Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
As early as 2012, the provincial government of Lingayen, Pangasinan, had planned on renovating the once seat of power of the north.Five million pesos was allocated for its initial phase of renovation, to turn the currently inhabitable building into a museum that would house old books, documents, artifacts, archaeological relics and other memoirs of historical and cultural values of Pangasinan ...
This is the official residence of the incumbent Governor of Pangasinan. The edifice was constructed in 1953 and named "Princess Urduja Palace" by former Governor Juan de Guzman Rodriguez. It houses the half-naked painting of Urduja by the renowned mural artist Antonio Gonzalez Dumlao.
Pangasinan: Binmaley: Mary Help of Christians Seminary [1] Pangasinan: Binmaley: Rufino Ynzon House Pangasinan: Binmaley: Clenior Ynzon House Built in the 1900s Pangasinan: Binmaley: Quinto House Built in 1939 Pangasinan: Binmaley: Upload Photo: Ferrer Ancestral House Built by Felix Ferrer, former governor of Bontoc, Mt. Province, in the 1900s.
Universities and colleges in Pangasinan (1 C, 10 P) Pages in category "Buildings and structures in Pangasinan" The following 18 pages are in this category, out of 18 total.
In the past, flophouses were sometimes called lodging houses or workingmen's hotels and catered to hobos and transient workers such as seasonal railroad and agriculture workers, or migrant lumberjacks who would travel west during the summer to work and then return to an eastern or midwestern city which ran along the rail lines, such as Chicago ...
Poverty incidence of Lingayen 5 10 15 20 25 30 2006 24.00 2009 18.32 2012 9.40 2015 10.61 2018 8.58 2021 15.65 Source: Philippine Statistics Authority Agriculture, livestock and fishing are the major industries of the town. Major crops include rice, corn, tomato, mongo, watermelon, and vegetables. Livestock rising are predominant in the southern barangays where vast, long stretch of pasture ...
Hale is a traditional form of Hawaiian architecture, known for its distinctive style, practicality, and close relationship with the natural environment. These indigenous structures were designed to be highly functional, meeting a menagerie of needs in Hawaiian society.
In order to ease travel, he commissioned a governor's mansion across the Pangasinan Provincial Capitol he promptly named "Urduja Palace," named after the legendary Urduja, a princess of Tawilisi, said to be located in the present-day Pangasinan. It was officially named "Urduja House" as a simplication, since it was too small to be a palace. [1]