The game changer is here. Century Properties Group, the real-estate company behind some of the most exciting and revolutionary developments seen on Philippine soil—Gramercy Residences (a hyperamenitized and fully serviced luxury residence), Azure Urban Resort Residences (featuring the country’s first man-made beach and beach club designed by Paris Hilton), Acqua Livingstone interior design by MISSONIHOME, Acqua Iguazu yoo inspired by Philippe Starck, the Milano Residences interior design by Versace Home, Trump Tower Philippines, Century Spire by architect Daniel Libeskind and interior design by Armani/Casa—is once again poised to change the industry, this time with its first tourism-oriented development featuring modern designer homes and world-class amenities set against lush surroundings.
With over 30 years of experience in the Philippine real-estate industry, Century Properties Group presents its most ingenious, avant-garde project yet—Batulao Artscapes, a 142-ha project dubbed as the world’s first “livable art park,” and for very good reasons.
Featuring Revolution Precrafted designer homes, themselves intriguing works of art, the development will have an art park and four museums designed by Pritzker Prize awardwinning architects.
ButterflyHome by Elizabeth de Portzamparc: The ButterflyHome reflects all the fundamental elements of Elizabeth’swork, such as flexibility, modularity,lightness and movement—all of which are introduced in this project through inclined shapes.
Batulao Artscapes will attract active retirees with its relatively cool climate and state-of-the-art amenities—there’s a man-made beach, lake and floating chapel, a sports and kids park, among many others—and proximity to Metro Manila’s financial district. It’s only a 1.5 to 2-hour drive from Makati via four access points: through Daang Hari Road toward the scenic Nasugbu-Kaybiang Tunnel, the Star Tollway to Tanauan Exit, the South Luzon Expressway (SLEX), and Cavite Expressway (Cavitex).
(Once the 49-km Cavite-Tagaytay-Batangas Expressway or CTBEX is built, travel time to nearby Tagaytay City will only take less than an hour, as announced by the tollways unit of Metro Pacific Investments Corp. Construction of the proposed CTBEX is expected to start by the 1st half of 2019.)
We Home by AFGH: The interiors and exteriors of the structure are true to the aesthetic of AFGH—fully adaptive and customizable
Live surrounded by wonderful works of art, as the bustling community will also feature museums by these design masters, replete with village-exclusive amenities, as well as a stunning, man-made lake and beach. The museums are a sight to behold, designed by Christian de Portzamparc for the Revolution Museum of Design and Architecture, Jean Nouvel Design for the Revolution Museum of Visual Arts, Philip Johnson Alan Ritchie Architects for the Revolution Museum of Art and Technology, and Tange Associates for the Revolution Museum of Performing Arts.
Batulao Artscapes will also have casual and formal dining options, as well as venue space for festivals and fairs. Batulao Artscapes will be a mix of the best of both nature and city conveniences by promoting a pedestrian culture and cultivating an eco-conscious, sustainable, suburban way of life.
While remaining respectful of the natural terrain, the concept of this neo-residential community is based on four core components: Active, Meditative, Festive, and Creative individuals.
Man-made beach
Active is represented in sports and outdoor activities—there are bike and hike trails, a man-made beach for swimming, a sports park, and “artventure” park; Meditative is for the spa, health, and wellness facilities, with a man-made lake for kayaking and boating, a clubhouse for yoga and a spa, and lots of open parks.
Festive is for the food concepts, festivities and themed celebrations, with the Flavor Park for fresh F&B concepts, Artventure Park Green House Pavilion, the Revolution Museum for Performing Arts, and a floating chapel; and Creative is for featuring art and design in all designer homes, art park with designer pavilions, and the four museums.
With its pedestrian-friendly culture, world-class amenities, and proximity to Metro Manila’s financial district, Batulao Artscapes aims to attract active retirees and become the vacation destination of a vibrant, active retirement community, or foreign retiree members 35 years old and above who wish to retire and live in the Philippines.
