Eat, pray, shop, (vote): Malls new town plazas | Lifestyle.INQ

OCTOBER 27, 2022

This picture taken on June 21, 2015 shows a mass wedding held inside a shopping center in Manila. With their functions expanding from shopping and dining to venues for Catholic mass, Zumba workouts or even weddings, experts say malls are taking on a more important role at the heart of communities. AFP PHOTO
This picture taken on June 21, 2015 shows a mass wedding held inside a shopping center in Manila. With their functions expanding from shopping and dining to venues for Catholic mass, Zumba workouts or even weddings, experts say malls are taking on a more important role at the heart of communities. AFP PHOTO
This picture taken on June 21, 2015 shows a mass wedding held inside a shopping center in Manila. With their functions expanding from shopping and dining to venues for Catholic mass, Zumba workouts or even weddings, experts say malls are taking on a more important role at the heart of communities. AFP PHOTO

As she eyes the colorful ice creams on offer at a Baskin-Robbins outlet in one of Manila’s most luxurious shopping centers, teenager Jamie Gamboa admits to being an incurable mall rat but not only for the shopping.

 

“It is the only place where you can just walk around without having to spend, and there are a lot of things to entertain us,” said the petite 16-year-old, surrounded by a gaggle of friends.

 

“We tried other places but it’s more of a hassle. In parks, there isn’t enough to do. A museum or a zoo isn’t a place you go to more than once.”

 

With their functions expanding from shopping and dining to venues for Catholic Mass, Zumba workouts or even weddings, [And soon, voting–Ed.] experts say malls are taking on a more important role at the heart of communities.

 

Filipino life traditionally revolved around a public square, with a church, local government building and market attached, where adults socialized and children played, according to urban planner Felino Palafox.

 

But while malls have long been a mainstay of urban Manila—the capital has at least 153 peppering its skyline—the neon-lit consumer temples are now sweeping across the country, penetrating even rural areas.

 

Losing lungs of city

 

“They have replaced the public plazas as gathering places,” Palafox said.

 

As population has boomed in recent decades, soaring from 68 million in 1995 to 100 million in 2015, creeping urbanization has magnified the appeal of malls to residents and businesses alike.

 

But this has come at the expense of green spaces, left languishing through neglect, short-sightedness and poor urban planning.

 

“We are losing the lungs of the city,” said Palafox.

 

Provincial grocer Wendy Tan remembers how she and her friends used to play in the sprawling, verdant plaza in Mambusao, a town of about 38,000 people.

 

But as the park deteriorated over time, the locals searched for the next best thing: A spanking new, 300-hectare air-conditioned shopping mall in Roxas City, about an hour’s drive away.

 

No more tall trees

 

“There are no more tall trees. No more fountains. There is no more shade so it is too hot,” she said.

 

So the mall developers stepped in, sometimes even leasing green spaces to build retail complexes.

 

Noted Jorge Mojarro, a Spanish Ph.D. student studying Philippine culture: “(People) know very well that the government is not delivering services so they address those. If the government does not create public spaces, they will build public spaces.”

 

He added: “It is not that Filipinos do not like parks. They are just not being offered parks.”

 

Safer than streets

 

But many Filipinos don’t seem to mind, seeing malls as a way to relax in cool surroundings and safer than the streets. The crime rate remains high in Manila, despite police figures showing a fall nationwide.

 

Jacqueline Luis, a 48-year-old mother of three, says malls are a sanctuary for her family away from the tropical heat and traffic-choked thoroughfares of the urban metropolis.

 

“You can let the (kids) go to the amusement center or watch a movie while you shop. And then you can all just meet up at the same place later,” she said.

 

Even the smallest towns are trying to attract malls.

 

Dean Villa, mayor of Larena, on the tiny island of Siquijor, has entered into a joint venture with a private firm to develop a mall in his community of about 13,000.

 

He hopes the new mall will attract people to spend money in his town, including local residents.

 

“Over here, as soon as pay-day comes, everyone hops on the ferry to Dumaguete City, about an hour’s ride away, because they already have a mall there,” he told Agence France-Presse.

 

As their steady march continues, malls are swallowing many of the services typically found in the public square.

 

Satellite government offices

 

Many boast chapels as well as child-care centers, allowing families in this devoutly Catholic nation to combine religious and family duties with shopping.

 

Satellite government offices in shopping centers allow Filipinos to pay utility bills and get documents such as voter ID cards, business permits, driver’s licenses and passports.

 

The election commission is even considering allowing voting in malls.

 

“We evolve to what is needed by the people,” said Alex Pomento, vice president of the country’s largest mall chain, SM Prime Holdings.

 

Rooftop gardens

 

The group often hosts free community events in their malls such as mass weddings, school graduations, Zumba workouts and singing contests, events once held in town plazas.

 

The rise of Internet shopping does not worry the company, with four more of its malls set to open this year on top of the current 50.

 

“Our malls are destination places,” Pomento said.

 

In an ironic twist, some larger malls are now literally replacing the lost parks by building expansive rooftop gardens to make them more attractive and in a nod to environmental concerns.

 

“Nowhere else in the world has a population so absorbed the shopping-mall lifestyle, Paul Santos, vice president of the Philippine Retailers Association observed.

 

“It’s not something you can stop,” he added.

 

Originally posted as of 12:27 PM | July 30, 2015

 

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