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Net satisfaction with the National administration

PUBLIC SATISFACTION with the administration of President Rodrigo R. Duterte stayed “very good” last quarter in a Social Weather Stations (SWS) survey that nevertheless bared erosion in the issues of defending territorial rights, fighting crime, providing jobs, “ensuring that no family will ever be hungry” and fighting inflation. Read the full story.

Net satisfaction with the National administration

Why an established real estate company bet on a food park

Subic Bay Development & Industrial Estate Corporation (SUDECO) is already made. It has developed a luxury seaside residential community with Ayala Land Inc. (ALI), and is also accredited by ALI’s subsidiaries: Alveo, Avida and Amaia Land Corporations. This year, it decided to launch a new project: Buendia Food by the Court in Gil Puyat Avenue, Makati City. Plot twist one: It’s a food park. Plot twist two: It comes with a matching basketball court.

You might ask: Why would a company of such stature build a food park (the recently invented, rather humble, millennial playground whose gravel flooring are no match to the pristine marble tiles of the structures on its portfolio) in Makati (the already‑dense urban jungle that delights in verticality, whose establishments are often deprived of the luxury of a sprawl, and where it is seems more sensible to build a towering commercial building)?

According to its quinquagenarian President Paul Elauria: “It’s a good strategy for the company.”

Gadflies might dismiss the food park concept as a fad, but to him, it is a venture with a potential for longevity, but “only if companies running them would be creative.”

While food parks which have sprouted in the metro’s north have gained massive success (The Yard in Quezon City, for example, is expanding), the case for the Makati area, which has yet to jump in on this trend, is uncertain. With that comes a slew of responsibilities.

“We had to bring people to the area,” he said during an interview one April morning at the SUDECO office in Makati. “We had to introduce the area to them, we had to condition the minds of the guests that it is a very nice location. It’s very accessible for both sides of Manila.”

And indeed, it is. Bounded by Buendia, Bautista, and Filmore streets, it is right smack between the Mall of Asia commercial district and Makati commercial district. “In that sense,” he said, “we thought we have to look for a project that will cater to people from those communities.”

Art Erka Capili Inciong

Aside from getting 23 established as well as startup food and beverage concessionaires, the members of the board thought of a whimsical twist: adding a basketball court.

“It’s a cooperative effort among the members of the management committee,” he mused. “Some of them are really into food parks, and there’s also a group of people in the group who are into physical activities, so we thought of joining the two concepts together. Later on, we realized that food and basketball are the two top passions of the Filipinos. Even among millennials, it is a good combination.”

According to Mr. Elauria, investing in the basketball court is SUDECO’s way of assuring that Buendia Food by the Court has something unique to offer compared to other existing food parks. From a mere strategy to attract customers, the basketball court has become the trademark of the food park.

The fully covered basketball court, which has a flooring made out of vinyl laminates, is available for rent at ₱1,100 per hour. Mostly, groups of employees working near the area lease the sports venue. And after the tiring game, where else should they go for refreshments?

“We envisioned the basketball court as something that would bring people initially for the food park to be known,” he said. “Because of the lack of available basketball courts in Makati, we opened the basketball court earlier than the food park [to also serve] as the initial instrument for us to draw people in.”

“You have to be creative just like in any other businesses. You need to have something better than the competitors,” he added.

Photo Buendia Food by the Court

Though relatively new, the food park has already created a buzz among Filipino foodies, especially on social media. In just a span of two months since it opened in February, Buendia Food by the Court’s Facebook page has already generated a total of 22,339 likes. Traffic inevitably became a concern, though short‑lived—the city, after all, is infamous for its rush hours (“Actually, that’s one of the reasons why we chose to open there,” he admitted. “We thought that some people who are bored of the traffic would spend time in the food park first before going home, parang palipasin lang yung rush hour.) But the tension dissipated after merely two weeks, and people got used to it, perhaps by force of circumstance.

Mr. Elauria attributes the early success of the food park not only to its creative features and location, but, primarily, to the choices of the food it offers. From Japanese, Chinese, Indonesian, and Filipino cuisines to healthy food choices, Buendia Food by the Court literally has a lot to offer to the table.

“As much as possible we try to avoid duplication. For various cuisines, we choose the best applicants among the long line of interested tenants,” he said.

At the end of the day, Mr. Elauria said, it is still the quality of a food park’s menu and services that would determine the fate of this new business venture.

“For as long as you maintain the quality of the food and the venue,” he said, “there will always be a market for the food park.”


Photos courtesy of Buendia Food by the Court

Asia-Pacific Trade agreements: How they compare

HANOI — Disagreements between Asian countries over a China-backed free trade deal surfaced at talks on Monday, raising questions over a target for concluding negotiations by the end of the year. Read the full story.

