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ABS-CBN Broadcasting Center

The ABS-CBN Broadcasting Center (also called ABS-CBN Broadcast Center; formerly known as Broadcast Plaza from 1974 to 1979 and current edifice formerly spelled officially as ABS-CBN Broadcasting Centre) in Diliman, Quezon City, Philippines is the oldest broadcast headquarters of ABS-CBN. It houses ABS-CBN Entertainment studios, broadcast facilities, offices and the headquarters of ABS-CBN News. It is also where the transmitter site of ALLTV is situated which was previously used by ABS-CBN before it became inactive due to the 2020 broadcast franchise renewal dispute with ownership of the transmitter remains with the network.[2] It occupies an area of approximately 34,000 square meters adjacent to ELJ Communications Center.[3] It was originally built in 1968 and was then the most advanced broadcast facility in Asia. Today it is now the country's largest and most technologically advanced media facility.[4] While ABS-CBN's production facility is located at ABS-CBN Horizon IT Park at San Jose del Monte, Bulacan.[5]

ABS-CBN Broadcasting Center
The ABS-CBN Broadcasting Center as viewed from Sgt. Esguerra Street.
General information
StatusComplete - Operational (online and cable broadcasting activities i.e. Kapamilya Channel, ANC, Kapamilya Online Live, TFC, TeleRadyo as well as news and current affairs offices of ABS-CBN News, entertainment, television, and film production of ABS-CBN Entertainment and Star Cinema and its subsidiaries)
TypeStudio, office, broadcasting
Architectural styleNeo-modern
LocationSgt. Esguerra Avenue corner Mother Ignacia Street, Brgy. South Triangle, Diliman, Quezon City
CountryPhilippines
Coordinates14°38′22.76″N 121°02′13.91″E / 14.6396556°N 121.0371972°E / 14.6396556; 121.0371972
Construction startedFebruary 24, 1967
Opening
  • December 18, 1968 (studios and main building)
  • January 1, 2000 (ELJCC building)
Renovated1992
1999
2010
Owner
Height
Antenna spire720 feet (Millennium Transmitter)
Technical details
Floor count3
GroundsApproximately 34,000 m²
Design and construction
Architect(s)Carlos Arguelles[1]
Other designersWili Fernandez (interior design)

Built as the headquarters of ABS-CBN, the center has since seen several management changes, such as a takeover by RPN and sister station BBC in 1973, the addition of a third tenant, the government station GTV (now PTV) in 1974, and then the departure of RPN and BBC in 1978 to Broadcast City (along with then-sister station IBC from San Juan del Monte) and the entry of NMPC and BB in 1980 which accompanied the remaining tenant MBS. From 1986 to 1992, the reopened ABS-CBN and PTV, along with PBS, shared the Broadcast Center and following PTV's departure in 1992, ABS-CBN has since regained full control of the facility.

History

1968–1972: First era under ABS-CBN

The broadcasting center, conceptualized by ABS-CBN's then-President Eugenio Lopez Jr., began construction on February 24, 1967 and was opened on December 18, 1968. Prior to the opening, ABS-CBN held headquarters in two buildings: the ABS building in Roxas Boulevard for ABS-CBN's Manila TV stations at that time, DZAQ-TV 3 and DZXL-TV 9, and the Chronicle Building in Aduana, Manila for its Manila radio stations. With the opening, ABS-CBN's radio and TV operations were housed in one building. ABS-CBN would soon sell the Roxas Boulevard studios to Kanlaon Broadcasting System or KBS (now known as Radio Philippines Network or RPN), which then took Channel 9 and prompted ABS-CBN to switch frequencies from Channels 3 and 9 to Channels 2 and 4.

When it was opened, it was the most advanced TV broadcasting facility in Asia. ABS-CBN mentioned that before Martial Law, it was once the training ground of TV electronics engineers from other countries. The new TV transmitter tower known as the Millennium Transmitter in the complex would begin beaming Channel 2 and 4's signals in 1969.

1972–1986: Martial law and takeover by KBS/RPN, BBC, GTV/MBS and the BB

 
The ABS-CBN Broadcasting Center as viewed from the rooftop of the main building of ABS-CBN.

