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National Printing Office (NPO) is one of 3 Recognized Government Printers in the Philippines (together with Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas and the Apo Production Unit). It was first established in 1901 as the Philippine Bureau of Printing.
Its first office was then located at A. Ma. Regidor Street, Area XI, University of the Philippines, Diliman, Quezon City from 1995 to 2007. After a few months, it was transferred to 2nd Floor, National Printing Office, EDSA corner NIA Northside Road, Diliman, Quezon City from 2007 until 2012.
The main tenants of the DILG-NAPOLCOM Center as its name suggest is the Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) and the National Police Commission (NAPOLCOM). The DILG moved to the building in June 2013 while the NAPOLCOM transferred to the building from its previous office in Makati in May 2014.
The 2nd National Assembly of the Philippines passed Commonwealth Act No. 638, "An Act to provide for the uniform publication and distribution of the Official Gazette" on May 22, 1941, which was approved by President Manuel L. Quezon on June 10, 1941. [4] The Spanish edition was last published in 1941.
During the administration of President Corazon Aquino, it became known as People's Television Network (PTV) after a brief period under the New TV-4 branding. The years following its broadcast, PTV's facilities, then housed on a major part of ABS-CBN's present studio complex in Bohol (now Sgt. Esguerra) Avenue, Quezon City, became a subject of a legal battle between the Lopezes and the Government.
RPN South Tower, Panay Avenue, Brgy. South Triangle, Diliman, Quezon City, Metro Manila: RPTV Baguio DZBS-TV: 12 10 kW Relay Mt. Sto. Tomas, Tuba, Benguet Province under Baguio, Benguet (Northern Luzon) RPTV Iriga DWKI-TV: 10 Iriga-Baao road, Brgy. San Nicolas, Iriga, Camarines Sur (Bicol Region) RPTV Bacolod DYKB-TV: 8
The building has a gross floor area of 101,608.32 square meters; almost seventy thousand (70,000) square meters of office space and over thirty thousand (30,000) square meters of parking space. The construction of the building, which costed 6 billion pesos, began in 1995, but was delayed due to the Asian Financial Crisis in 1997.
Its studios, offices and broadcast facilities are located at the IBC Compound, Lot 3-B, Capitol Hills Drive cor. Zuzuarregui Street, Barangay Matandang Balara, Diliman, Quezon City. As a government-run station, IBC received funding from the General Appropriations Act (Annual National Budget) and sales from blocktimers and advertisers, among others.