2013-08-23

Metro Manila is a monster of a metropolis, and it’s not even the largest city in the Philippines. Sitting in southern Luzon, it’s one of the largest of the more than 7,000 islands that make up the Filipino archipelago.

Among the constant ebb and flow of this frenetic city, gridlocked and chaotic in its urban sprawl, sleek new skyscrapers in the CBD and vast shopping malls contrast sharply with vibrant street markets that have existed for centuries. With its heart wrapped around the sweeping Manila Bay and bisected by the mighty Pasig River, this is a forward-thinking city, a cultural polyglot where a babble of Tagalog – a mixture of Chinese, Malay, Japanese, Spanish and local dialects – and English can be heard in the streets, reflecting the country’s long and checkered history.

Spanish-Colonial Manila



San Agustin Church in Intramuros. Photo credit: shankar s. via Flickr.

Settled by the Chinese and Arabs, conquered by the Spanish in the 16th century, annexed by the US in 1898 and invaded by the Japanese during WWII, Manila’s repeated struggles for independence are highlighted in its museums and memorials. Most of Old Manila’s attractions cluster around Intramuros, laid out along the riverside by the Spanish as a pentagon-shaped defense fort in the late 16th century. A tour of the 16th-century walls, the Romanesque Manila Cathedral and Fort Santiago serves as an introduction to the colonial city. Resistance hero José Rizal was imprisoned by the Spanish military in Fort Santiago, where a small museum features the cell in which he was imprisoned and tortured.

The UNESCO-listed church of San Agustin is the oldest church in the Philippines and was virtually the only building of Intramuros to survive US bombing in the successful 1945 attempt to drive the Japanese out of the city; its lovely Baroque ceiling paintings are also still intact.

Spanning out from Intramuros, Rizal Park offers a breather from the constant row of the city; here the various galleries of the National Museum of the Philippines (closed Monday) showcase collections expanding on Spanish rule in Manila. A stroll away down Roxas Boulevard, which clings to the side of Manila Bay, the galleries of the Metropolitan Museum of Manila (closed Sunday and first Monday of every month) throw further light on Manila’s colonial past.

Learn more on a historical sightseeing tour of Manila

Manila after WWII



Manila’s Chinatown. Photo credit: Trishhhh via Flickr.

Much of Manila was destroyed during sustained fighting between Japan and the US in 1945. The American Cemetery and War Memorial in Fort Bonifacio pays homage to those who died protecting the city; there are 17,201 graves here amid beautifully maintained grounds and centered around a vast white marble memorial chapel. Thought-provoking day trips tour Manila Bay past WW2 sites, explore the gently crumbling, roofless US barracks on Corregidor Island and visit the former US naval facility at Subic Bay, once the largest US base in the Pacific region.

The suffering in the Philippines did not end with WWII; after a few decades of democracy the Marcos family took power in 1966. The legacy of their corrupt regime can be seen in the excesses of the Coconut Palace on Roxas Boulevard, lavishly decorated with walls and furniture encrusted with coconut shells and mother of pearl. Now the home of the Vice President of the Philippines, it is accessible only by short tour. In a more light-hearted fashion, the Marikina Shoe Museum displays 749 pairs of shoes from the infamous collection of Imelda Marcos.

Across the Pasig River sprawls Binondo, the world’s oldest Chinatown; a charismatic labyrinth of streets crammed with traditional apothecaries, food stalls and souvenir stores; search hard among the plastic imports for exquisite handmade gold, jade and pearl jewelry, among the best buys in Manila. Don’t venture too far north from Chinatown; the area of Tondo was once one of Manila’s biggest slum areas and still has little to recommend it to visitors – nor is it the safest place to end up after dark. If you want to glimpse everyday city life, instead take the MRT (Metro Rail Transit System) from Taft to Araneta Center-Cubao for raucous, smelly and wonderfully colorful Divisoria, the city’s largest flea market, to haggle over ‘designer’ labels, textiles and kitchen utensils.

Manila in the Future



Jeepneys are Manila’s most popular mode of transport. Photo credit: Philip Cotsford via Flickr.

A thriving modern city is fast emerging in a remarkably Dubai-like fashion from the decimation of WWII; the futuristic towers of Makati form Manila’s burgeoning financial hub, centered on Ayala Street. Led by the mind-bogglingly enormous Mall of Asia in Pasay City – get there by taxi, hotel shuttle or jeepney from Taft MRT station – Metro Manila’s brash super-malls, sleek boutiques, posh restaurants and smart hotels are concentrated around Malate, EDSA and Makati, south-east of the old colonial city.

For an Asian city, Manila’s cuisine is curiously spice-free, showing a blend of Malay, Chinese and Spanish influences; street food stalls offer roast suckling pig, dim sum is eaten all over Chinatown and great tapas bars can be found throughout the city. Glitzy Makati has spawned more than half of Metro Manila’s top restaurants, concentrated around Greenbelt, while international eateries cluster in Ermita, Malate and around cosmopolitan Remedios Circle. When eating out, remember that restaurant waiting staff will often expect a small tip, even if service is included on the bill.

Manila by Night

Sunset over Manila Bay. Photo credit: bingbing via Flickr.

After dark, young trendies trawl the bars and cafés of Orosa Street and Remedios Circle. Ermita is crammed with music clubs, pubs and bars, filled with young professionals who party late into the evening. Pavement cafés at Remedios Circle allow for perfect people watching as label-clad fashionistas stalk by on impossibly high heels. Elegant Makati is Manila at its most glamorous: cocktails are served in sleek bars and Gucci-clad giggling girls flit between venues in the malls. Manila’s night-time scene changes almost daily, with clubs passing in and out of fashion with unseemly haste; most places are open until late and the dress code is always smart.

The city’s notorious girly bar scene is concentrated around the International Center off Roxas Boulevard and along the street of P. Burgos in Makati; here gangs of strutting guys get pulled into rowdy, expensive bars and dance clubs of varying legality by street workers (and walkers) of sometime indeterminate sex.

Traditional dancing in Manila. Photo credit: Trishhhh via Flickr.

If late nights and falling out of clubs are not your style, take a sunset cruise around Manila Bay or walk the 1.5 km length of the promenade at San Miguel by the Bay outside the Mall of Asia for some of the world’s most beautiful sunsets. Alternatively, take in a display of traditional dancing while dining on fine Filipino cuisine.

Family-friendly Manila

There’s plenty for families to do in Manila too. Join in with the morning Tai Chi sessions among the greenery of Rizal Park, spend the day with the dolphins and sea lions at Manila Ocean Park, take part in the special kids’ events at the Museo Pambata on Roxas Boulevard and take a ride in a cart drawn by water buffalo on a coconut plantation in the countryside south of Manila.

 - Sasha Heseltine

Exploring Manila by Sasha Heseltine from Viator Travel Blog

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