Saturday, January 14, 2012


The illustrious Roces ancestral house

By BIBSY M. CARBALLO
January 11, 2012, 9:29am
What was once the ancestral house of the illustrious Roces clan is now an elegant commercial building that houses a coffee shop and an art gallery.
What was once the ancestral house of the illustrious Roces clan is now an elegant commercial building that houses a coffee shop and an art gallery.
MANILA, Philippines — We had always wondered about Peachy Roces Prieto, a friend we had lost touch with. She lived in Paris for a while, and in Baguio where she operated a restaurant called Café Amapola. The place was famous for its food, of course, but its arty ambience was also a major attraction.
Well, two months ago, we did an interview with her husband Briccio Santos, the new head of the Film Development Council of the Philippines (FDCP). He mentioned in passing that his wife had acquired an old house in Malacañan. It belonged to the Roces family and Peachy has turned it into a dining place called Casa Roces.  The place now houses a café called Kape Chino and an art gallery called Galeria Roces. Not long after, we attended a dinner party for the Italian Film Festival officials at Casa Roces. So we finally got to see dear Peachy. Her hair has turned silver gray and she’s now a few pounds heavier. But she’s amazingly lovely as ever.
Casa Roces is an old house fronting the Palace at corner J.P. Laurel and Aguado in Manila’s San Miguel district. We were determined to see Casa Roces again and we asked Singapore-based architect Manolet Garcia to accompany us for lunch one Sunday.  When we arrived, diners were chattering away while enjoying the food at Kape Chino on the ground level. The official food concessionaire, Cravings, has a selection of delicious Filipino, Spanish and Basque cuisine all of which are priced reasonably.
Peachy has turned over operations to her daughter Bianca Prieto Santos, whose cousin Tono Versoza is in charge of Galeria Roces on the second floor. Bianca says it was Architect Tina Bonoan and designer Al Caronan who came up with the concept for Casa Roces. It took nine months to refurbish the place. The original house, which was designed during the Art-Deco era, had its central focus on the grand staircase with senorita steps. Bianca says, “We refurbished it in line with the Commonwealth Era, to match our neighbor, which is the Malacañan Palace.”
We like the comfortable casual and homey look of the place. It is not a fine dining place. There is no dress code (just dress decently). “Like every home, it is never truly finished, and it continues to be a loving work in progress,” says Bianca. “As such, the place is constantly evolving, especially when we discover nice accents, plants and artworks. We envision Casa Roces as a vibrant venue infused with culture and heritage.”
Much of the materials and accessories in the house are original, particularly the machuca tiles and flooring. The bulk of the work came in the form of electrical rewiring and plumbing. Likewise, the bedrooms on the second floor were turned into private function rooms. Concrete walls were replaced with glass walls to bring in natural light.
“The location, view, design, history and content are the aspects that set Casa Roces apart,” continues Bianca, pointing out that its perimeter dining rooms look out directly at Malacañan Palace. “Family members share treasures such as photographs, artworks and awards that highlight various events in Philippine history.  The restaurant is a throwback in time, combining modern day amenities to give diners comfort, and the lounge appeal during their visit to Casa Roces.”
We toured the place and the architect in Manolet had to peek into every nook and cranny in admiration of the work of refurbishing. Our personal interest was in the little touches that bought us back to our first job as a journalist at The Manila Times on Florentino Torres. Pictures and illustrations of Don Chino Roces decorated the walls of Kape Chino; Manila Times repros were found all around. And of course the old Newsboy metal statue on Florentino Torres has now found its finally permanent home.

Corona assets worth P200M’


