By Ramon Dacawi
BAGUIO CITY A-- Do not alter
nature - not even the colors it had assigned to pebbles, stones and rocks.
“Let the stones’ natural colors
be,” advised former city architect Joseph Alabanza. He’s the same aging Baguio
boy and former presidential assistant who also frowns each time a high-rise
building is put up to further obliterate the city’s skyline.
The advice may well be for
politicians of any color, some of whom had their names painted white on river
stones and rocks, and on Baguio’s dwindling limestone formations,
obviously to enhance voters’ recall of their names in the elections.
To some, this act of vandalism
boomeranged, as some voters retaliated by omitting such names of
wannabes in their ballots.
Alabanza’s call for now, however,
is directed to for well-meaning barangay leaders and residents who turn to
stones which they line up on street sides and jurisdictional
boundaries to enrich the pattern, harmony and tranquility of their community’s
gardens, projects and borders.
“I hope we stop changing the
stones’ natural colors,” Alabanza said.
He noted the practice of painting
them is contrived, an affront to authenticity.
The best thing is to scrub them
clean of moss, soot and dirt so their original hues would emerge, he stressed.
That’s why, he said, the stone
base of the facades of the city hall and the Baguio City National High
School were spared of paint brush, to bring to the fore the beauty and
unique color and grains of Baguio stone.
“Maymayat no baybay-antayoti natural ngakolor to bato.”
The architect pointed to a tree,
noting that painting stones is like painting its green leaves and brown trunk
to make it look artificial.
Only the other week, city
officials issued a public reminder on adherence to a 23-year old ordinance
prohibiting the nailing, bolting and wiring of signs on trees.
The reminder came in the wake of
findings by a team from the city council staff that even trees around Burnham
Park, the city’s main recreation area, were not spared of signs.
The regulatory ordinance authored
by then councilor and now vice-mayor Daniel Farinas, was amended last year,
through councilor Erdolfo Balajadia who upped the penalties for violations from
five to 20 days imprisonment or P200 to P800 fine to P30 days
imprisonment and or P5,000 fine.
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