Greenfield District is a transit-oriented mixed-use development in Mandaluyong, Metro Manila, Philippines. It is a redevelopment of the old United Laboratories (Unilab) pharmaceutical plant and adjacent retail market in Barangay Highway Hills adjoining Barangay Kapitolyo in Pasig to the east. The 15-hectare (37-acre) mixed commercial and residential complex is in the crossroads of EDSA and Shaw Boulevard immediately south of the Ortigas Center financial district. It consists of an office tower, condominium high-rises, a central park, retail centers and recreational facilities.[1][2][3]
Project | |
---|---|
Opening date | 2009 |
Developer | Greenfield Development Corporation |
Owner | Greenfield Development Corporation |
Website | Greenfield District |
Physical features | |
Transport | 3 Shaw Boulevard 3 Boni Jeepneys, UV Express, P2P buses |
Location | |
Coordinates: 14°34′39″N 121°3′16″E / 14.57750°N 121.05444°E | |
Location | Highway Hills, Mandaluyong, Metro Manila, Philippines |
Address | EDSA and Shaw Boulevard |
Location
editGreenfield District is situated along Metro Manila's main thoroughfare, EDSA, near the geographic center of the metropolis. It is a natural extension of Ortigas Center abutting the Shangri-La Plaza and Edsa Shangri-La, Manila developments, as well as Lourdes School of Mandaluyong, to the north. The district is spread over an area bounded on the north by Shaw Boulevard, on the east by Pioneer Street on the south by Reliance Street, and EDSA on the west. It is in a rapidly urbanizing area of eastern Mandaluyong that saw gentrification in the late 2000s with the construction of Robinsons Cybergate and Forum Robinsons, TV5 Media Center, Avida Towers Centera and the SM Light, SM Fame and SM Flair residential towers by SM Investments. Greenfield District is directly connected to the Manila MRT-3 Shaw Boulevard station through its Greenfield Pavilion (formerly EDSA Central Pavilion). It is also indirectly linked to Shangri-La Plaza and Starmall Edsa Shaw through the walkways of the MRT-3 station.
History
editGreenfield District is on a 30-hectare (74-acre) plot of land acquired by Unilab founder Jose Yao Campos from Ortigas & Company in the 1950s. For a long time, the area belonged to the 4,033-hectare (9,970-acre) Hacienda de Mandaloyon (also known as Mandaloya, Mandaloyen, or Mandaloyong), a former friar estate owned by the Order of Saint Augustine which Francisco Ortigas purchased in the 1920s.[4] The Campos group moved its Unilab production plant from its Santa Mesa compound to the Mandaluyong property in 1961.[5] In the same year, the group formed Greenfield Development Corp. to manage the rest of the property.[6]
Greenfield Development's first foray into the property development industry was with its wet and dry goods market launched in the 1970s. The Edsa Central, popularly known as Edsa Crossing, covered 8 hectares (20 acres) of a corner of the property facing Edsa and Shaw Boulevard and included a jeepney terminal.[7] After two decades, Greenfield Development announced its complete redevelopment into a modern shopping center to be divided into four separate buildings or sections, namely the Edsa Central Station Mall, Edsa Central Bazaar, Edsa Central Wet Market and Jeepney Park.[7] Along with the makeover of its flagship mall in December 2003, Greenfield Development announced that a masterplan for the property as the new Greenfield District mixed-use development was being drawn up.[8] It launched its first condominium project in the district in January 2004, the Soho Central, in partnership with Jose Antonio's Meridien Development Group.[9]
In March 2007, Unilab announced that it would be transferring all its production facilities in Mandaluyong to its 35,000-square-meter (380,000 sq ft) Pharma Campus in Biñan, Laguna.[10] In November 2009, Greenfield Development broke ground on the second residential development in the district, its first exclusive project, with the twin-tower Twin Oaks Place.[11]
Developments