On September 21, 1972, ABS-CBN was shut down after then-President Ferdinand Marcos declared martial law. All of its properties, which included the Broadcast Center, were seized from the network.

The facility was not to be used again at least until RPN (then KBS until renamed it to the latter in 1975), whose first facility given by ABS-CBN was destroyed by a fire, took over the facility in 1973. It also became home of two newly formed networks BBC which took Channel 2 and Government Television (GTV) which took Channel 4 in 1974. The facility was also renamed as the Broadcast Plaza.

RPN and BBC, were all owned by Roberto Benedicto (a prominent crony of Marcos − along with IBC, in which Benedicto bought the network (including its flagship channel 13) from the Canoys, who owns RMN and the Sorianos (as Inter-Island Broadcasting Corporation) in 1975; and IBC which is still based from then town of San Juan del Monte, Rizal province (now city of San Juan, Metro Manila) at that time), and GTV was owned by the government through National Media Production Center (NMPC). Benedicto owned the facility without any compensation. The crony-owned networks used ABS-CBN's facilities without even paying the network's owners, the Lopezes, making the network's technologies gradually dilapidated, resulting in it losing its prestige as one of the most advanced broadcasting centers in Asia.

In July 1978, RPN and BBC left the Broadcast Plaza (along with IBC from San Juan del Monte) for their new home in the Broadcast City, situated in Old Balara in Quezon City, leaving GTV, which at that point was relaunched as Maharlika Broadcasting System (MBS) two years later, as the sole tenant of the facility.

In 1980, the Bureau of Broadcasts (BB), a radio network also owned by the government under the Department/Ministry of Public Information, was also transferred to Broadcast Plaza from now demolished Philippine Communications Center (PHILCOMCEN) building in Ortigas Center, Pasig, Metro Manila after the Office of Media Affairs was created to provide a unitary form of media for both NMPC and the BB.

In 1986, the complex was stormed by anti-Marcos rebel soldiers that attacked and took over Channel 4 under the supervision of ABS-CBN's former General Manager Augusto Almeda-Lopez. Channel 4 then went back on the air to serve the people and to broadcast the historic People Power Revolution that resulted in Ferdinand Marcos being ousted from office.

1986–1992: Housing ABS-CBN and PTV

After Marcos was deposed and when Corazon Aquino became the first female president, on February 25, 1986, MBS was changed its interim name to The New TV-4 until it was officially rebranded as the People's Television Network (PTV) in April 1986 while the radio properties of NMPC and the BB were integrated to the reinstated pre-Martial Law era Philippine Broadcasting Service (PBS, through the Bureau of Broadcast Services or BBS). The same year, RPN, IBC, and BBC were sequestered by the newly-formed Presidential Commission on Good Government from Benedicto. BBC was dissolved and its frequencies were given to ABS-CBN, which was turned back to the Lopezes and was relaunched on September 14, 1986. RPN and IBC, on the other hand − were turned over to the government (under the Presidential Communications Group). While Channel 4 remained with PTV, Channel 2 of the former BBC was given back to ABS-CBN.

At that time, the facility was dilapidated. The technology in the facility was very old, the center was sorely lacking in tables, chairs, and telephones, there were plants growing on the compound's walls, and some of the studios' walls were even crumbling.

In January 1987, the network did get back the facility, but with an agreement with PTV (which also had to deal with the facility's outdated equipment) wherein they will share the space, splitting it 50–50 (until January 22, 1992). In just two years after reopening in 1986, ABS-CBN would soon regain ratings leadership and propel itself back to financial stability.

During the coup attempt against President Aquino on August 28, 1987, a fierce fire fight between rebel soldiers and the police raged around the compound as rebel soldiers seized PTV. Eventually, the rebels' assault was thwarted and PTV was back under the control of the government, but in the midst of the conflict, P/Sgt. Eduardo A. Esguerra of the Quezon City Police Department fell and died in the compound. A marker in his memory on the spot where he died was erected a year after the assault, and Bohol Avenue, where ABS-CBN is situated, was eventually renamed Sgt. Esguerra Avenue.

