Laperal White House

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Laperal White House
Laperal House 3.JPG
The house in 2014
Laperal White House is located in Luzon
Laperal White House
Laperal White House is located in Philippines
Laperal White House
Alternative namesLaperal Guesthouse
General information
StatusCompleted
Architectural styleVictorian architecture
Town or cityBaguio
CountryPhilippines
Coordinates16°24′40″N 120°36′17″E / 16.41110°N 120.60472°E / 16.41110; 120.60472Coordinates: 16°24′40″N 120°36′17″E / 16.41110°N 120.60472°E / 16.41110; 120.60472
Current tenantsIfugao Bamboo Carving Gallery
Completed1930s
Technical details
MaterialNarra and yakal wood

The Laperal Guesthouse, popularly known as Laperal White House is a building in Baguio, Philippines which houses a museum.

History

The house was built by Roberto Laperal in the 1930s. The house is made of narra and yakal wood, designed in Victorian style with its wooden planks and gables and steep roof.[1] The clan heads, Roberto and Victorina Laperal made the house as their vacation home.[citation needed]

During World War II, the house was occupied by Japanese soldiers and was used as a garrison. The troops reportedly raped women, tortured and killed suspected spies working for the United States and their allies.[1]

The house transferred ownership after the death of the head of the Laperal clan. The house withstood many natural and man-made casualties, such as the deadly earthquake in 1990 and many more.

Chinese Filipino billionaire tycoon Lucio Tan purchased the property in 2007 but never stayed in the place during his trips to Baguio. He instead had it renovated and refurbished with proper maintenance then made it into a tourist attraction. From then on, the house was opened to public.

In 2013, the tycoon's Tan Yan Kee Foundation transformed the house into a Bamboo Foundation museum which houses Filipino artworks made of bamboo and wood.

In popular culture

According to believers, the house is haunted.[1] The house has been featured on television, especially during Halloween, by TV5, GMA, the ABS-CBN programme Magandang Gabi, Bayan, and i-Witness news. The 2010 horror movie White House featured the house.

Photo gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Caluza, Desiree (1 November 2013). "Signs of the spirits in 'White House'". Inquirer. Retrieved 12 October 2014. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)