Come and celebrate this year’s most
colorful, attractive and un-scary Halloween costume party! Halloween Night of
the Stars 2019 is a grand Halloween costume celebration where more than 500
kids, teens and the whole family will gather together in theirgrandest and most
colorful costumes inspired by Justice League, Avengers, Disney movies,
Fairytales, Pinoy superheroes, animae characters, among others.
The event will be held in one of the
unique fun-dining restaurants in the heart of Quezon City, MOVIE STARS CAFÉ,
located at the Ground Floor of Eton Centris Mall, EDSA corner Quezon Avenue,
Quezon City, on October 31, 2019, from 1pm to 4pm.
For the price of P750, participants will
enjoy food and drinks exclusively catered by Movie Stars Café, loot bags and
freebies, a whole 3 full shows where costumed dancers will perform to
everyone’s delight, mascot parade, best in costume competition (kids, teens and
adult categories), face painting, and other fun, prizes and surprises!
Buy your tickets now at the Movie Stars
Café reception area or call 02-7504-3821 or 0922-2127772 to reserve your
tickets.
This event is organized by Elle 784 Public Relations and Events Services, in cooperation with Unilever, Sunsilk, Vaseline Lotion, Dental First, Citibank, Robby Rabbit, Nature Spring, Gardenia, Magnolia Chocolait, Mogu-Mogu, Welch’s and Lotus. Media Partners include Business Mirror, Sound Strip, Saksi and TNN Philippines.
BEST Magazine’s 3rd Year Anniversary for the 3rd OUTSTANDING MEN &WOMEN OF THE YEAR (2019)PHILIPPINES.
Awardees
is based in Power, gauging on the contributions they have made to the society
and the nation, the advocacies they have initiated or have taken active
participation, of which serve as an inspiration to others.
Some
of Past awardees includes: Hon. Vilma Santos-Recto, Megan Young (Ms. World 2013),
Hon. Monsour Del Rosario, Alma Concepcion (Ms. Grand Universe 2019), Ms. Rhea
Santos (Newscaster GMA7/TV Host), Maggie Wilson-Consunji(TV Host/Actress), Ara
Mina (Award Winning Actress), Congresswoman Florida P. Robes, Ms. Jikkie Lee-Ines
(Businesswoman), Elwood Perez (Award Winning Director), Karen Ibasco (Former
Miss Earth), Rosa Rosal (Former TV Host / Award Winning Actress), Sanya Lopez
(Actress), Arnold Vegafria (Talent Manager / Beauty Pageant Organizer) and to
name a few.
Awards night is slated on
November 25, 2019 (Monday), 7:30pm at Teatrino Promenade Greenhills, San Juan
City, Philippines.
Shown in Photo:
Top Row Left to Right:GaziniGanados (Miss Universe Philippines 2019 /
Pageantry), Hon. Isko Moreno (Public Service), Catriona Gray (Miss Universe
2018 / Pageantry), Wilbert Tolentino (Business), Nora Aunor (Superstar /
Entertainment), Dante Salamat(Realtor) &SharifaAkeel (Miss Asia Pacific
International 2018 / Pageantry).
Middle Row Left to Right: John Salandanan (Business), IzaCalzado
(Entertainment), William Thio (Public Affairs), Marilou Tolico-Villanueva
(Pageant Directorship / Woman Leadership), Atom Araullo (Journalism), Keanna
Reeves (Entertainment)& Allan Taunan Direct Sales International).
Bottom Row Left to Right: Faye Tangonan (Pageantry), John Estrada (Entertainment), ConconSiñel (Fashion), Helen Miller (Philanthropy), Ejay Pardo (Direct Sale International), Dr. Mario Guiang JR. (Social Media Influencer)&Leah May Luna-Panisales (Mrs. Grand Universe 2019 / Pageantry).
Climate
change is a global issue. It is one that is pushing the Philippines to act upon
its weak spots and harness its strengths. “It’s inevitable,” Lamudi CEO Bhavna
Suresh says at the media roundtable held last September 27 in partnership with
Holcim Philippines and Subdivision and Housing Developers Association (SHDA).
Though the country may be facing a dire situation, there is plenty to be done
in response to climate change, from big, industrial efforts to small, household
changes.