The network soon filed a case against Marcos, Benedicto, and his networks for not compensating for the usage of the broadcast technology and equipment in the facility that clearly belonged to ABS-CBN. At this point, the facility's former tenant RPN and its then-sister station IBC, once the dominant channels, both slumped in the ratings as ABS-CBN furthered its supremacy during the tail-end of the decade.

In 1988, a fire hit one of the studios in the compound, injuring a few people and slightly damaging the broadcast equipment. It was also the site of a failed military coup in 1989 that attempted to overthrow the then-current Aquino government.

DZMM, ABS-CBN's flagship AM radio station, soon moved to the Broadcast Center in 1987, along with DWRR, its flagship FM radio station. Prior to this, DZMM was once housed at the Chronicle Building (now Benpres Building) in Ortigas Center, Pasig, where it was relaunched in 1986 as a news and commentary station.

1992–1999: Second era under ABS-CBN

After past five years and four months of reopening on January 22, 1992, ABS-CBN finally regained full control of the facility after both PTV and the PBS/BBS moved out of the area to a new broadcasting complex (PIA/Government Information and Media Center Building) and the new 500 ft (150 m) transmitter tower situated in Visayas Avenue, Quezon City.

The network renovated the Broadcasting Center and began the long, tedious process of updating its broadcasting technology and equipment. By the end of the millennium, the Broadcast Center had become the most advanced broadcast facility in the Philippines.

2000–present: The new millennium

 
The ABS-CBN Studios and open parking lot in 2012

In 2000, the Broadcasting Center was renovated again, with its hallways turned into a picture gallery of the network's stars and personalities, and the transmitter in the complex was relaunched as the Millennium Transmitter, increasing its transmitter power to 120 kilowatts.

That same year, the network moved most of its operations to the newly inaugurated Eugenio Lopez Jr. Communications Center, named in honor of the network's late chairman Eugenio Lopez, Jr. It became the new home of the offices of many of the network's operations as well as four new technologically advanced studios (including Studio 10, the biggest studio in the complex, and the home of ASAP, ABS-CBN's longest-running Sunday noontime variety show). The building was accredited by PEZA as an IT zone in 2003.

The building was built mainly to suit ABS-CBN's growing demands - a result of its diversification from a broadcasting network to a media powerhouse engaging not only in radio and TV broadcasting but now also in movie production, records, merchandising, cable and UHF TV, international services, and post-production. The Broadcast Center is still being used as the headquarters for the network's news division and its nine studios are still being used by the network's entertainment programs.

In 2003 (ABS-CBN's 50th anniversary), the National Historical Commission set up a plaque in the entrance of the ABS-CBN Broadcast Center, honouring the first TV broadcast made in the country, made by DZAQ-TV Channel 3, owned by Alto Broadcasting System, precursor of ABS-CBN.

In 2005, the Millennium Transmitter increased its power to 346.2 kilowatts (60 kW TPO), the most powerful in its history. In 2008, in honour of the 80th birthday of one of its most prized talents, the late comedy king Dolphy (who was with ABS-CBN for most of his showbiz career), Studio 1 was renamed as the Dolphy Theater. In 2009, the Millennium Transmitter increased its height to 720 feet and was also reinforced with powerful dipole antennas replacing the cylinder antennas.

Throughout early and mid-2020, in the midst of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic in the Philippines, the broadcasting center became the site of the commemoration following the expiration of the ABS-CBN's franchise, and the subsequent rallies and noise barrages generated by thousands of ABS-CBN employees and supporters, regarding the opposition of the verdict from the House of Representatives.