Asia-Pacific Trade agreements: How they compare

Modern slavery prevalence around the world

‘I belong to the country of making art’

By Sam L. Marcelo

Over four days in May, citizens of the international art world — artists, curators, collectors, critics, and camp followers — descended upon the sinking city of Venice to preview the 57th International Art Exhibition. Oligarchs moored their super yachts along the Arsenale stop, while plebeians stepped off vaporettos churning through the Grand Canal.

The Bible in burlesque

Theater Review
Godspell
Presented by MusicArtes
Directed by Anton Juan
May 6-21
Carlos P. Romulo Auditorium, RCBC Plaza, Ayala Ave. corner
Gil Puyat Ave., Makati City

By Sujata S. Mukhi

Growing up in Malate, sandwiched between two edifice complexes of Catholic education, it seemed inevitable, and even quite natural that I spent many Saturday afternoons with my siblings re-enacting the only two existing religious musicals of the time: Jesus Christ Superstar and Godspell, both released as films in 1973. I was diehard JCS: you could not take away my intense, brooding, slightly wall-eyed Ted Neeley, who played JC, from my night time reveries of being his Mary Magdalene in the desert. My sister, on the other hand, liked the light hearted musicality of Godspell, the clown persona of Jesus alias Victor Garber — yes Alias’ Victor Garber! — that made spiritual teachings a performance. To this day, the six-line song “Day by Day” (which actually is five sentences because of a repeated line) is the only song she knows the full lyrics to. My brother on the other hand would not be caught dead with a shawl around his head to play Mary Magdalene (or maybe he did, once? A pioneer of cross-gender casting?), and took on JCS’ JC, sometimes Pontius Pilate, and many times the heinous Roman soldier crucifying anything and anyone in sight: my mom’s arm laid on the back of a sofa; my dad’s feet on the floor; a cat lying on its back, too hot to protest with the accompanying sound effect of “tak tak tak” as its paws were “nailed” to the bed. (Note please before the slacktivists descend that no human nor animals were ever harmed in that ’70s pasyon.)

Trip to Quiapo

Movie Review
MNL 143
Directed by Emerson Reyes

By Noel Vera

You’d think Emerson Reyes’s MNL 143 took inspiration from Jafar Panahi’s Taxi, or Steven Knight’s Locke — both very good films that largely take place inside a public transport vehicle — and you’d be wrong; Reyes’s film came out three years before Panahi’s, and a year before Knight’s. Not that I’m suggesting Panahi or Knight were inspired by Reyes (Though who knows? The film screened in the Edinburgh festival the year it was released), just that the Filipino filmmaker is every bit as capable of conceiving a reasonably novel concept and now — thanks to digital filmmaking and fund-raising efforts to support that filmmaking — are able to realize them on the big/small/online screen.

Roaming China

Videogame Review
Romance of the Three Kingdoms 13
PlayStation 4

By Alexander O. Cuaycong and Anthony L. Cuaycong

ROMANCE of the Three Kingdoms 13 (ROTK 13) is the latest installment in Koei’s long-running series. The series has certainly come a long way, establishing a dedicated fanbase not only in Japan but also in China and America since its inception in the 1980s. ROTK 13 uses Luo Guanzhong’s novel Romance of the Three Kingdoms as the baseline of its plot, and has players experiencing key events in the book, allowing them to either relive it faithfully or to change it as they see fit. The game lets players take part in the Three Kingdoms era of China as one of many officers during the time period or even as their own self-inserted avatar. Whether starting small or starting big, the players’ ultimate objective is to unite factions together under one banner by instigating conflict or engaging in diplomacy.

Listening to the market

By Michael Angelo S. Murillo

ALREADY ONE of the largest fitness equipment manufacturers in the world, Johnson Health Tech is not resting on its laurels and is continuing to evolve. One way it is going about it is through introducing new products which are in tune with the demands of the market.

King Arthur fights back to big screen, leading the resistance

A NEW DAWN, and possibly even a franchise, await the legend of British folklore hero King Arthur.

Fitbit adds feature for reaching wellness goals

SAN FRANCISCO-BASED wearable technology company Fitbit has introduced a new feature to its slimmest fitness wristband — a heart rate and sleep monitor to guide wearers into “reaching (their) wellness goals in style.”

Honors for Globe’s “#CreateCourage” Rogue One campaign

GLOBE TELECOM’S #CreateCourage branded film “Mask” has been shortlisted at the Tangrams Effectiveness@Spikes Awards, an Asia-Pacific award which honors outstanding marketing strategies that deliver remarkable business results.

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