editGreenfield District boasts a variety of amenities, including strip malls like The Hub, The Portal, The Square, and Pavilion, along with office buildings such as IT Center 2, Greenfield Tower, and HealthFirst Williams Center. It is also home to residential developments like Twin Oaks Place and Zitan, forming part of the Edsa Central development. It also hosts the Greenfield Weekend Market which offers outdoor dining and live jazz music every weekend evening.[3] The market is housed in the Greenfield Central Park that occupies the open space between the four retail buildings. The District's green open spaces comprise 40% of the entire development.[3] The Portal houses an indoor rock climbing gym known as Climb Central Manila and formerly a trampoline park, known simply as Trampoline Park.[1][3]
Other notable establishments in the District include the offices of Greenfield Development Corporation, a Bank of the Philippine Islands branch, and the open-air Mayflower Parking that houses the Food Truck Fest, fire and police sub-stations, a Maxus showroom, Unilab's main and R&D offices, and warehouses respectively belonging to La Perla and Univet Nutrition and Animal Healthcare Company (UNAHCO).[12][13]
Office buildings
editIT Center 2
editIT Center 2, also known as the EDSA Central IT Center, is a two-story Philippine Economic Zone Authority-accredited office building on EDSA and United Street. Built in 2009, it hosts Teleperformance.[14]
Greenfield Tower
editGreenfield Tower is a 30-storey office building on Mayflower Street and Williams Street with a total leasable office space of 65,765 square meters (707,890 sq ft). It features a six-level retail podium, a restaurant, garden and auditorium on its roof deck.[3] It was completed in October 2017.[15]
Residential developments
editTwin Oaks Place
editTwin Oaks Place is a twin tower residential condominium development along Shaw Boulevard consisting of a 43-storey East Tower and a 49-storey West Tower. Its first tower, West Tower, was completed in 2014, while its second tower, East Tower, was topped off in October 2017.[15][16]
Zitan
editZitan is a 35-storey condominium development by Equus Property Venture, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Greenfield Development. It is located next to The Pavilion development and the MRT station.[17]
References
edit- ^ a b Inquirer.net BrandRoom (13 October 2017). "Greenfield District: An integrated urban community above the rest". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved 12 February 2020.
- ^ TDT (6 March 2019). "Global firms make Greenfield Tower home". Daily Tribune (Philippines). Retrieved 12 February 2020.
- ^ a b c d e "Rising city center enhances profile of Mandaluyong City". Manila Bulletin. 8 March 2018. Retrieved 12 February 2020.
- ^ Flores, W.L. (19 December 2005). "The Ortigas clan stages a business comeback". The Philippine Star. Retrieved 12 February 2020.
- ^ Ibañez, Rodolfo G. (2002). Bayanihan: the many great lessons of United Laboratories, Inc, p. 97. Anvil Publishing.
- ^ Galang, V.M.P. (5 February 2019). "Greenfield to develop luxury community in Laguna". BusinessWorld.
- ^ a b "Greenfield's EDSA Central gets makeover". The Philippine Star. 27 December 2003. Retrieved 12 February 2020.
- ^ de la Peña, Z.B. (24 August 2009). "Campos family finalizing masterplan for 23-hectare Pasig-Mandaluyong CBD". The Philippine Star. Retrieved 12 February 2020.
- ^ "SOHO Central project unveiled". The Philippine Star. 3 January 2004. Retrieved 12 February 2020.
- ^ de la Peña, Zinnia B. (19 March 2007). "Unilab to build new mfg facility in Laguna". The Philippine Star. Retrieved 12 February 2020.
- ^ de la Peña, Z.B. (25 November 2009). "Campos Group to launch 5 new residential projects". The Philippine Star. Retrieved 12 February 2020.
- ^ "Food Truck Fest". Greenfield Development Corporation. Retrieved May 5, 2024.
- ^ "Greenfield District Map". Greenfield Development Corporation. September 2023. Retrieved May 5, 2024.
- ^ "EDSA Central IT Center". KMC Savils. Retrieved May 5, 2024.
- ^ a b "Greenfield District tops off two towers". Manila Bulletin. 18 October 2017. Retrieved 12 February 2020.
- ^ Inquirer.net BrandRoom (13 November 2017). "A lofty point of view at Twin Oaks Place". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved 12 February 2020.
- ^ "Your space, your pace at Zitan". Philippine Daily Inquirer. 3 January 2015. Retrieved 12 February 2020.