Ramon Magsaysay Center | |
Alternate Names: | RM Center |
Status: | Complete |
Location: | Roxas Boulevard corner Quintos Street, Malate, Manila, Philippines |
Coordinates: | 14.5719°N 120.9822°W |
Namesake: | Ramon Magsaysay |
Completion Date: | 1967 |
Destruction Date: | --> |
Floor Count: | 18 |
Architect: | Ruben Payumo |
Architecture Firm: | A.J. Luz Associates |
Unit Count: | --> |
Highest Prev: | Manila Hotel |
Highest Next: | Manila Pavilion Hotel |
Highest Start: | 1967 |
Highest End: | 1968 |
Highest Region: | the Philippines |
The Ramon Magsaysay Center (abbreviated as RMC or RM Center) is an 18-storey building located at the corner of Roxas Boulevard and Quintos Street in Malate, Manila, Philippines.
It was built and opened in 1967[1] and was designed by Alfredo J. Luz and Associates, in consultation with Italian-American Pietro Belluschi and Alfred Yee Associates. It is named after Ramon Magsaysay, the 7th President of the Philippines who died in a plane crash in Cebu in 1957. It previously held the title as the tallest building in the Philippines from 1967 to 1968, before the completion of the Manila Pavilion Hotel.
Ruben Payumo of the Alfredo Luz's architectural firm was the project manager for the Ramon Magsaysay Center[1] It is the first structure in the country to sport column-free structural concept. The design used pre-cast and pre-stressed beams like a tree rooted on the ground. The exterior of the building was designed to withstand the salty environment that surrounds the building. It was clad with travertine marble slabs embedded in the frame of the building.[2]