19 properties allegedly undeclared

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UNIT 31B THE COLUMNS, Ayala Avenue cor. Buendia 48 sq m, P6,000,000. NIÑO JESUS ORBETA
Land titles show a spate of acquisitions of prime real estate by Chief Justice Renato Corona and his family as late as 2010.
Documents of the Land Registration Authority (LRA) obtained by the Inquirer from unimpeachable sources showed that 19 properties were registered under the name of Corona, his wife Cristina, their daughters Charina and Carla, and the latter’s husband Constantino Castillo.
Spread across four cities in Metro Manila—Makati, Taguig, Marikina and Quezon City—the 19 properties, including condominium units in the most prestigious addresses, have an estimated total area of 5,880 square meters and current market value of P202.2 million.
The combined area of nearly 6,000 sq m is roughly equivalent to 326 housing units under the government’s socialized housing program.
The 19 properties are among the 45 properties that the House prosecution panel disclosed on Thursday as among the questionable assets that the impeached Chief Justice did not declare in his statement of assets, liabilities and net worth (SALN).
The 11-member House prosecution panel has asked the Senate impeachment court to subpoena documents on the 45 properties during the impeachment trial that opens on Monday.
Corona is charged with culpable violation of the Constitution, betrayal of public trust, and graft and corruption contained in eight articles of impeachment.
The properties in Taguig, Makati and Quezon City were acquired between 2004 and 2010.
Prior to his appointment to the high court, Corona served as Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo’s chief of staff in 2000 when she was Vice President, and as her spokesperson in 2001 when she became President. He was appointed to the high court in 2002 and as Chief Justice on May 12, 2010, which was questioned as a “midnight appointment.”

38B BELLAGIO 1, Fort Bonifacio, Taguig City, 303 sq m, P30,000,000. JOSEPH AGCAOILI
If you can find them…
The embattled Corona had taunted his accusers on Thursday, saying: “If you can find [the properties], you can have them.”
But copies of Copies of Transfer Certificates of Title and Condominium Certificates of Title issued by the LRA and obtained by the Inquirer showed condominium units and houses and lots registered in the names of the Corona family members.
In Taguig, host to a number of upscale condominium developments, the family has titles to three luxurious properties, including a 203-sq-m lot at Block 16, Fairgreen corner Pinecrest Streets, in McKinley Hill valued at P16 million. The deed of sale for this property, dated Oct. 21, 2008, is in the name of Charina Corona, with her father as attorney-in-fact.
In its website, Megaworld described McKinley Hill as its “vision of a world-class enclave” in a 50-hectare township featuring a residential block of houses, garden villas and condominiums, a retail complex, a cyberpark and international schools and embassies.
Another Taguig property is a 113.02-sq-m condominium unit at 1902 Spanish Bay Tower, Bonifacio Ridge, registered in the name of the Chief Justice’s wife Cristina. Valued at P10 million, the 2-bedroom unit on the 19th floor comes with a parking slot acquired on Nov. 29, 2005.
Bonifacio Ridge, a project of the Ayala-led Fort Bonifacio Development Corp., is located near the Manila Golf Course and consists of two 18-story towers.
The third Taguig property is the 303.5-sq-m penthouse condominium unit, with three parking slots of 12.5 sq m each, at Bellagio I, which the prosecutors earlier disclosed in a press conference. The deed of absolute sale was signed by Cristina and Renato Corona on Dec. 16, 2009.
The prosecutors earlier said Corona acquired the property for P14 million. Its current market value is pegged at P30 million. A regular Bellagio unit today reportedly costs P100,000 per square meter.
The Columns

1902 SPANISH BAY TOWER, Fort Bonifacio, 113 sq m, P10,000,000. CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
A new property in Makati is identified as a 48-sq-m, one-bedroom condo (Unit 31B) with one parking slot at the Ayala-owned The Columns on Ayala corner Buendia Avenues. Registered in the names of the Corona couple, it has a market value pegged at P6 million.
It was acquired on Oct. 1, 2004, two years after Corona’s appointment as associate justice in 2002.
The Columns is a residential and commercial complex composed of three 42-story towers. Located near the Makati central business district, it is said to have a huge recreational club “with swimming pool, gym and sauna, function rooms, garden and barbecue area, daycare with indoor and outdoor play area, game room, communal wine cellar.”
La Vista (5 properties)
In Quezon City, the Corona family has titles to five properties, the biggest of which is a 1,200-sq-m house and lot in the posh La Vista Subdivision.
Valued at P72 million, and the priciest of the 19 properties covered by LRA documents, the property is under the name of Carla Corona Castillo and acquired on Nov. 9, 2010, or a few months after Arroyo appointed her father Chief Justice.
La Vista is also home to Arroyo, now a Pampanga representative and under hospital arrest on charges of electoral sabotage.
There is also a 819-sq-m property in Diliman, Quezon City, with a market value of P12.5 million, which is under the name of Carla’s husband Constantino Castillo. It was acquired on March 17, 2009.
Also under Castillo’s name is a 350-sq-m property in Cubao, Quezon City, worth P7 million and acquired on Feb. 23, 2004.
Two other pieces of real estate in Diliman, Quezon City, are registered under the names of Renato and Cristina Corona—a 630-sq-m property valued at P10 million and acquired on Oct. 23, 1995, and a 514-sq-m property valued at P7 million and acquired April 5, 1971.
The Corona couple are also registered owners of seven properties in Marikina Heights, all acquired in one day—Sept. 24, 1984.