On September 6, 2022, a fire was struck inside the ABS-CBN compound. The fire reached the first alarm before it was declared out around 8:39 am.[6]

On September 11, 2022, the Millennium Transmitter was leased by Advanced Media Broadcasting System to air its flagship television station, ALLTV, after its broadcast franchise lapsed in 2020. [7]

Structures

ABS-CBN main building

 
Main building of ABS-CBN Broadcasting Center, as seen in 2010

The ABS-CBN main building was originally built in 1968 and was the main headquarters of the whole ABS-CBN network for decades until 2000 when the ELJ Communications Center was opened. It is directly connected to the network's studios which was also built in 1968. The main entrance to the whole complex is located here. Today, it is mainly occupied by the news division ABS-CBN News and Current Affairs and the Manila Radio Division which consist of DZMM 630/TeleRadyo (AM) and MOR 101.9/MOR Entertainment (FM) as well as its ABS-CBNnews.com website. The ABS-CBN Newsroom which is used by the ABS-CBN News Channel for live broadcasts is located here.

There is also a historical marker in the building's entrance which commemorates the first TV broadcast in the Philippines which was made by ABS-CBN on October 23, 1953, which was issued by the National Historical Commission of the Philippines in 2003, the 50th anniversary of ABS-CBN and Philippine television.

ABS-CBN Studios

ABS-CBN's studios are the oldest television studios of the network. It is actually a single large building that houses seven studios. It was originally built in 1968 and it is directly connected to the main building. Studio 1, now called the Dolphy Theatre, is named after the late comedian-actor Dolphy. Studio 2 is used by the singing variety show Everybody, Sing!. Studio 3 is the home studio of the noontime variety show It's Showtime. Studio 4 houses the now-defunct game show Your Face Sounds Familiar. Studio 5 houses the game show I Can See Your Voice. Studio 6 houses the programs of the ABS-CBN News Channel, while ABS-CBN's flagship news programs TV Patrol, News Patrol, Headline Pilipinas and The World Tonight airs live from Studio 7.

ABS-CBN DTC Building

The ABS-CBN Development and Talent Center building, which is also known as the DTC building, is a seven-story building that houses two studios, rehearsal rooms, a storage area, and the offices of ABS-CBN Star Magic Workshop and DTT channels, including Cine Mo! and Yey!. Studios 11 and 12, which are located in the building's fourth floor, are used by ABS-CBN CPI's programs. The building was completed after 1998 and was the home of Star Magic before moving its offices to the ELJ building. ABS-CBN Sports occupied the entire 7th floor before its Technical group was disbanded and its Production team moved to a room inside DZMM.

Gina Lopez Building

The Gina Lopez Building, or also known as the ABS-CBN Foundation Building, is a five-story building behind the ELJ Communications Center. Built during the 1990s, the building houses the offices of the programs and initiatives under AFI. The building was renovated and retrofitted during the late 2000s. The building was renamed in 2020 after Gina Lopez who passed away in 2019.[8]

ABS-CBN Audience Entrance and Tulong Center

The ABS-CBN Audience Entrance, which is located along Eugenio Lopez Drive, serves as the main entrance for audiences of ABS-CBN shows. The building houses several food stalls and a lounge for audiences before being accommodated in live tapings. The building also housed the ABS-CBN Tulong Center, which was closed following the non-franchise renewal.

See also

References

  1. ^ Paulo Alcazaren (February 13, 2010). "Wili's wonders". Philstar Global.
  2. ^ "Willie Revillame, nagpasalamat sa ABS-CBN sa pagbebenta ng transmitter sa AMBS". Philippine Entertainment Portal. September 16, 2022. Retrieved September 16, 2022.
  3. ^ Villanueva, Paul Michael (December 31, 2011), ABS-CBN 17-A 2011, Scribd.com, p. 18, retrieved August 8, 2012
  4. ^ , Reocities, archived from the original on October 19, 2013, retrieved March 21, 2012
  5. ^ News, ABS-CBN (December 12, 2018). "Pasilip sa bagong ABS-CBN Studios". ABS-CBN News. Retrieved April 17, 2021. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  6. ^ "Fire hits ABS-CBN compound". Philippine Daily Inquirer. September 6, 2022. Retrieved September 6, 2022.
  7. ^ "Willie Revillame, nagpasalamat sa ABS-CBN sa pagbebenta ng transmitter sa AMBS". Philippine Entertainment Portal. September 16, 2022. Retrieved September 16, 2022.
  8. ^ "ABS-CBN Foundation Building renamed after Gina Lopez". ABS-CBN News. February 5, 2020. Retrieved July 7, 2022.

