A chapel dominates the ground floor with the image of Sto. Niño as focal point. Elevated by 2-3 steps on the peripheral are 13 guest rooms, each with varied motifs representing the different regions of the country. On the second floor is a very spacious ballroom as well as the bed chambers of the former First Family.
Inside the mansion you can find some collections of paintings of historical events in Leyte. The shrine was also a palace during the Marcos regime, with Olympic-size swimming pool, state dining rooms, about 13 guest rooms and private bedrooms for Imelda, Ferdinand and their children. Imelda's bathroom was luxurious and larger than many Filipino homes. The place is filled with antique ceramics, pottery and collectibles. Imelda stayed there only once.
The guest rooms are each in a different theme; a little touch that I really like was that each room had a signed picture of Ferdinand, and a diarama showing Imelda performing some beneficial act or another.
The whole house was furninshed with a multitude of antiques from around the world, you can find Austrian mirrors in almost every room of the mansion. It also became a repository of the Marcos' collections - chandeliers from Czech Republic, mirrors from Austria, tiles from Italy, jars from China, floor carpets from Argentina, among others.
ADDRESS
STO. NINO SHRINE
Real Street
Tacloban City, Leyte
Philippines
OPENING HOURS
Open daily from 8am to 4 pm.
A guided Tour takes about 30 minutes.
RATES
Entrance PHP 200
(for a group of 5 persons)
inclusive of a tour guide,
and an additional PHP 20
exceeding 5 persons
PHP 30 for the use of camera
PHP 200 for video cameras
BOOKINGS
For bookings and information,
call 0063.53.321.977