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Rehab of Baguio鈥檚 oldest grade school halted

Rehab of Baguio鈥檚 oldest grade school halted

WORK SUSPENSION The Baguio City government stopped the Department of Education from what should have been the restoration of the Gabaldon building of the Baguio Central School following the demolition of one of its wings, dismantling eight classrooms in the process. 鈥擭EIL CLARK ONGCHANGCO

BAGUIO CITY 鈥 This city鈥檚 oldest elementary school, which traces its origins to 1899 as an Ibaloy house, is undergoing rehabilitation to preserve its historic Gabaldon building.

The P41.2-million project of the Department of Education (DepEd) intended to repair portions of the Baguio Central School (BCS) that have deteriorated, such as termite-infested floorboards, walls, beams and ceilings which were vulnerable to storms, said Ni帽o Tibangay, chief of school governance and operations of the Baguio schools division office on Monday.

The city鈥檚 Cultural Mapping Book classified BCS as a 鈥渟ignificant tangible and immovable cultural heritage property,鈥 and described it as 鈥渢he biggest elementary school in the city, with about 70 classrooms, 3,300 pupils and 83 teaching staff.鈥

It cited a popular account that the school began in a hut owned by Ibaloy clan leader Mateo Cari帽o in 1899, shortly before the American colonial government took control of the Philippines.

Clearances

But construction work was recently stopped by the Baguio government following complaints over the demolition of a section of BCS.

鈥淎 community outcry broke out when the school鈥檚 left wing was suddenly and noticeably demolished, attracting the attention of parents, passersby, and even Baguio City Hall personnel,鈥 said Linda Grace Cari帽o, a great-granddaughter of Mateo and who helped document BCS for the Cultural Mapping Book.

The demolition also caught the attention of the City Planning, Development and Sustainability Office, which required DepEd to first provide a conservation plan and a work management plan for the school, City Administrator Bonifacio dela Pe帽a told the Inquirer on June 6, noting that the project did not secure clearances like a building permit.

DepEd is tasked with preserving all 2,045 Gabaldon school buildings in the country, as required by the Gabaldon School Buildings Conservation Act of 2019 (Republic Act No. 11194).

Gabaldon school houses were built in the first years of American governance. These are elevated buildings with high ceilings, arched or clam-shaped windows, and porticos with large columns which took its name from Assemblyman Isauro Gabaldon who sponsored Act No. 1801 that allocated funding for public school buildings in 1907.

Since BCS is one of seven Baguio schools with Gabaldon buildings, the school was inspected by the National Commission for Culture and the Arts (NCCA) and the National Historical Commission of the Philippines before work proceeded, Tibangay said.

But during an inspection on May 26 last year, the NCCA architect directed DepEd to restore the Gabaldon structure to its 鈥渙riginal state,鈥 which meant removing the 鈥渂uilding extensions鈥 that hold 16 classrooms, he said. The Gabaldon building鈥檚 left and right wings were incorporated in October 1959 because of the rising school population.

鈥淚 was against the NCCA decision,鈥 Tibangay said, but noted that DepEd acceded because NCCA had jurisdiction over Gabaldon buildings.

Due to the city government鈥檚 objections, he said DepEd stopped the demolition of BCS鈥 right wing, 鈥渁nd will concentrate on rehabilitating the main Gabaldon building,鈥 before seeking funding to restore the destroyed left wing in coordination with the city government.

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