broadcasting, center, also, called, broadcast, center, formerly, known, broadcast, plaza, from, 1974, 1979, current, edifice, formerly, spelled, officially, broadcasting, centre, diliman, quezon, city, philippines, oldest, broadcast, headquarters, houses, ente. The ABS CBN Broadcasting Center also called ABS CBN Broadcast Center formerly known as Broadcast Plaza from 1974 to 1979 and current edifice formerly spelled officially as ABS CBN Broadcasting Centre in Diliman Quezon City Philippines is the oldest broadcast headquarters of ABS CBN It houses ABS CBN Entertainment studios broadcast facilities offices and the headquarters of ABS CBN News It is also where the transmitter site of ALLTV is situated which was previously used by ABS CBN before it became inactive due to the 2020 broadcast franchise renewal dispute with ownership of the transmitter remains with the network 2 It occupies an area of approximately 34 000 square meters adjacent to ELJ Communications Center 3 It was originally built in 1968 and was then the most advanced broadcast facility in Asia Today it is now the country s largest and most technologically advanced media facility 4 While ABS CBN s production facility is located at ABS CBN Horizon IT Park at San Jose del Monte Bulacan 5 ABS CBN Broadcasting CenterThe ABS CBN Broadcasting Center as viewed from Sgt Esguerra Street General informationStatusComplete Operational online and cable broadcasting activities i e Kapamilya Channel ANC Kapamilya Online Live TFC TeleRadyo as well as news and current affairs offices of ABS CBN News entertainment television and film production of ABS CBN Entertainment and Star Cinema and its subsidiaries TypeStudio office broadcastingArchitectural styleNeo modernLocationSgt Esguerra Avenue corner Mother Ignacia Street Brgy South Triangle Diliman Quezon CityCountryPhilippinesCoordinates14 38 22 76 N 121 02 13 91 E 14 6396556 N 121 0371972 E 14 6396556 121 0371972Construction startedFebruary 24 1967OpeningDecember 18 1968 studios and main building January 1 2000 ELJCC building Renovated199219992010OwnerABS CBN Corporation 1968 1972 1986 present Roberto Benedicto 1972 1978 KBS RPN Government of the Philippines 1974 1992 GTV MBS PTV HeightAntenna spire720 feet Millennium Transmitter Technical detailsFloor count3GroundsApproximately 34 000 m Design and constructionArchitect s Carlos Arguelles 1 Other designersWili Fernandez interior design Built as the headquarters of ABS CBN the center has since seen several management changes such as a takeover by RPN and sister station BBC in 1973 the addition of a third tenant the government station GTV now PTV in 1974 and then the departure of RPN and BBC in 1978 to Broadcast City along with then sister station IBC from San Juan del Monte and the entry of NMPC and BB in 1980 which accompanied the remaining tenant MBS From 1986 to 1992 the reopened ABS CBN and PTV along with PBS shared the Broadcast Center and following PTV s departure in 1992 ABS CBN has since regained full control of the facility Contents 1 History 1 1 1968 1972 First era under ABS CBN 1 2 1972 1986 Martial law and takeover by KBS RPN BBC GTV MBS and the BB 1 3 1986 1992 Housing ABS CBN and PTV 1 4 1992 1999 Second era under ABS CBN 1 5 2000 present The new millennium 2 Structures 2 1 ABS CBN main building 2 2 ABS CBN Studios 2 3 ABS CBN DTC Building 2 4 Gina Lopez Building 2 5 ABS CBN Audience Entrance and Tulong Center 3 See also 4 ReferencesHistory Edit1968 1972 First era under ABS CBN Edit The broadcasting center conceptualized by ABS CBN s then President Eugenio Lopez Jr began construction on February 24 1967 and was opened on December 18 1968 Prior to the opening ABS CBN held headquarters in two buildings the ABS building in Roxas Boulevard for ABS CBN s Manila TV stations at that time DZAQ TV 3 and DZXL TV 9 and the Chronicle Building in Aduana Manila for its Manila radio stations With the opening ABS CBN s radio and TV operations were housed in one building ABS CBN would soon sell the Roxas Boulevard studios to Kanlaon Broadcasting System or KBS now known as Radio Philippines Network or RPN which then took Channel 9 and prompted ABS CBN to switch frequencies from Channels 3 and 9 to Channels 2 and 4 When it was opened it was the most advanced TV broadcasting facility in Asia ABS CBN mentioned that before Martial Law it was once the training ground of TV electronics engineers from other countries The new TV transmitter tower known as the Millennium Transmitter in the complex