Billboard Home by David Salle
With this in mind, Batulao Artscapes will have Centuria Medical Urgent Care with Ambulance, a dedicated medical facility for urgent health needs; a transport hub to assist in transportation in and out of Batulao Artscapes, lay-by for bus stops, and roving e-jeeps within the development; dormitories to accommodate household staff for an overnight stay or longer; and Siglo Suites, premium hospitality and leasing management services for clients who wish to enroll their units for leasing.
Even more good news, Batulao Artscapes can assist foreign nationals and/or former Filipino citizens in their application for a Special Resident Retiree’s Visa with the Philippine Retirement Authority. The SRRV comes with additional benefits, including medical insurance for a set period of time.
Libeskind Design’s Adaptation Home II is a homage to the simple joy of living.
Established architects
Imagine owning a home designed by some of the world’s most eminent architects and award-winning firms and design collectives, such as Philip Johnson Alan Ritchie Architects, Marmol Radziner with Kravitz Design, Libeskind Design, Jean Nouvel, Paulo Mendes de Rocha, Daphne Guinness, and many more. Even the Dutch product and interior designer Marcel Wanders, who achieved international recognition with his Knotted Chair in 1996, designed his first home for Revolution Precrafted and it can be yours in Batulao Artscapes.
Notable Filipino architecture and design names Kenneth Cobonpue, Budji Layug and Royal Pineda through Budji+Royal Architecture + Design, and Eduardo Calma are also featuring their designer homes here.
Batulao Artscapes is set to be a cultural landmark in Southeast Asia, offering a mix of sports and art parks by fostering a design-driven community in an expansive natural landscape.
These structures will be built using a combination of conventional construction methods and prefabrication, and will offer different sizes and specifications in order to meet individual tastes and preferences.
Daphne SkinHome by Daphne Guinness: The Daphne SkinHome is a “fashion” house that reflects the style of Daphne Guinness. Borne from the creativity of a fashion designer, artist and theater enthusiast, Daphne’s SkinHome is a work that evokes drama and sophistication.Eden by MarcelWanders. Wanders is a product and interior designer, an art directorwho won global recognition with his iconic Knotted Chair in 1996.BUDJI+ROYAL’s The Facet affords the homeowner numerous configuration possibilities through the use of practical and functional design attachments.HEDERA by Kenneth Cobonpue: Nature is an essential part of us, asmuch aswe are a part of it. Serving as the organic architect, nature actively participates in the design process as evergreen shrouds the walls, turning the artificial structure into a soft and lush sight to behold.Instrumental Home by Marmol Radziner for architecture/Interiors by Kravitz DesignThe Modular Glass House by Philip Johnson/Alan Ritchie ArchitectsTranche by BUDJI+ROYAL: Tranche is a unique home model that grows and expands in tranches as it takes into account the evolution of one’s lifestyle.Revolution Museums and the Kids ParkRetail area: The Flavor ParkSports Park
Visit http://www.batulaoartscapes.com for more info.
Revolution Precrafted specializes in selling prefabricated homes with an average price of $120,000 per unit. Customers can order through the company’s website and have their homes delivered in as little as 90 days around the world.
According to Tech in Asia, the Philippines’ pre-built home-selling startup Revolution Precrafted is valued at more than $1 billion after a recent funding round, becoming the country’s first billion-dollar startup.
With less than 2 years of operation, since December 2015, Revolution Precrafted is also the startup that has achieved this value the fastest in Southeast Asia.
Leading this round of Revolution Precrafted’s funding is Singapore’s K2 investment fund. This is a fund founded by Ozi Amanat, who is known for his investments in Alibaba and Twitter before these companies made their IPOs. K2 also invests in many big startups such as Spotify, Magic Leap, Paytm, and Palantir.
This is considered a miracle for a startup in a small country with a small amount of startup capital compared to neighboring countries like the Philippines.
Revolution Precrafted was founded by Robbie Antonio, from a family specializing in real estate. Robbie is the brains behind a series of billion-dollar projects in collaboration with big names like Forbes Media, Armani/Casa, Versace Home, Paris Hilton, and the Trump corporation. Later, he switched to making houses with professional design to reach more customers.
