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Wagwagan in Baguio. An ukay-ukay (Tagalog pronunciation: [ˌʔuːkaɪ.ˈʔuːkaɪ] oo-ky-OO-ky), or wagwagan (Ilocano pronunciation: [wɐgˈwaːgɐn] wəg-WAH-gən) is a Philippine store where a mix of secondhand and surplus items such as clothes, bags, shoes and other accessories are sold at a more affordable price.
Baguio (UK: / ˈ b æ ɡ i oʊ / BAG-ee-oh, US: / ˈ b ɑː ɡ i oʊ, ˌ b ɑː ɡ i ˈ oʊ / BAH-ghee-oh, - OH, Tagalog:), officially the City of Baguio (Ibaloi: Siudad ne Bagiw; Ilocano: Siudad ti Baguio; Tagalog: Lungsod ng Baguio), is a highly urbanized city in the Cordillera Administrative Region, Philippines.
SM City Baguio is the 23rd largest shopping mall in the Philippines. At a floor area of 176,073 m 2 (1,895,230 sq ft), [ 1 ] it is the largest shopping mall in the North Luzon Region . The entire SM City Baguio complex stands on a land area of 80,000 m 2 (860,000 sq ft) on Luneta Hill on top of Session Road overlooking historic Burnham Park and ...
The establishment is the first shopping mall and livelihood hub in Baguio. [5] Nearby souvenir shops which were displaced by fire moved into the building. [6] In 1975, the Baguio city council extended the lease period of the Maharlika Livelihood Center to 50 years, with the lease set to expire on April 27, 2025.
Joseph J. Keith Long serving police chief (1912–1941) who declared Baguio an open city on December 8, 1941 in face of the Japanese bombardment [18] Lyman W.V. Kennon, builder and namesake for Kennon Road [17] George A. Malcolm, American jurist establishing the U.P. College of Law and namesake of Malcolm Square in the city center [17]
With subsidiaries, JoyBus and North Genesis (the former Baguio - Cubao route of Dagupan Bus retained by Genesis Transport Service Inc.). Plies from Manila to Baler, and Baguio to Cabanatuan. German Espiritu Liner Inc. – one of the oldest bus companies based in Bulacan. [8] Its buses travel to Bulakan and Balagtas from Cubao and Divisoria.
University of the Philippines Baguio's chairman for the Program of Indigenous Cultures, Io Jularbal, asserts that the barrel man is a byproduct of Westernization. He points out that prior to the arrival of foreigners in the Cordilleras that indigenous people freely roamed around with little to no clothing with no shame.
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