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  2. Machuca Tile - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Machuca_Tile

    In 1993, the Machuca Tile Inc. showroom was relocated to its current address on the ground floor of J y J Condominium, #867 General Solano Street, San Miguel, Manila. Meanwhile, their factory is situated at Lot 17 Marian Park, Road I, East Service Road, South Superhighway, Parañaque. [2]

  3. Cobangbang Ancestral House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cobangbang_Ancestral_House

    Original machuca tiles are laid on the second floor. [3] More antique furnitures and furnishings can be found. One of the most remarkable furniture found inside is the round dining table - made from the root of a Narra tree, and was built the same time the ancestral house was constructed.

  4. Augusto P. Hizon House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Augusto_P._Hizon_House

    The house exemplifies the American colonial-style architecture. It has a winding staircase leading to the house's portico, with Machuca tiles. The multi-colored tiles, dating back to 1900s, feature a Mediterranean motif. [3]

  5. Bahay na bato - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bahay_na_bato

    Machuca tiles (formerly known as "baldozas mosaicas") – colorful Mediterranean-style cement tiles used for the zaguan flooring, often in harlequin pattern; manufactured by the Machuca company; another brand is Majolica; Mascaron – An architectural ornament representing a face or head, human or animal, that is often grotesque or frightening

  6. Casa Villavicencio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casa_Villavicencio

    In anticipation of the visit, black-and-white Machuca tiles were laid in the zaguan. The original painted canvas ceilings of the formal rooms upstairs were removed and replaced with stamped tin imported from the United States.

  7. Casa de Segunda - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casa_de_Segunda

    Its flooring retained the black-and-white machuca tiles despite the partial damage caused by the bombing of Lipa during the World War II. [1] The Luz–Katigbak House was originally built on a square plan, with the terrace, or azotea, extending it into an L-shaped plan. Balusters were restored to protect the open portion of the azotea.

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