Lamudi
reinforced their support for building resilient and sustainable cities with the
first panel discussion, Sustainability Efforts for the Philippines of NGOs and
Private Organizations. NGOs, private organizations, and green developers were
represented in the discussion, which tackled the roadblocks to green
development in the Philippines and determined the efforts already in place to
steer the country into a greener future.
Highlighting
Resilience
“Most of our coastal
municipalities want to be cities eventually. How do we push them towards not
just sustainability but also push them to also look at measures that will make
them resilient as well?” Atty. Angela Ibay, Head of the Climate and Energy Program
of the World Wide Fund for Nature, posed an important question at the
roundtable, steering right into the thick of the important topic of
sustainability and climate change.
In a country that is
dotted with high-rise mixed-use buildings and humble coastal homes, the effort
to save the environment is tightly coupled with the measures developers can
take to safeguard the value of their legacy. One solution, something as simple
as planting trees, encourages the growth of foliage and relieves some of the urban
heat island effect our cities are experiencing right now. However, it is not
enough.
“It’s not a question
anymore of whether you can control climate change or not. It’s about adapting
to the effects of climate change. It’s here. We are experiencing it now,” says
Wesley Caballa, Senior Manager for Sustainability of Costa Del Hamilo Inc.
According to Caballa, Hamilo is actively pursuing efforts to protect mangrove
forests to do their part as a company.
Hamilo is one of many
companies that have started making changes in keeping with a more
climate-conscious business ethos. Climate change has not spared the Philippines
with its onslaught, and with lives at stake, developers cannot sit around and
wait.
“We are already in an
area of the world that is highly, highly susceptible to all these natural
disasters, and climate change made us more vulnerable to that,” adds Justine
Santos-Sugay, Director for Resource Development and Communications of Habitat
for Humanity.
Addressing
Roadblocks to Sustainability
The Philippines has not
been remiss when it comes to sustainable efforts. One of the problems
developers and real estate experts face, however, is misinformation or lack of
dissemination at the grassroots.
“When you ask a common
fisherman, ‘What do you know about climate change?’ Sometimes they say it’s
synonymous to disaster without knowing why,” adds Caballa. “It’s really
important for them to know what is wrong, what climate change is all
about.”
Santos-Sugay weighs in:
“When you think about it, when you look at the issue of climate change, climate
change seems to exaggerate or re-highlight a lot of the already pre-existing
social themes.”
One issue all Filipinos
will relate to, especially in the Philippine capital, is the water shortage. Despite
the typhoons that visit the country and leave damage in low-lying areas, there
is water shortage because the rainfall missed the dams that are meant to supply
water to the majority of the city. Ferdzdela Cruz, former Chief Executive
Officer of Manila Water Company, Inc., emphasizes the urgency of the matter:
“It’s up to us to make hard choices for us to be resilient. There are no easy
choices at this point. For us to make that, we need to have a constructive
dialog and without the misinformation.”
Dela Cruz also mentions
the disparity in the supply and demand for water supply. According to him,
“There are two issues on water–there’s the supply side and there’s the demand
side. On the supply side, there is a roadmap of what needs to be done, but there
are delays in the execution of the roadmap. There’s always opposition to a big
water project.”
Long-term solutions to
water shortage and climate change are further hampered by the lack of
initiative at the individual level. According to Dela Cruz, people forget about
the problem once they have water, but it quickly resurfaces when another water
shortage is felt.
Sustainability
in the Commercial and Industrial Sectors
Much of the effort real
estate developers have put into sustainability can be seen in the commercial
buildings they have strategically positioned in key cities. Jaime “JJ”
Fernandez, Strategic Management Consultant of Menarco Development Corporation,
mentions the savings Menarco Tower is able to pass on to its tenants through
its sustainable design. According to Fernandez, “There is an estimate that the
tenant will save about 20% in terms of energy consumption because the way the
building is built is very efficient.”
Fernandez also
highlights the human aspect of thinking sustainable. “Prospective tenants would
rather pay a little bit more rent” when they know the building will take care
of their employees.
This, paired with Dela
Cruz’s observation that people will be more responsible if the problem pinches
their bill, makes the case for green developments: rather than lose money in
inefficient designs, developers, tenants, and residents can save by
prioritizing sustainability.
