What Makes Mixed-Use Developments in Philippines Come Alive? It’s Not What You Think.
- charisse35
- Aug 5
- 3 min read

Across our cities, mixed-use developments have become the go-to solution. Residential towers sit on top of office floors, connected to retail podiums and scattered amenities. On paper, they seem complete. But many of these developments still don’t feel quite right once you're in them.
It's not that the model doesn’t work. The issue is that we often plan these spaces without really understanding how Filipinos live, move, and interact with their environment.

Where it starts to fall apart
We are a community-first culture. We linger. We move in groups. We gravitate toward visibility, convenience, and spaces that feel welcoming. But in most projects, circulation is designed for symmetry instead of natural flow. Retail is set too deep into the site. Shared amenities are placed where they look balanced on a plan, not where people can easily access them.
These misalignments usually happen early in the process. By the time interiors are being planned, it becomes difficult and expensive to course correct.

What we often overlook
In our context, people are not just passing through spaces. We pause, we wait, we observe. And we tend to gather where things are familiar and visible. When design ignores this, people disengage.
You see it in retail zones that struggle to lease because they're hidden or too far from where people naturally walk. Or in amenities that feel detached from everyday life. Or in offices that remain underused because they were planned before hybrid work shifted how teams operate.
Buyers and tenants are also becoming more critical. They ask better questions. They want more than just good finishes. They want to know how the place works, how it connects, and whether it supports the way they live.
What the better ones get right
There are some places where the experience feels more natural. These spaces aren’t always louder or bigger. They just read people better.
Retail is visible from key entry points. Amenities are close to movement, not hidden behind elevators or locked away on rooftop corners. Offices are designed to adapt to changing occupancy, not resist it. Open spaces serve a clear purpose, not just a checklist item.
What makes these places work is not scale or budget. It's the order in which decisions were made. The teams behind them planned for behaviour first. They paid attention to how people move, how they gather, and what they respond to.
The question we should be asking
Instead of asking what else can we fit in, maybe we should ask what's already happening here and how can we support it.
That small shift in mindset changes everything. When we move from assuming to observing, we design spaces that make sense. Environments become more intuitive. People stay longer. Places feel alive.
A closing thought
Mixed-use developments have the potential to do more than combine functions. They can build communities that reflect how we live. But this only happens when we stop designing for how things should look and start designing for how people live.
It’s not about squeezing in more features. It’s about sequencing the right decisions from the start, with people in mind.
If we get that right, we don’t just build mixed-use. We build places that feel lived.
References
CBRE Philippines. (2024). Metro Manila Office Vacancy Trends. Available at: CBRE Philippines on LinkedIn
ResearchGate. (2024). Economic Vitality, Sustainability and Marketability of Mixed-Use Development Projects in the Leasing Industry. Available at: researchgate.net
Eurogroup / French Trade Advisors Forum. (2023). The New ASEAN Consumer. Available at: marketresearchsoutheastasia.com
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