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The Landmark opened in 1988 on the ruins of the Makati Supermart, which was destroyed by a fire in 1985 and demolished soon after. It was founded by Teddy Keng, the son of the founders of Anson's Emporium (now Anson's), whose second store was located at Arnaiz Avenue south of the edifice.
The Ayala Center is a 50-hectare (120-acre) mixed-use major commercial development operated by Ayala Land located in Barangay San Lorenzo within the Makati Central Business District in Makati, Metro Manila, Philippines.
Makati: Formerly known as San Pedro Makati (Sampiro) and was part of the visita of Santa Ana de Sapa. Façade of the old Makati City Hall building. Filipino November 11, 1991 Nielson Tower: The control tower of the first airport of the Philippines, built in 1937. Nielson Tower, Makati Avenue Filipino March 22, 1996 Philippine Bar Association
Jeepneys to the Makati Central Business District, BGC, Makati, Pateros, and Pasay can be boarded at McKinley Road, One Ayala, or The Landmark, respectively. UV Express vans to Metro Manila and nearby provinces are available at One Ayala. Taxis stop at McKinley Exchange Corporate Center, SM Makati, Glorietta 4, and The Landmark.
The Enterprise Center is an office skyscraper located in Makati, Philippines. [10] It is owned and developed by KSA Realty Corporation, a joint venture of the Kuok Group (majority shareholder), ING, and A. Soriano Corporation (ANSCOR). [11]
McKinley Exchange Corporate Center is a 5-story commercial building, part of a mixed-use complex developed by Ayala Land Inc. as part of the ₱65 billion redevelopment and rebranding of the city of Makati. [2] It is located along McKinley Road corner EDSA in Barangay Dasmariñas and was slated to become the new transport hub of Makati.
The Philippine Long Distance Telephone Company (PLDT) would commission a design for an office building along Makati Avenue in 1974. The structure which would be dubbed the Ramon Cojuangco Building would be inaugurated in 1982.
Makati: Olympia, a tile and brick factory that once stood in the area on the banks of the Pasig River ca. 1925. [10] Onse: San Juan: Block number 11 (onse in Filipino) [41] Paang Bundok: Quezon City: Filipino for "mountain foot" Paco: Manila: Spanish rendering of the old Tagalog name for edible vegetable fern (pako). [20] Pagibig sa Nayon ...