Revolution Precrafted specializes in selling prefabricated homes with an average price of $120,000 per unit. Customers can order through the company’s website and have their homes delivered in as little as 90 days around the world.
As of March 2017, Revolution Precrafted has completed $110 million worth of orders and raised $15.4 million in capital from several investors such as 500 Startups. These investors also have to work hard to get approval to invest here.
“Revolution Precrafted doesn’t need to be mobilized, I had to convince them to invest here,” said 500 Startups fund representative Khailee Ng.
In Southeast Asia, there are a number of billion dollar startups such as Sea, Grab and Lazada in Singapore; Traveloka and Tokopedia of Indonesia, and VNG Corp of Vietnam.
There’s a montage in HBO’s Silicon Valley where startup founders pitch their product at a TechCrunch Disrupt conference.
They each earnestly and nerdily claim that their app is going to revolutionize the world and/or make it a better place, using the rhetoric of technological determinism to capture the deep pockets of venture capitalists who hope to fund the next Uber or Airbnb. The Philippines has its very first startup that’s achieved unicorn status—that is, a company with a valuation of $1 billion—and it is one with roots in property development. “The revolution has begun!” declares Robbie Antonio, future-unicorn founder, sounding not unlike the Elon Musks of the world. Of course, he’s referring to Revolution Precrafted, the startup that’s got the VC world abuzz.
Earlier this year, startup accelerator 500 Startups (incidentally founded by Dave McClure, one of the supposed inspirations behind the “incubator owner” Erlich Bachman character in Silicon Valley), poured money into Revolution, bringing the company’s valuation to $256 million. 500 Startups, which has been zeroing in on Southeast Asia as the next area of explosive growth, has successfully backed Grab, the Singapore-based ride-sharing app now valued at US$ 3 billion. “We’re very happy. One of the world’s more prolific seed venture capital companies funded us. They fought their way to come in, because we were funded already for our seed round,” says Robbie, who often speaks enthusiastically, if not forcefully, that one can’t help but yield to his vision. “The reasons are twofold—one, it’s extremely, and I hate to use such a cliché word, disruptive, and two, it has a proven business model. I’ve been doing real estate for over a dozen years.”
Robbie antonio introduced the concept of branding to prefabricated homes, an industry not normally associated with aspirational living
IMAGE Edric Chen
Robbie has been the managing director of Century Properties, the real estate development rm established in 1986 by his father Jose E.B. Antonio, and is responsible for the company’s direction toward branded collaborations like the Milano Residences by Versace, Acqua Livingstone by Missoni Home, Azure by Paris Hilton, Forbes Media Tower, Armani for Century Spire, and their newest luxury residences, the Trump Tower.
At the Design Miami fair last December 2015, Robbie launched his own company, Revolution Precrafted, showing a dining pavilion designed by Zaha Hadid and Patrick Schumaker, and a mobile gallery by Gluckman Tang (Hadid passed away in 2016, making the “Volu” pavilion one of her last projects; Robbie donated it to the Cannes amfAR auction, where it was sold for €1.3 million). He introduced the concept of branding to prefabricated homes, an industry not normally associated with aspirational living, and created something that has been done in retail—think Rodarte for Target, Balmain for H&M—but never before in homes and architecture.
Prefab homes have been around since the automotive boom, borrowing the idea of assembly-line production where housing parts were mass-produced in a factory. Starting in 1908, the earliest kit homes were sold by mail on the Sears catalog, and throughout the decades, manufactured homes became popular low-cost housing options. In postwar France, pioneering French architect Jean Prouve designed “demountable houses” to address the housing shortage. Though now hailed as innovative modernist masterpieces, they failed to achieve commercial viability during his time. In the 2000s, architects started taking interest in modern prefab structures that tapped into a higher-end market, and the “great 21st-century prefab revival” was arguably kickstarted when Dwell magazine issued a challenge to create stylish yet affordable prefabs that can be mass-produced. On the market today are architect-designed prefabs, slick little Muji Huts, and a $1,100 Ikea flatpack shelter, as well as container vans, modular units, and artisan mobile homes that you can unmount and relocate, and the prevalence of these compact habitats has also fueled the tiny home movement.
