24/04/2026
The Artemio Reyes Residence (1959) on Araneta Avenue, designed by Marcos C. De Guzman, is not only one of the most striking expressions of the Space Age in Philippine domestic architecture; it is also a fragile witness to Quezon City’s vanishing modern heritage. Built at a time when the city was expanding as a landscape of postwar aspiration, the house captured an era that looked to the future with almost boundless confidence. The 1950s drew heavily from the imagery of rockets, satellites, observatories, and flying saucers, and architecture responded with bold forms that seemed to defy gravity itself. In this house, modernity was not timid. It was theatrical, optimistic, and unafraid to dream.
Marcos de Guzman gave this optimism a memorable and almost cinematic form. The residence’s great saucer-like concrete shell, pierced by bubble skylights and ringed by a continuous band of windows, appears to hover above the ground like a craft poised for lift-off. Its crescent-cut tower, with its projecting observation deck and antenna-like device, completed the fantasy of interplanetary communication. Yet beneath this playful futurism lay real architectural intelligence: the aerodynamic roof naturally shed water, resisted winds, and created a luminous, well-ventilated interior. It was a house that translated the technological imagination of the Space Age into a distinctly local tropical modernism.
Today, however, the Artemio Reyes Residence stands in a poor state of preservation, and its condition mirrors the broader erosion of Quezon City’s modern architectural legacy. Too many postwar houses, civic buildings, and commercial landmarks have disappeared quietly under the pressures of redevelopment, neglect, and historical amnesia. These structures are often dismissed as merely old, eccentric, or unfashionable, when in truth they embody a vital chapter in the city’s cultural formation. They tell us of a Quezon City that once served as a testing ground for new ideas, new lifestyles, and new architectural vocabularies.
To lose the Artemio Reyes Residence is to lose more than an unusual house. It is to lose a piece of Quezon City’s memory as the nation’s experimental capital of modern life. Its fading presence reminds us that heritage is not confined to colonial stone churches or ancestral houses; it also resides in concrete shells, futuristic towers, and the extravagant dreams of the postwar decades. If Quezon City is to honor its own architectural history, it must learn to see these endangered modern landmarks not as expendable relics, but as irreplaceable records of a time when the city dared to imagine the future.