippines. But that will never amount to a Pinoy architecture. Because Pinoy architecture will always be defined by what the greater masses of Pinoys are building in their country. Just like how new Filipino words are added to the language. When a word is used widely by the masses, it is added in our dictionary.

I hope, one day, somebody would come up with the idea of giving more study, philosophy, and art to authentic Pinoy architectural ingenuity, which is grassroots and with a kapitbahay culture.

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