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Cesar Lacson Locsin Ancestral House

Coordinates: 10°47′54″N 122°58′31″E / 10.79833°N 122.97528°E / 10.79833; 122.97528
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Cesar Lacson Locsin Ancestral House
The Cesar Lacson Locsin Ancestral House is home of El Ideal Bakery.
Cesar Lacson Locsin Ancestral House is located in Philippines
Cesar Lacson Locsin Ancestral House
Location within the Philippines
Alternative namesEl Ideal Bakery
General information
StatusCompleted
Architectural styleBahay na bato
AddressRizal and Fr. Eusebio Streets
Town or citySilay City, Negros Occidental
CountryPhilippines
Coordinates10°47′54″N 122°58′31″E / 10.79833°N 122.97528°E / 10.79833; 122.97528
OwnerMr. and Mrs. Henry and Maritess Villanueva-Sanchez and family
Technical details
Floor counttwo

The Cesar Lacson Locsin Ancestral House is a heritage house known to be the home of El Ideal Bakery, the oldest bakery along Rizal and Eusebio Streets, National Highway, Silay, Negros Occidental, Philippines. The bakery is known for its guapple pie (a combination of guava and apple pie) and several other local delicacies and sweets.[1]

History

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Around the 1920s, Cesar Lacson Locsin and his sisters, Julianita "Nitang" Locsin-Gamboa included, started baking breads and cookies in their lone brick oven within the confines of their two-storey home.[2][3]

El Ideal Bakery from the highway.
The famous pies of El Ideal.

During the glory days of Silay, El Ideal served to cater to the gastronomic needs of gamblers who were often glued to their favorite pastime.[4]

Then time came when the sisters had to leave the bakeshop to the hands of Locsin as the sole owner. Locsin-Gamboa, on her part, had to focus on raising a family and had to sell her share to her brother.[3] Locsin took on the responsibility of running El Ideal and eventually passed the management to his daughter, Alice Locsin-Villanueva, in the 1950s. Locsin-Villanueva developed El Ideal by installing another brick oven, adding a restaurant that occupied the whole ground floor of the ancestral house, and expanding its product line that included refreshments. Now, Locsin's granddaughter Maritess Villanueva-Sanchez with her husband Henry Sanchez and son Mark took over the business.[2]

But El Ideal was not without challenges. In 1977, there was a move to widen Rizal St., which would mean taking down heritage structures, such as the Cesar Lacson Locsin Ancestral House. But the residents of Silay expressed their desire to protect these old buildings. A petition was submitted and the plan never pushed through.[5] Such demolition would have chopped off a portion of the refreshment parlor and part of the kitchen.[2]

The Cesar Lacson Locsin Ancestral House is now protected from such threats through its stature as a heritage structure through a declaration by the National Historical Institute pursuant to board resolution no. 3 dated 6 April 1993.[6]

Art and architecture

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An Antillan structure, the Cesar Lacson Locsin Ancestral House adheres to the classic "bahay na bato" standards wherein the lower portion is made of concrete while the upper floor is made of wood. The windows are made of glass panes and the upper level windows have iron grills.[7]

See Also

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References

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  1. ^ Gamboa Fernandez, Doreen. "Savoring Silay". Silay City Government. Archived from the original on 8 November 2014. Retrieved 2 November 2014.
  2. ^ a b c Gabriel, Emmaruth (October 2002). "El Ideal: No Cookie-Cutter Operation". Entrepreneur Philippines. Philippines: Summit Publishing. Archived from the original on 2014-11-08. Retrieved 8 November 2014.
  3. ^ a b "Negros Delicacies: Traditional and Trendy". Food Magazine. Philippines: ABS-CBN Publishing, Inc. September 2008. Archived from the original on 8 November 2014. Retrieved 8 November 2014.
  4. ^ Bloom, Greg (15 September 2010). El Ideal Bakery. Lonely Planet Publications. ISBN 9781742203706. Retrieved 2 November 2014. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  5. ^ Betancourt, Daniel (December 2007). "Housing Our Rich Past". Cebu Smile. Smile Magazine. Retrieved 13 September 2014.
  6. ^ Tejero, Constantino (25 March 2007). "Bacolod the Bountiful". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Archived from the original on 2014-12-17. Retrieved 30 October 2014.
  7. ^ Pacete, Ver (23 January 2014). "Archi Tourism in Silay (First of Three Parts)". Sunstar. Sun Star. Retrieved 3 November 2014.
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