The Philippines, which
receives ample sunlight because of its equatorial location, can do more to
utilize solar energy, one of the most efficient ways to be sustainable. James
Buskowitz, Chief Executive Officer of Buskowitz Group, explains that projects
harvesting solar energy come in levels: “Residential scale has always been the
goal, but not in the beginning. Typically, when a country starts developing
solar projects, it always starts with utility, then it goes to
commercial-industrial rooftops, then it goes residential.”
“If we combine all the
roofs in the entire Metro Manila, we would have enough solar energy to power
the entire Philippines,” Buskowitz shares.
Trickling
to the Residential Developments
“What color is your
roof?”
A simple question
sparked discussion in the roundtable’s second panel discussion, Design and
Construction Trends in Real Estate to Build Sustainable and Resilient Cities in
the Philippines. It is not a pointless question either, as the simple selection
of a white roof can already help a household save energy.
“A safe home, a
resilient city, a safe community is at the heart of what we have to address to
adapt to the changes in the climate,” mentions Santos-Sugay.
To add, Lamudi’s CEO
says climate change is not an isolated problem: “All of these inequalities that
exist in the world today are getting heightened because of global
warming.”
We are not at a
standstill when it comes to sustainable solutions, thankfully. Dela Cruz says,
“The supply solutions will come many years from now, but everyone could start
doing something on the demand side.”
One of the solutions
proposed is a mirror of what other countries have already implemented: water
tariffs. According to dela Cruz, “In other countries, what they’ve done quite
successfully during periods of water shortage is to actually adjust the price
of water–double or triple–during hot summer months basically to curtail the
usage.”
Though this price
adjustment has been discussed but not yet explored, companies such as Hamilo
Coast have already implemented their own guidelines to conserve water and
safeguard the environment from climate change. Hamilo Coast, which aims to be a
“microcosm of what could be done,” practices a “top-down approach” on
implementing sustainable policies. “The only way that we will see individuals
actually follow the rules is if you put a system of checks, balances, and
penalties.”
To get to the finish
line, where a more climate-resilient Philippines awaits, each individual has to
make impactful changes, but at the forefront are the bigger organizations that
can influence those in their respective industries as well.
With miscommunication
proving to be a big roadblock, the discussion needs to be sustained. This is
one of the reasons for the creation of the roundtable, as Architect. Amado de
Jesus, Vice Chairman of the Philippine Green Building Initiative, mentions, “If
you have a bigger role, that’s a bigger responsibility.”
“Lamudi is a giant brand. With all the buildings that are together, the organizations that you have a big influence on, you can create a big impact,” says de Jesus.
Panel A: Sustainability Efforts for the Philippines of NGOs and Private Organizations
Ferdzdela Cruz, Former Chief Executive Officer of Manila Water Company, Inc.Angela Ibay, Head, Climate and Energy Program of the World Wide Fund for Nature Wesley Caballa, Senior Manager for Sustainability of Costa Del Hamilo Inc.Justine Santos-Sugay, Director for Resource Development and Communications of Habitat for Humanity Ferdzdela Cruz, Former Chief Executive Officer of Manila Water Company, Inc. Angela Ibay, Head, Climate and Energy Program of the World Wide Fund for Nature Wesley Caballa, Senior Manager for Sustainability of Costa Del Hamilo Inc. Justine Santos-Sugay, Director for Resource Development and Communications of Habitat for Humanity
Panel B: Design and Construction Trends in Real Estate to Build Sustainable and Resilient Cities in the Philippines
James Buskowitz, Chief Executive Officer of Buskowitz GroupAr. Amado de Jesus, Vice Chairman of the Philippine Green Building InitiativeJJ Fernandez, Strategic Management Consultant ofMenarco Development Corporation Left to Right: James Buskowitz, Chief Executive Officer of Buskowitz Group Ar. Amado de Jesus, Vice Chairman of the Philippine Green Building Initiative JJ Fernandez, Strategic Management Consultant ofMenarco Development CorporationModerator: Bhavna Suresh, Chief Executive Officer of Lamudi; Panelists from Left to Right: Angela Ibay, Head, Climate and Energy Program of the World Wide Fund for Nature, James Buskowitz, Chief Executive Officer of Buskowitz Group, Ar. Amado de Jesus, Vice Chairman of the Philippine Green Building Initiative, JJ Fernandez, Strategic Management Consultant ofMenarco Development Corporation, Justine Santos-Sugay, Director for Resource Development and Communications of Habitat for Humanity; Aina Cruz, Marketing Manager of Lamudi.