1/BLOCK 16 MCKINLEY HILL, Fort Bonifacio, 203 sq m P16,000,000. CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
The sizes of the Marikina Heights properties range from 203 sq m to 328 sq m, and have a total area of 1,903 sq m. Their combined current market value is P25.7 million.
Mortgaged properties
On Thursday, the House prosecution panel through Iloilo Rep. Niel Tupas Jr., lead House counsel, and Mario Bautista, lead private prosecutor, asked the Senate impeachment court to subpoena the Corona couple, their two children and son-in-law, as well as the documents pertaining to the 45 properties.
Attached to the prosecution’s request was a letter dated Jan. 10 from LRA Administrator Eulalio Diaz III and sent to Tupas. It contained the numbers of the documents “relative to the real estate properties registered in the name of Renato Corona et al.”
Of the 45, three were listed in the name of “National Housing Authority, Burgundy Realty Corp. and Ismael Mathay Jr. et al.”
A source privy to the prosecution panel’s evidence said this could be because the properties were mortgaged.
But Marikina Rep. Romero Quimbo said the three titles could be traced back to the Coronas. He said this was why the titles still appeared on the LRA list.
All the supposed properties of the Corona family will be used in prosecuting Article 2 of the impeachment complaint, which concerns Corona’s SALN.
The prosecution panel had earlier said that Corona’s last SALN was in 2002, and that this could mean possible unexplained wealth.
Article 2 will be handled by Tupas, a former junior partner of Belo Gozon Elma Asuncion & Lucila offices; Pangasinan Rep. Marilyn Primicias-Aggabas, a former trial lawyer; and Dasmariñas City Rep. Elpidio Barzaga Jr., a practicing certified public accountant, lawyer and bar reviewer in civil law in 1983-1992, before he ran for Congress in 2007.
Absurdity
Bayan Muna Rep. Neri Colmenares, a member of the prosecution panel who has previously released his SALN, challenged Corona and other Supreme Court justices to do so as well.
Colmenares said the high court’s statement that the justices were not releasing their SALN because they could be kidnapped was “absurd.”
“Kidnappers don’t go around looking at the SALN of their victims before they kidnap them. This kind of reasoning means all public officials can refuse to submit their SALN on the flimsy ground that, like justices of the Supreme Court, they can also be kidnapped,” he said.
Colmenares said the nonrelease of SALNs was a violation of Section 17, Art. XI of the Constitution and of Republic Act No. 6713, which state that public officers or employees shall, upon assumption of office and as often thereafter, submit a declaration under oath of their SALN.
He said the high court’s insistence that justices, unlike all other public officials, were exempted from the constitutional and statutory provision was “absurdly self-serving.”
Colmenares’ latest SALN showed a net worth of P700,000.
“I live in a 59-sq-m, one-bedroom home in a low-cost housing unit in Sauyo (Novaliches, Quezon City) and drive a second-hand 2003 Revo. We have a dilapidated 13-year-old, secondhand 1998 Nissan Sentra,” the lawmaker said.
“In case spin doctors plan to concoct stories against prosecutors like me, they can visit my house in Sauyo any time,” he said.
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UNIT 31B THE COLUMNS, Ayala Avenue cor. Buendia 48 sq m, P6,000,000. NIÑO JESUS ORBETA
Land titles show a spate of acquisitions of prime real estate by Chief Justice Renato Corona and his family as late as 2010.
Documents of the Land Registration Authority (LRA) obtained by the Inquirer from unimpeachable sources showed that 19 properties were registered under the name of Corona, his wife Cristina, their daughters Charina and Carla, and the latter’s husband Constantino Castillo.
Spread across four cities in Metro Manila—Makati, Taguig, Marikina and Quezon City—the 19 properties, including condominium units in the most prestigious addresses, have an estimated total area of 5,880 square meters and current market value of P202.2 million.
The combined area of nearly 6,000 sq m is roughly equivalent to 326 housing units under the government’s socialized housing program.
The 19 properties are among the 45 properties that the House prosecution panel disclosed on Thursday as among the questionable assets that the impeached Chief Justice did not declare in his statement of assets, liabilities and net worth (SALN).
The 11-member House prosecution panel has asked the Senate impeachment court to subpoena documents on the 45 properties during the impeachment trial that opens on Monday.
Corona is charged with culpable violation of the Constitution, betrayal of public trust, and graft and corruption contained in eight articles of impeachment.
The properties in Taguig, Makati and Quezon City were acquired between 2004 and 2010.
Prior to his appointment to the high court, Corona served as Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo’s chief of staff in 2000 when she was Vice President, and as her spokesperson in 2001 when she became President. He was appointed to the high court in 2002 and as Chief Justice on May 12, 2010, which was questioned as a “midnight appointment.”