IMAGE Edric Chen
So what do you get when you marry the convenience of prefab with the design power of Pritzker Prize-winning architects? A concept quite confounding, yet brilliant in its audacity. Robbie, through years of fraternizing with Hollywood celebrities, star athletes, Forbes-listers, movers- and-shakers of the art and design world, and yes, world leaders and their kin, has developed a virtual Rolodex of potential partners for his business plans.
It’s not an overstatement to say that Robbie is one of the most connected young Filipinos in the country today. Franco Varona, Revolution’s chief operating officer, breaks down the founder’s strange attraction: “He has this magnetic personality—once you meet Robbie, you’re not likely to forget him, and combined with his endless desire to close a deal, makes it very hard for anyone to say no to him.” This I can attest to.
It’s not an overstatement to say that Robbie is one of the most connected young Filipinos in the country today.
How Revolution Precrafted works, in a nutshell: You go online to Revolution’s website, choose a designer house, then click buy. Somewhere in a factory in India, Korea, Italy, or the Philippines, the parts are fabricated, usually with robotics, then shipped to you and assembled onsite, wherever you are in the world. Your very own Marmol Radziner, or if you want to go Filipino, Ed Calma abode without the hassle of hiring a whole team of contractors, manufacturers, builders, etc., and of course the astronomical fees of commissioning a famous architect.
Though the individual market is catered to, Revolution is primarily geared toward developers who can deal with building codes and mount many structures at once, whether for hotel and resorts, condos and residential areas, or commercial and art centers. In a couple of years, a “Revolution community” will pop up in Batulao, Batangas, where you can enjoy the cool mountain air in your prefabricated weekend home, or see art in a Jean Nouvel museum without having to go to the Louvre Abu Dhabi.
This democratization is at the core of Revolution’s “disruptive” philosophy. As a client who commissioned the legendary Dutch architect Rem Koolhaas to design his own house—a black concrete private museum/ residence in Forbes Park so stealth that only a select few have been inside—Robbie would know all about the tedious processes and prohibitive costs involved in building one’s dream house. In the infamous Vanity Fair article from 2013, Robbie had expressed that he wanted to work with ve Pritzker winners by the time he turns 45. Now only 40, he beat his own deadline in typical Robbie zealousness, and the new projects aren’t just for personal enjoyment, like those pavilions he started acquiring.
IMAGE Edric Chen
If it’s not obvious by now, Robbie is an obsessive collector of art, who has commissioned portraits from the likes of Julian Schnabel, Damian Hirst, and David LaChapelle. Artnet recognized him as one of the top 100 collectors in the world in 2016, putting him alongside Leonardo DiCaprio, Bernard Arnault, Paul Allen and other point one percenters. It was in thinking about these pavilions, collectible by only a tiny fraction of people who are art lovers, that led to Robbie’s eureka moment of developing branded homes for the middle market. “Honestly, in business, passion is not even enough. OBSESSION is key,” he says, and it’s this obsession—almost like a possession—that drives him to take his company to a whole different level.
“I’ve worked with 13 Pritzker Prize architects, possibly more than any human being in the world,” he says. “I love doing this! It’s not just about the valuation, it’s creating something so inherently different. We have intellectual property over all these names, you can get them at a ridiculously high price and wait a number of years, or get it from us in three months at a much cheaper price.”
How much cheaper? A few of the homes Revolution recently released are priced for the local market, starting at P3.5 million. Robbie has been working with, or shall we say convincing, a renowned Filipino architect and getting him to do one for P1.5 million. It’s a challenge on both their parts, creating something couture at Zara prices, while still keeping to the DNA of the architects and designers, who are used to blowing through sky-high budgets.
