#CulturePH - The same Brutalist icons, but not as you know them
It is said that Brutalist architecture asked for patience. Its language was not immediately inviting and resisted quick affection for it stands firm in raw concrete and heavy, geometric forms.
A brutalist landmark, the PNB
Financial Center continues to shape the bay area skyline.
Photo from the PNB One Hundred Years of Service Commemorative Coffeetable Book
Appreciation for this style came with distance. That return happened around 2019 across cities, including in the Philippines when the culture began to look again and see intent behind the weight. Buildings that were once dismissed as severe began to draw in a new audience. Architects, designers, and the public revisited them with a fresher perspective.
Iconic properties of the Metro skyline
In Makati and Pasay, two such structures are among those that gained renewed attention: the PNB Makati Center and the PNB Financial Center, properties managed by PNB Holdings Corporation (PHC).
From the street, both buildings read as resolute. The PNB Makati Center, designed by Filipino architect Carlos Arguelles, a key figure in modern and Brutalist architecture, holds its place along Ayala Avenue with a sense of order, set against a district in constant evolution.
On the other end, the PNB Financial Center, found nearer the bay, stretches across a wide footprint of almost 90,000 sqm. Designed by noted Filipino architect Gabriel Formoso, it carries the same material honesty, set against an open horizon.
When PHC assumed stewardship, the shift began at the threshold. They ensured not to erase time but work with it, leaning toward adaptive redevelopment. They ensured that the structure remains legible and that interventions respond well to present-day use.
When one steps inside the PNB Makati Center,
the experience becomes less measured. Light softens the entry as the lobby
leads with clarity. Materials move from exposed concrete to finishes that are
easier on the eye and touch.
At
the PNB Makati Center, materials move from an exterior that features heavy,
geometric forms to interiors with finishes that are easier on the eye and
touch.
Workspaces, found from second to penthouse
levels, follow a similar intent. Color pops in controlled accents and
seamlessly blends with the structure. They feature layouts that support
employee interaction without forcing it. There are open zones for team
collaboration, alongside areas that allow for focus. The choices reflect the
building’s current priorities—health, safety, and a more human-centered way of
working.
When PHC assumed stewardship, the real estate developer ensured not to erase the history of the building but work with it, leaning toward adaptive redevelopment and ensuring that interventions respond well to present-day use.
At the PNB Financial Center, the narrative expands. The building has long functioned as a headquarters. Its expansiveness allowed it to house offices and institutional tenants over time. Under PHC’s direction, parts of the complex have taken on a new role.
Certain interiors have been adapted into event venues. This move leans on the asset that Brutalism provides, volume. Large spans and high ceilings offer a flexible canvas. The spaces can host formal gatherings or more relaxed assemblies. The bay area setting adds another layer. Natural light shifts across the day and gently spills through the windows. The edge between inside and outside becomes part of the event experience.
At
the heart of the PNB Financial Center, the Grand Atrium unfolds as a versatile
and expansive space as its openness allows creative visions to take shape with
ease.
This reprogramming extends the building’s original identity. Where there were once purely administrative spaces, there are now areas, such as The Grand Atrium, that invite the public in a variety of ways.
Both buildings show that preservation is not fixed, but a process where change unfolds with discipline, allowing the original architecture to remain clear as new interventions settle in with intent. And, when updated with care, they can support contemporary life without losing character. The current work at PNB Makati Center and PNB Financial Center reflects precisely this.
For those who pass by, the first impression may still be distant. The silhouettes have not softened. Yet beyond the facade, the spaces tell a whole new story, one that considers how people move, gather, and work today. In this way, the buildings continue to shape the spaces they hold. They define their legacy not only by what they were, but by how they are used today.
From
surrounding plants at The Amphitheater to sunlight streaming through the
expensive windows of The Grand Atrium, nature tempers the PNB Financial
Center’s textured exterior.
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