38B BELLAGIO 1, Fort Bonifacio, Taguig City, 303 sq m, P30,000,000. JOSEPH AGCAOILI
If you can find them…
The embattled Corona had taunted his accusers on Thursday, saying: “If you can find [the properties], you can have them.”
But copies of Copies of Transfer Certificates of Title and Condominium Certificates of Title issued by the LRA and obtained by the Inquirer showed condominium units and houses and lots registered in the names of the Corona family members.
In Taguig, host to a number of upscale condominium developments, the family has titles to three luxurious properties, including a 203-sq-m lot at Block 16, Fairgreen corner Pinecrest Streets, in McKinley Hill valued at P16 million. The deed of sale for this property, dated Oct. 21, 2008, is in the name of Charina Corona, with her father as attorney-in-fact.
In its website, Megaworld described McKinley Hill as its “vision of a world-class enclave” in a 50-hectare township featuring a residential block of houses, garden villas and condominiums, a retail complex, a cyberpark and international schools and embassies.
Another Taguig property is a 113.02-sq-m condominium unit at 1902 Spanish Bay Tower, Bonifacio Ridge, registered in the name of the Chief Justice’s wife Cristina. Valued at P10 million, the 2-bedroom unit on the 19th floor comes with a parking slot acquired on Nov. 29, 2005.
Bonifacio Ridge, a project of the Ayala-led Fort Bonifacio Development Corp., is located near the Manila Golf Course and consists of two 18-story towers.
The third Taguig property is the 303.5-sq-m penthouse condominium unit, with three parking slots of 12.5 sq m each, at Bellagio I, which the prosecutors earlier disclosed in a press conference. The deed of absolute sale was signed by Cristina and Renato Corona on Dec. 16, 2009.
The prosecutors earlier said Corona acquired the property for P14 million. Its current market value is pegged at P30 million. A regular Bellagio unit today reportedly costs P100,000 per square meter.
The Columns