The first time I interviewed Robbie, the company hadn’t announced the news about its latest valuation yet, but his unicorn mission was already well known. According to Varona, unlocking unicorn level is Robbie’s singular focus, and all roads lead to that end goal. You can imagine what it must be like to work with him. In the office, there is an internal rule requiring people to answer emails and texts within 10 minutes of receipt, and accomplish tasks within 24 hours, regardless of how complex the task may be. The work culture in the Philippines usually allows for a little to a lot of leeway when it comes to responsiveness, but because Revolution’s employees push themselves, the result is that everyone, internally and externally, gets pushed to complete tasks much faster than a typical Filipino company. “Everyone working with Robbie must have an incredible resistance to stress, and used to not having sleep,” Varona says, adding, “He has given us all three years to make it a US$ 2 billion company.”
“I’ve worked with 13 Pritzker Prize architects, possibly more than any human being in the world,” he says.
IMAGE Edric Chen
When I meet with Robbie again, they had moved to a much larger, still all black, office at the top floor of the Pacific Star Building, and with it, more wall space to display their ever increasing portfolio of branded homes, as well as the press coverage that he embraces. Two bottles of Trump-branded sparkling wine adorn an otherwise empty black side table, and a quick Google search tells me that they’re produced in the state of Virginia, on the same valley where American president Thomas Jefferson tended his own vineyard. Robbie had just come back from New York, where he signed up a Victoria’s Secret supermodel to be part of the roster. She’s not an interior designer, but she partnered up with someone who is, and Robbie took a look at their portfolio and says he was convinced. If we’re talking about the democratization of design, surely that’s when a model can be given the same billing as Marcel Wanders, Philip Johnson, and the de Portzamparcs, who all have designed structures for Revolution. One of Revolution’s more interesting collaborations is with style icon plus Daphne Guinness, an heiress who works in fashion, music, lm and philanthropy—the ultimate intersection of celebrity and art that, to Robbie, makes for one hell of a sexy branded home.
Revolution’s goal for swift global domination is made possible by taking the business model of a real estate company and turning it on its head: “We’re the complete antithesis of the traditional real estate company. We cater to the world. We don’t have to be site-specific, we don’t have to buy land, take out construction loans, or have inventory.” Certainly, no one is handing out flyers on the street. Being asset-light has enabled the company’s rapid growth, and rapid growth attracts VCs like flies to honey. “I’ve been through at least three cycles in my life. Boom and bust. It’s so easy to have an economy taken from you, and I learned from that. If an economy doesn’t do well, I can go to one that is doing better. I can maneuver.”
Aside from offering homes via an e-commerce platform, Revolution is on the same league as other tech startups because of what the company will eventually will be—a platform for a smart home. Robbie often says they are the “Ikea of homes,” for its plug-’n-play simplicity, or the “Tesla of homes,” because Tesla is a technology platform on wheels more than it is a car. “Revolution will be a technology platform on foundations,” says Varona. More than just providing four walls and a roof over your head, the precrafted home can be as intelligent as you choose it to be. A house that behaves like Siri or appears sentient certainly gives new meaning to the phrase, “if these walls could talk.”
The next day, we go see one of the model homes in person, the “Simple” by Jean Nouvel, which was on display at the Tuileries Garden in Paris before it was transported to a construction site in Taguig. As the name implies, it’s a pretty straightforward structure, almost shed-like with a corrugated roof, aluminum exteriors, and Japanese-inspired mobile wooden partitions that allow the user to de ne the spaces inside. At 40 sq. meters, it’s a cozy one-bedroom, but modular and expandable to up to four bedrooms. Nouvel has said of the house: “What we propose here is the most immediate way to inhabit a space, within a short timeframe, in places that are not designed for residential use today and that become so, spontaneously.” Simple is a high- end, thoughtfully planned emergency shelter that Ja Rule would have been wise to consider for the Fyre Festival.
Speaking of disasters, Robbie is in the perfect position to roll out relief shelters should catastrophes strike, and this is something he pledges to do as part of the company’s CSR, having already supported Shigeru Ban with his “Paper Log” homes in Cebu. With temporary housing being subject to intense politicking and controversy—the FEMA trailers for Hurricane Katrina and the still-un nished housing projects for Typhoon Haiyan come to mind—Revolution could very well provide sustainable housing solutions that need not be merely temporary; structures that can be erected in a few days, con gured to suit different needs and unforeseen situations, and that also—why the hell not— look good. Shelters of all kinds have been imagined in response to the displacement of humans, but Revolution is perhaps the only Filipino company with the capabilities for mass-producing them, and more importantly, delivering them within a critical time frame.
