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  2. Binondo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binondo

    Lucky Chinatown Mall; Chinatown Arch; Jones Bridge; One Financial Center Manila Chinatown by Anchor Land is a 45-story Grade-A office at 531 Quintin Paredes Street, Binondo, the tallest in Manila. It features sleek, low-e-glass curtain wall façade, with lobby drop-off and 9 multistorey car park with 5 high-speed elevators. [17]

  3. Chinatown - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinatown

    Binondo, Manila, home to the world's oldest Chinatown. In the Spanish Philippines, where the oldest surviving Chinatowns are located, the district where Chinese migrants were required to live is called a parián, which were also often a marketplace for trade goods. Most of them were established in the late 16th century to house Chinese migrants ...

  4. Chinatowns in Asia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinatowns_in_Asia

    Welcome Arch to the Manila Chinatown. The best-known Chinatown in the Philippines is the district of Binondo in Manila. Binondo is the oldest Chinatown in the world, having been established in 1594, [18] when the Spanish colonial government of the Philippine islands restricted the residence of Chinese who had converted to Christianity to this ...

  5. A fire sweeps through a building in Manila's Chinatown ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/fire-sweeps-building-manilas...

    A fire swept through a part of a small building in Manila’s crowded Chinatown district Friday, leaving at least 11 people dead, police said, adding that an investigation was underway to ...

  6. Plaza Moraga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plaza_Moraga

    Serving as the gateway to Manila's Chinatown of Binondo, the plaza is located at the foot of Jones Bridge at the west end of Escolta Street. [1] It was named after a Franciscan friar, Fr. Fernando de Moraga and it is by the opinion of many, that were it not for him, the history of the Philippines would turn out differently from what it is now.

  7. Lucky Chinatown - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucky_Chinatown

    The Chinatown Walk is a promenade within Lucky Chinatown where people can try Filipino-Chinese products. It is inspired by Hong Kong and Shanghai market alleys where Chinese merchants sell exotic Chinese delicacies, herbal medicine, and street food. The design and layout is also inspired by the Manila Chinatown of the past. [12]

  8. Parián (Manila) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parián_(Manila)

    Before the Spanish conquest of Manila in the Battle of Manila (1570), a Sangley Chinese community had already settled in Baybay (modern-day San Nicolas) near Tondo on the north bank of the Pasig river. Around the years after 1581, a place closer to the city south of the Pasig river had been set aside as a market for the Sangley Chinese merchants.

  9. 168 Shopping Mall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/168_Shopping_Mall

    168 Shopping Mall (Chinese: 一路發商場; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: It-lō͘-hoa̍t siong-tiûⁿ) is a shopping complex in Binondo, Manila, the Chinatown of the Philippines. The three-story complex, housing over 500 tenants, is located along St. Elena and Soler Streets just south of Recto Avenue and Divisoria. It is owned and managed by the 168 Group ...

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