1902 SPANISH BAY TOWER, Fort Bonifacio, 113 sq m, P10,000,000. CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
A new property in Makati is identified as a 48-sq-m, one-bedroom condo (Unit 31B) with one parking slot at the Ayala-owned The Columns on Ayala corner Buendia Avenues. Registered in the names of the Corona couple, it has a market value pegged at P6 million.
It was acquired on Oct. 1, 2004, two years after Corona’s appointment as associate justice in 2002.
The Columns is a residential and commercial complex composed of three 42-story towers. Located near the Makati central business district, it is said to have a huge recreational club “with swimming pool, gym and sauna, function rooms, garden and barbecue area, daycare with indoor and outdoor play area, game room, communal wine cellar.”
La Vista (5 properties)
In Quezon City, the Corona family has titles to five properties, the biggest of which is a 1,200-sq-m house and lot in the posh La Vista Subdivision.
Valued at P72 million, and the priciest of the 19 properties covered by LRA documents, the property is under the name of Carla Corona Castillo and acquired on Nov. 9, 2010, or a few months after Arroyo appointed her father Chief Justice.
La Vista is also home to Arroyo, now a Pampanga representative and under hospital arrest on charges of electoral sabotage.
There is also a 819-sq-m property in Diliman, Quezon City, with a market value of P12.5 million, which is under the name of Carla’s husband Constantino Castillo. It was acquired on March 17, 2009.
Also under Castillo’s name is a 350-sq-m property in Cubao, Quezon City, worth P7 million and acquired on Feb. 23, 2004.
Two other pieces of real estate in Diliman, Quezon City, are registered under the names of Renato and Cristina Corona—a 630-sq-m property valued at P10 million and acquired on Oct. 23, 1995, and a 514-sq-m property valued at P7 million and acquired April 5, 1971.
The Corona couple are also registered owners of seven properties in Marikina Heights, all acquired in one day—Sept. 24, 1984.

1/BLOCK 16 MCKINLEY HILL, Fort Bonifacio, 203 sq m P16,000,000. CONTRIBUTED PHOTO
The sizes of the Marikina Heights properties range from 203 sq m to 328 sq m, and have a total area of 1,903 sq m. Their combined current market value is P25.7 million.
Mortgaged properties
On Thursday, the House prosecution panel through Iloilo Rep. Niel Tupas Jr., lead House counsel, and Mario Bautista, lead private prosecutor, asked the Senate impeachment court to subpoena the Corona couple, their two children and son-in-law, as well as the documents pertaining to the 45 properties.
Attached to the prosecution’s request was a letter dated Jan. 10 from LRA Administrator Eulalio Diaz III and sent to Tupas. It contained the numbers of the documents “relative to the real estate properties registered in the name of Renato Corona et al.”
Of the 45, three were listed in the name of “National Housing Authority, Burgundy Realty Corp. and Ismael Mathay Jr. et al.”
A source privy to the prosecution panel’s evidence said this could be because the properties were mortgaged.
But Marikina Rep. Romero Quimbo said the three titles could be traced back to the Coronas. He said this was why the titles still appeared on the LRA list.
All the supposed properties of the Corona family will be used in prosecuting Article 2 of the impeachment complaint, which concerns Corona’s SALN.
The prosecution panel had earlier said that Corona’s last SALN was in 2002, and that this could mean possible unexplained wealth.
Article 2 will be handled by Tupas, a former junior partner of Belo Gozon Elma Asuncion & Lucila offices; Pangasinan Rep. Marilyn Primicias-Aggabas, a former trial lawyer; and Dasmariñas City Rep. Elpidio Barzaga Jr., a practicing certified public accountant, lawyer and bar reviewer in civil law in 1983-1992, before he ran for Congress in 2007.
Absurdity
Bayan Muna Rep. Neri Colmenares, a member of the prosecution panel who has previously released his SALN, challenged Corona and other Supreme Court justices to do so as well.
Colmenares said the high court’s statement that the justices were not releasing their SALN because they could be kidnapped was “absurd.”
“Kidnappers don’t go around looking at the SALN of their victims before they kidnap them. This kind of reasoning means all public officials can refuse to submit their SALN on the flimsy ground that, like justices of the Supreme Court, they can also be kidnapped,” he said.
Colmenares said the nonrelease of SALNs was a violation of Section 17, Art. XI of the Constitution and of Republic Act No. 6713, which state that public officers or employees shall, upon assumption of office and as often thereafter, submit a declaration under oath of their SALN.
He said the high court’s insistence that justices, unlike all other public officials, were exempted from the constitutional and statutory provision was “absurdly self-serving.”
Colmenares’ latest SALN showed a net worth of P700,000.
“I live in a 59-sq-m, one-bedroom home in a low-cost housing unit in Sauyo (Novaliches, Quezon City) and drive a second-hand 2003 Revo. We have a dilapidated 13-year-old, secondhand 1998 Nissan Sentra,” the lawmaker said.
“In case spin doctors plan to concoct stories against prosecutors like me, they can visit my house in Sauyo any time,” he said.