“I’m known to be very impatient. I’m using my weakness as a skill set here, hopefully as an advantage, or an integral part of the business plan.” Basically, the need for instant grati cation drives everything he does. “Big time, all the time,” Robbie grins. “Is that bad?”
This article originally appeared under the title “The Obsession of Robbie Antonio” in the July 2017 issue of Esquire Philippines.
Antonio discusses the merits of Revolution Precrafted with model and actress Kate Upton
The peripatetic Robbie Antonio is a man in a hurry, driven hard by his lofty ambition to make Revolution Precrafted, reputedly the world’s only branded housing company, the country’s first “unicorn” or startup firm valued at over $1 billion.
And Antonio, who maximizes every second of his waking hours, believes he is on his way to achieving that goal, with his brainchild valued at some $256 million as of March 2017, just a little over a year since it was established to shake up the real estate industry, not just in the Philippines but around the world.
Antonio has intimate knowledge of the ever-dynamic real estate industry having grown up with it, being one of the four sons of Century Properties Group Inc. founder Jose E.B. Antonio.
“It is not like I just woke up in this industry. It is one that I know very well,” says the 40-year-old Antonio, who remains responsible for the resort and tourism side of the Century Properties portfolio.
Thus, Antonio also knows the pain points and the massive opportunities that Revolution Precrafted can take advantage of.
Revolution Precrafted basically supplies the market with prefabricated structures such as modular homes, condominiums and pop-up retail stores and fitness centers that bear the names of some of the world’s top names in design and architecture.
Its greatest assets are ownership of the intellectual property of world-class designers, the global network of fabricators and the invaluable relationships with developers and landowners.
For Antonio, Revolution Precrafted is defined by five key points—speed, quality, technology, designer brands and global.
Through its ties with quality fabricators here and abroad, for instance, it can complete the developments faster. A 50-square-meter home can be done in as fast as three months as opposed to the usual two years since most of the components had already been fabricated, ready for assembly at the job site.
Then instead of wasting six months to a year on the design, clients of Revolution Precrafted can choose from the works of such award-winning architects as Zaha Hadid, Jean Nouvel, Christian de Portzamparc and Paulo Mendes de Rocha and celebrities like Tom Dixon, Lenny Kravitz and Daphne Guinness.
Revolution Precrafted thus democratizes access to branded design of living spaces by combining world-renowned designers with the latest advances in construction technology.
Clients can boast of living in a home designed by actor and singer Lenny Kravitz without having to pay the full cost but getting all of the benefits, in terms of speed, quality and branding.
The self-confessed deal junkie was able to get these designers and fabricators to believe in the mission of Revolution Precrafted because they were piqued by the challenge posed by the startup to help shake up the real estate industry, the same way that Grab and Uber revolutionized the transport industry and Airbnb forever changed the hospitality sector.
Antonio’s passion for Revolution Precrafted is indeed infectious and venture capital firms have been quick to jump on the concept.
Early on, Antonio was able to raise seed funding from 500 Startups, the world’s most prolific venture capital firm, and more are expected to follow suit as the company flexes its muscles in the Philippines and in other countries in Asia and strengthens ties with real estate developers who want to deliver projects as quickly and as cost-efficiently as possible.
“Our mission is to be the biggest home supplier in the world,” says Antonio, “And I would love to put the Philippines on the technology scene.”
TODAY, I start a series on technological transformation in real estate from construction and marketing operations.
Technology either elicits fear or awe, and the success of legacy businesses as real estate depends on their ability to pivot fast.
Customer unfriendly construction process
A universal life landmark that bears utmost importance is the day that one decides to get his or her own house. The question that remains is how to move forward, especially with the intimidating process usually attached to buying a home or building one from the ground up.
