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Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts

Thursday, May 20, 2010

D'Leonor Hotel Tarpaulin

DLeonor Hotel,Hotel,Davao City

D'Leonor Hotel is located at JP Laurel Ave., Bajada, Davao City.

Services:
Terrace on all Junior Suites.
Living Area
Kitchen Area.
CoffeeShoppe
Restaurant

Monday, April 13, 2009

Blue Waters, Samal Island Escapade 2009

I haven't seen my college friends since our last Escapade and that was three (3) years ago. You can't blame me if I'll get excited when I heard that we have a summer escapade this year.

(Davao - Samal)

Meeting Place : Sasa Ferry 'Barge" Terminal

Type of transport : Ferry 'Barge'

Fare: Php10 ea.

(Samal Barge Terminal - Blue Waters)

Type of Transport : Motorcycle

Fare : Php25 ea.



BLUE WATERS

Entrance : Php100 ea.

Tables : Php150/ table (Good for 4 person)

Pool : Php50 ea.

HERE ARE SOME OF OUR PICS...

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GROUP PICTURES

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Friday, February 6, 2009

A Valentine Special @ EMARS Hotel

valentine



EMARS Hotel, Restaurant & Beach Resort located in Times Beach, Matina Aplaya, Davao City prepared a Valentine Special not only to couples but for the family also.

I designed the above newspaper ads, leaflet and a tarpaulin to promote the EMARS Hotel, Restaurant & Beach Resort.

So come and visit...

Monday, January 28, 2008

New Park in Davao City the 'People's Park'


A park is a bounded area of land, usually in its natural or semi-natural (landscaped) state and set aside for some purpose, usually to do with recreation.

A park in Davao City covering 4 hectares and planted with different species of trees and other plants. It is located at Palma Gil St., Davao City and a former PTA Ground.



Tuesday, January 22, 2008

City of the Future?















This article is from http://www.travelandleisure.com/
articles/city-of-the-future-october-2004/.I want you to make comments about this country.

City of the Future?

Dubai isn't just remaking its skyline, explains Lee Smith—it's becoming the Arab world's most ambitious social and economic experiment

From October 2004

By Lee Smith

In the past few years, Dubai—the most glamorous of the United Arab Emirates' seven sheikhdoms—has become famous for forward-thinking hotels such as the sail-shaped Burj Al Arab, and audacious building projects such as the Palm and the World, two massive collections of man-made islands that are taking shape offshore. On my recent visit to the emirate, people were buzzing about yet another new development, a $5 billion entertainment complex called Dubailand that will be built in the desert. Scheduled to open in 2007, Dubailand will include aquatic- and dinosaur-themed amusement parks, a space-age hotel, and the world's largest shopping center.

All this is part of ruler Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum's plan to wean the local economy off its dependence on oil, in part through tourism. According to the World Tourism Organization, Dubai had the world's highest growth rate in tourism in 2002. Last year, the emirate attracted nearly 5 million visitors, 38 percent more than in 2001. Dubailand is expected to boost tourism to 20 percent of the emirate's GDP.

Dubai's diversified economy—with large investments in the technology and information industries as well as tourism—has made it an increasingly popular place for international companies to do business, but what struck me most in Dubai was how much the city's ongoing transformation is being debated. Locals are wondering what kind of future Dubai is building toward—and whether it's one they want.

"There has to be more to a place than doing business," Jihad Fakhreddine, an analyst at the Pan-Arab Research Center, told me one afternoon at his office. The 47-year-old Lebanese expatriate had recently returned from Iraq, where he'd conducted polling for Gallup International. "I felt more attracted and attached to Baghdad after forty days than I do to Dubai after thirteen years." Unlike Iraq, Dubai is stable and rich, but what concerns Fakhreddine is that the emirate's cultural com- placency may shape the future of the Arab world. "There is no interest here in forming a culture that would make this country unique," he said. "We aren't asking things like, 'What does it mean to be an Arab? Is Dubai even an Arab city at all?'"

That is a complicated question. With between 80 and 90 percent of Dubai's population made up of foreign workers, from Pakistani laborers to Western executives, the answer is: maybe not. "Dubai's fundamental issue is demographic," Abdelkhaleq Abdulla, an Emirati native who runs a political science think tank, told me a few days later. "How can locals accept that they're a minority in their own country? Yet the economy is tied to the presence of expats.

"There are a lot of locals who look to the past and think the old ways were best," Abdulla continued. "And there are also a lot of people worried about the future. They're afraid the bubble will burst and everyone will go home."

While there is concern that the Islamist insurgency in Saudi Arabia could cause problems throughout the Persian Gulf, it is precisely Dubai's building boom that may make Abdulla's nightmare scenario less plausible. Much of the emirate's pricey new real estate—a substantial portion of developments such as the Palm—is being purchased by non-Arab, non-Muslim foreigners, giving them a greater stake in the city's future.

It's not far-fetched to think that outsiders could someday play as important a part in Dubai's political life as they have in its economy. The emirate may be a model of openness in the region, but it still suffers from a democracy deficit. And since Westerners are accustomed to political participation in their homelands, one possible incentive to keep the expat labor force in Dubai could well be democracy. "Political participation is the next step for us," Abdulla told me. "It has to come."

The question remains whether a multi-ethnic, democratic society really is possible here. Of course, that's exactly what the 21st century was supposed to look like, before September 11 left many wondering if it would instead become a jet-age reprise of historic clashes. After visiting Dubai, I found it reassuring to find that this is, in fact, a place—in the Arab world, no less—still considering that once-shared vision of the future.