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Juan Marcos Arellano y de Guzmán (April 25, 1888 – December 5, 1960), or Juan M. Arellano, was a Filipino architect, best known for Manila's Metropolitan Theater (1935), Legislative Building (1926; now houses the National Museum of Fine Arts), the Manila Central Post Office Building (1926), the Rizal Memorial Sports Complex (1934), the Central Student Church (today known as the Central ...
The restoration was done under the supervision of the architects Otilio and Alejandro Arellano, both nephews of the Met's original architect Juan M. Arellano. [11] The Metropolitan Theater re-opened in December 1978, after just four months of work, making the pre-Christmas opening deadline desired by Imelda Marcos. [13]
Intended as the National Theater. Designed by architect Juan Arellano. Metropolitan Theater Filipino 1976, 1988 Manuel Araullo y Gonzales (1853–1924) Structure Monument Third Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. Adviser of General Elwell Otis: Araullo High School Filipino February 16, 2002 Manuel Acuña Roxas (1892–1948) Orator and statesman.
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A view of the U.S.-Mexico border at Tijuana River Valley Regional Park in San Diego. In the foreground is an interior wall; toward the back is an unfinished border wall.
The 25-year-old phenom will be front and center at the World Polo Championship—and he'll be breaking records along the way.
Frost Plan (also known as the Frost-Arellano Plan) was the popular name for the Plan of Quezon City, co-authored by Juan M. Arellano and Harry Frost, together with Alpheus Williams and Louis Croft. The plan was approved in 1941, two years after the creation of Quezon City . [ 1 ]