would begin beaming Channel 2 and 4 s signals in 1969 1972 1986 Martial law and takeover by KBS RPN BBC GTV MBS and the BB Edit The ABS CBN Broadcasting Center as viewed from the rooftop of the main building of ABS CBN On September 21 1972 ABS CBN was shut down after then President Ferdinand Marcos declared martial law All of its properties which included the Broadcast Center were seized from the network The facility was not to be used again at least until RPN then KBS until renamed it to the latter in 1975 whose first facility given by ABS CBN was destroyed by a fire took over the facility in 1973 It also became home of two newly formed networks BBC which took Channel 2 and Government Television GTV which took Channel 4 in 1974 The facility was also renamed as the Broadcast Plaza RPN and BBC were all owned by Roberto Benedicto a prominent crony of Marcos along with IBC in which Benedicto bought the network including its flagship channel 13 from the Canoys who owns RMN and the Sorianos as Inter Island Broadcasting Corporation in 1975 and IBC which is still based from then town of San Juan del Monte Rizal province now city of San Juan Metro Manila at that time and GTV was owned by the government through National Media Production Center NMPC Benedicto owned the facility without any compensation The crony owned networks used ABS CBN s facilities without even paying the network s owners the Lopezes making the network s technologies gradually dilapidated resulting in it losing its prestige as one of the most advanced broadcasting centers in Asia In July 1978 RPN and BBC left the Broadcast Plaza along with IBC from San Juan del Monte for their new home in the Broadcast City situated in Old Balara in Quezon City leaving GTV which at that point was relaunched as Maharlika Broadcasting System MBS two years later as the sole tenant of the facility In 1980 the Bureau of Broadcasts BB a radio network also owned by the government under the Department Ministry of Public Information was also transferred to Broadcast Plaza from now demolished Philippine Communications Center PHILCOMCEN building in Ortigas Center Pasig Metro Manila after the Office of Media Affairs was created to provide a unitary form of media for both NMPC and the BB In 1986 the complex was stormed by anti Marcos rebel soldiers that attacked and took over Channel 4 under the supervision of ABS CBN s former General Manager Augusto Almeda Lopez Channel 4 then went back on the air to serve the people and to broadcast the historic People Power Revolution that resulted in Ferdinand Marcos being ousted from office 1986 1992 Housing ABS CBN and PTV Edit After Marcos was deposed and when Corazon Aquino became the first female president on February 25 1986 MBS was changed its interim name to The New TV 4 until it was officially rebranded as the People s Television Network PTV in April 1986 while the radio properties of NMPC and the BB were integrated to the reinstated pre Martial Law era Philippine Broadcasting Service PBS through the Bureau of Broadcast Services or BBS The same year RPN IBC and BBC were sequestered by the newly formed Presidential Commission on Good Government from Benedicto BBC was dissolved and its frequencies were given to ABS CBN which was turned back to the Lopezes and was relaunched on September 14 1986 RPN and IBC on the other hand were turned over to the government under the Presidential Communications Group While Channel 4 remained with PTV Channel 2 of the former BBC was given back to ABS CBN At that time the facility was dilapidated The technology in the facility was very old the center was sorely lacking in tables chairs and telephones there were plants growing on the compound s walls and some of the studios walls were even crumbling In January 1987 the network did get back the facility but with an agreement with PTV which also had to deal with the facility s outdated equipment wherein they will share the space splitting it 50 50 until January 22 1992 In just two years after reopening in 1986 ABS CBN would soon regain ratings leadership and propel itself back to financial stability During the coup attempt against President Aquino on August 28 1987 a fierce fire fight between rebel soldiers and the police raged around the compound as rebel soldiers seized PTV Eventually the rebels assault was thwarted and PTV was back under the control of the government but in the midst of the conflict P Sgt Eduardo A Esguerra of the Quezon City Police Department fell and died in