By Francis Allan L. Angelo
The PHP 18.27-billion reclamation deal is dead. Good riddance — though perhaps not for the reasons city hall is willing to admit.
Iloilo Global City Corp. failed to meet requirements under the PPP Code, and negotiations collapsed before the deadline. That’s the official version. But the more honest story is that a 662-hectare island-type reclamation project stretching from Fort San Pedro to Villa Arevalo was always a strange solution to a problem the city hasn’t properly defined. What, exactly, were we solving? Commercial real estate supply? Or was this about the thousands of families living along that very coastline — families who need housing, not a luxury mixed-use development rising from reclaimed seabed?
The sales pitch was attractive, sure. Hundreds of hectares. A massive project. New land supposedly without direct city spending. But “no public funds” is not the same thing as no public cost — especially in a coastal city already talking about greenbelt protection, mangroves, storm surge, and flooding.
Let us start with the housing math. The city government has acknowledged a backlog of over 20,000 units. The Institute of Contemporary Economics puts informal settler families at roughly 22,000 — close to one-fifth of the city’s population. The city’s own housing office has said recent initiatives will only gradually reduce that number. None of that is marginal. It points to a structural failure, and reclaimed land won’t change the math — not until someone is honest enough to ask who these projects are actually being built for.
The Villa Beach area in Arevalo is a case in point. Families there didn’t settle along the coast out of carelessness. As researchers have consistently noted in the Philippine context, low-income households have no viable alternative when formal housing supply near their jobs simply doesn’t exist. Proximity to livelihood is not a preference but a matter of survival. You can’t tell a fisherfolk family in Arevalo to relocate to the city’s periphery and assume everything works out.
And then there’s what reclamation actually does to the coastline they depend on.
The Philippines has already lost roughly half its mangrove cover since the early 20th century. Wetlands International Philippines has been explicit: coastal reclamation is among the primary drivers of mangrove destruction. A 2014 study on Manila Bay found that coastal areas adjacent to reclamation sites were sinking by 9 centimeters every year — compounding flood risk, not reducing it. A World Bank-backed policy brief goes further: mangroves can cut wave heights by 50 to 100 percent over a 500-meter belt and avert more than USD 1 billion in flood damage nationwide each year. Without them, annual flooding and damages would increase by roughly 25 percent.
PAGASA’s climate assessment showing sea level rise of around 5 to 7 millimeters per year over the Philippine Sea only sharpens the point. In a warming, wetter, riskier future, building over coastal space is not automatically bold. Sometimes it is just expensive denial.
The city council itself seems to understand this — it’s now moving to protect coastal and mangrove forests because, as officials admitted, mangroves help cushion the impact of flooding, typhoons, and storm surge. You do not praise coastal vegetation as natural protection on one hand and casually flirt with large-scale shoreline alteration on the other. Iloilo is already flood-prone. Reclaiming that stretch from Fort San Pedro to Arevalo would have altered tidal patterns and drainage dynamics in ways that ultimately hurt the communities already living there most.
So what should the city actually do?
The common-sense alternative is already sitting in law and policy. Republic Act 7279 says socialized housing and resettlement should, as far as feasible, be near employment opportunities. DHSUD’s resettlement framework says urban families living and working in cities benefit more from in-city or near-city relocation. The expanded 4PH program now emphasizes on-site, near-site, and in-city housing for informal settler families. ICE makes the economic argument cleanly: in-situ upgrading, where safe, costs less than building from scratch and preserves the social and economic networks that informal communities have spent decades building. There is nothing t radical in this common sense urbanism.
Iloilo has taken some real steps. The Uswag Condominium Complex in Jaro — a PHP 2.539-billion project delivering 1,677 units — is already in the pipeline. The Iloilo Residences rental housing project in Sambag, Jaro, a 362-unit development with a proposed monthly rent of PHP 850 and a 2027 opening target, is another practical move. In-city rental housing under the expanded 4PH program is expected to roll out here as well. That’s genuine movement. But these projects are concentrated in Jaro. The coastal communities in Arevalo, Molo, and City Proper are still waiting. And 362 units against a 22,038 housing backlog is a reminder that pilot projects alone won’t cut it.
What’s needed now is a serious housing-first program: land acquisition where sensible, land sharing where possible, medium-rise and rental housing where density demands it, utility formalization, transport links, and negotiated solutions that respect both property rights and the reality that workers cannot be exiled far from where they earn a living.
PPP head Atty. David Garcia said the city “remains open” to future reclamation proposals. That openness is understandable — Iloilo can’t finance everything on its own. But before the next unsolicited proposal lands on the PPP office’s desk, someone in city hall should ask a simpler question: what happens to the people already living on that coastline?
The real embarrassment here is not that the reclamation deal died. It is that megaprojects still seem to command more political imagination than the ordinary but harder work of housing ordinary Ilonggos. A city that struggles to house its own people decently should not be too eager to manufacture premium waterfront land for future commercial use while today’s workers crowd danger zones, easements, and borrowed spaces because that is the only way to stay near work, school, transport, and the markets that keep daily life moving.
Iloilo doesn’t need more swagger on the shoreline right now. It needs the maturity to repair the city it already has — beginning with Villa — and to understand that homes built with common sense will do more for the future than any glossy artist’s rendering of land that doesn’t yet exist.






