the compound A marker in his memory on the spot where he died was erected a year after the assault and Bohol Avenue where ABS CBN is situated was eventually renamed Sgt Esguerra Avenue The network soon filed a case against Marcos Benedicto and his networks for not compensating for the usage of the broadcast technology and equipment in the facility that clearly belonged to ABS CBN At this point the facility s former tenant RPN and its then sister station IBC once the dominant channels both slumped in the ratings as ABS CBN furthered its supremacy during the tail end of the decade In 1988 a fire hit one of the studios in the compound injuring a few people and slightly damaging the broadcast equipment It was also the site of a failed military coup in 1989 that attempted to overthrow the then current Aquino government DZMM ABS CBN s flagship AM radio station soon moved to the Broadcast Center in 1987 along with DWRR its flagship FM radio station Prior to this DZMM was once housed at the Chronicle Building now Benpres Building in Ortigas Center Pasig where it was relaunched in 1986 as a news and commentary station Millennium Transmitter at night 1992 1999 Second era under ABS CBN Edit After past five years and four months of reopening on January 22 1992 ABS CBN finally regained full control of the facility after both PTV and the PBS BBS moved out of the area to a new broadcasting complex PIA Government Information and Media Center Building and the new 500 ft 150 m transmitter tower situated in Visayas Avenue Quezon City The network renovated the Broadcasting Center and began the long tedious process of updating its broadcasting technology and equipment By the end of the millennium the Broadcast Center had become the most advanced broadcast facility in the Philippines 2000 present The new millennium Edit The ABS CBN Studios and open parking lot in 2012 In 2000 the Broadcasting Center was renovated again with its hallways turned into a picture gallery of the network s stars and personalities and the transmitter in the complex was relaunched as the Millennium Transmitter increasing its transmitter power to 120 kilowatts That same year the network moved most of its operations to the newly inaugurated Eugenio Lopez Jr Communications Center named in honor of the network s late chairman Eugenio Lopez Jr It became the new home of the offices of many of the network s operations as well as four new technologically advanced studios including Studio 10 the biggest studio in the complex and the home of ASAP ABS CBN s longest running Sunday noontime variety show The building was accredited by PEZA as an IT zone in 2003 The building was built mainly to suit ABS CBN s growing demands a result of its diversification from a broadcasting network to a media powerhouse engaging not only in radio and TV broadcasting but now also in movie production records merchandising cable and UHF TV international services and post production The Broadcast Center is still being used as the headquarters for the network s news division and its nine studios are still being used by the network s entertainment programs In 2003 ABS CBN s 50th anniversary the National Historical Commission set up a plaque in the entrance of the ABS CBN Broadcast Center honouring the first TV broadcast made in the country made by DZAQ TV Channel 3 owned by Alto Broadcasting System precursor of ABS CBN In 2005 the Millennium Transmitter increased its power to 346 2 kilowatts 60 kW TPO the most powerful in its history In 2008 in honour of the 80th birthday of one of its most prized talents the late comedy king Dolphy who was with ABS CBN for most of his showbiz career Studio 1 was renamed as the Dolphy Theater In 2009 the Millennium Transmitter increased its height to 720 feet and was also reinforced with powerful dipole antennas replacing the cylinder antennas Throughout early and mid 2020 in the midst of the ongoing COVID 19 pandemic in the Philippines the broadcasting center became the site of the commemoration following the expiration of the ABS CBN s franchise and the subsequent rallies and noise barrages generated by thousands of ABS CBN employees and supporters regarding the opposition of the verdict from the House of Representatives On September 6 2022 a fire was struck inside the ABS CBN compound The fire reached the first alarm before it was declared out around 8 39 am 6 On September 11 2022 the Millennium Transmitter was leased by Advanced Media Broadcasting System to air its flagship television station ALLTV after its broadcast franchise lapsed in 2020 7 Structures EditABS CBN main building Edit Main building of ABS CBN Broadcasting Center as seen in 2010 The ABS CBN main building was originally built in 1968 and was the main headquarters of the whole ABS CBN network for decades until 2000 when the ELJ Communications Center was opened It is directly connected to the network s studios which was also built in 1968 The main entrance to the whole complex is located here Today it is mainly occupied by the news division ABS CBN News and Current Affairs and the Manila Radio Division which consist of DZMM 630 TeleRadyo AM and MOR 101 9 MOR Entertainment FM as well as its ABS CBNnews com website The ABS CBN Newsroom which is used by the ABS CBN News Channel for live broadcasts is located here There is also a historical marker in the building s entrance which commemorates the first TV broadcast in the Philippines which was made by ABS CBN on October 23 1953 which was issued by the National Historical Commission of the Philippines in 2003 the 50th anniversary of ABS CBN and Philippine television ABS CBN Studios Edit ABS CBN s studios are the oldest television studios of the network It is actually a single large building that houses seven studios It was originally built in 1968 and it is directly connected to the main building Studio 1 now called the Dolphy Theatre is named after the late comedian actor Dolphy Studio 2 is used by the singing variety show Everybody Sing Studio 3 is the home studio of the noontime variety show It s Showtime Studio 4 houses the now defunct game show Your Face Sounds Familiar Studio 5 houses the game show I Can See Your Voice Studio 6 houses the programs of the ABS CBN News Channel while ABS CBN s flagship news programs TV Patrol News Patrol Headline Pilipinas and The World Tonight airs live from Studio 7 ABS CBN DTC Building Edit The ABS CBN Development and Talent Center building which is also known as the DTC building is a seven story building that houses two studios rehearsal rooms a storage area and the offices of ABS CBN Star Magic Workshop and DTT channels including Cine Mo and Yey Studios 11 and 12 which are located in the building s fourth floor are used by ABS CBN CPI s programs The building was completed after 1998 and was the home of Star Magic before moving its offices to the ELJ building ABS CBN Sports occupied the entire 7th floor before its Technical group was disbanded and its Production team moved to a room inside DZMM Gina Lopez Building Edit The Gina Lopez Building or also known as the ABS CBN Foundation Building is a five story building behind the ELJ Communications Center Built during the 1990s the building houses the offices of the programs and initiatives under AFI The building was renovated and retrofitted during the late 2000s The building was renamed in 2020 after Gina Lopez who passed away in 2019 8 ABS CBN Audience Entrance and Tulong Center Edit The ABS CBN Audience Entrance which is located along Eugenio Lopez Drive serves as the main entrance for audiences of ABS CBN shows The building houses several food stalls and a lounge for audiences before being accommodated in live tapings The building also housed the ABS CBN Tulong Center which was closed following the non franchise renewal See also EditABS CBN SoundstageReferences Edit Paulo Alcazaren February 13 2010 Wili s wonders Philstar Global Willie Revillame nagpasalamat sa ABS CBN sa pagbebenta ng transmitter sa AMBS Philippine Entertainment Portal September 16 2022 Retrieved September 16 2022 Villanueva Paul Michael December 31 2011 ABS CBN 17 A 2011 Scribd com p 18 retrieved August 8 2012 What is ABS CBN Reocities archived from the original on October 19 2013 retrieved March 21 2012 News ABS CBN December 12 2018 Pasilip sa bagong ABS CBN Studios ABS CBN News Retrieved April 17 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a last has generic name help Fire hits ABS CBN compound Philippine Daily Inquirer September 6 2022 Retrieved September 6 2022 Willie Revillame nagpasalamat sa ABS CBN sa pagbebenta ng transmitter sa AMBS Philippine Entertainment Portal September 16 2022 Retrieved September 16 2022 ABS CBN Foundation Building renamed after Gina Lopez ABS CBN News February 5 2020 Retrieved July 7 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title ABS CBN Broadcasting Center amp oldid 1127645322, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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