Enter prefab technology. The term “prefab” didn’t always sit particularly well with consumers. The word has been synonymous with dull nondescript houses lined up in a singular block. French architect Jean Prouve pioneered prefab housing technology back in 1940, working his magic on crafting demountable houses for those that lost their homes in World War II. But the industry has evolved dramatically since then, giving birth to unhampered creativity. Thankfully, these prior troubles have been addressed by Revolution Precrafted Properties. An innovative enterprise that specializes in the business of prefabricated homes, Revolution makes your dream house an actuality while keeping your worries at bay. Their prefab homes and transportable pavilions bring the concept up a notch with collaborations with over 61 of the world’s well-esteemed architects, designers and industry-leading creatives coming together for every stylishly sustainable piece.
Time is on your side
Revolution’s prefab creations greatly simplify the process for homebuyers and developers alike. Its edge not only lies on its world-class designer aesthetic but also on its functionality and efficacy over traditional builds. Robbie Antonio, founder
and CEO of the brand, elaborated further, “The term prefab refers to off-site or factory-assembled building components often sized in modular dimensions. A prefabricated building has innate advantages when it comes to consistency of quality, fit, finish, and over-all cost benefits”. The lengthy time-consuming old-fashioned mechanisms of paperwork, sourcing reliable contractors and supplier and picking out every single detail from floorings to fixtures are immediately eliminated. In its place are low-maintenance homes that breed high quality and saves time like no other—so much that you can easily move in to the house of your dreams in just about 90 days upon placing your order.
Rest assured, the quick and easy pace does not sacrifice a prefab’s integrity. It’s certainly not a thing to be worried about in Revolution’s case. Their creations go through a prototype stage, where all components and processes for the build are tested, improved upon and certified.
Furthermore, these pieces are code compliant with all seismic, wind and other environmental load and site-specific factors that could affect its performance. The production process is as meticulous as it gets, it begins with extensive shop drawings based on the concept plans provided by the consultant or designer. These shop drawings are then adapted for compliance with local and national codes where the houses will be built. Once the shop drawings, materials and specifications are approved, the house is built in an indoor facility where sections that can be modularized are assembled. The kinds of machines we use are matched to the material and design at hand, and are usually sourced locally. A kit of parts catalogue is then generated to enable dismantling, packaging, transport and reconstruction.
The cutting-edge design built on advanced technology is set to change the standard of living. It democratizes the ultra-chic architecture arena and brings designer homes more accessible to a broader market. At a range of 50 square meters (sq m) to 250 sq m with components that could fit in a shipping container, its transportable feature becomes a core appeal. Each borderless piece transcends time and space, conveniently movable to wherever you are, and breaking free from location and construction complaints. Perhaps, the best part of every Revolution home is its versatility. There’s a wide range of precrafted designs suited for any area, function and preference.
E-commerce for real estate
Purchasing each unit is also a breeze with Revolution Precrafted site’s user-friendly interface. Each unit comes with a hefty preview of the structure, as well as a complete specifications list of every home. It also comes with a profile of the designer involved in the project, with a description or anecdote of each specified prefab home to boot. E-commerce gives you an option to buy or build, depending on your role as homebuyer or developer. Structures are delivered to your doorstep ideally three months from the initial order, all ready for assembly. The price of each designer home begins at roughly P1.5 million excluding shipping, installation and land cost.
Creative collaboration
Revolution precrafted’s roster of internationally celebrated talents is some of the world’s greatest creative geniuses in their respective fields. You’ve got big shot architects, such as Philip Johnson and Allan Ritchie, the likes of the late Zaha Hadid and Patrick Schumacher, and renowned artists like David Salle and Francisco Clemente. Even music and fashion icons like Lenny Kravitz and Daphne Guiness are part of the incredible lineup. Recently, Budji Layug and Royal Pineda, the country’s lead advocates of modern Filipino architecture and design have joined the roster of game changers. The growing list is of collaborations, bound to be bigger and better in the coming years—an exciting feat to anticipate.
Prefab home is just the beginning of this construction revolution. More collectible thoughtfully designed properties are under way, whether it’s a residential, hospitality or entertainment development. To look forward to are its limited-edition offerings of adaptive amenity spaces, modular hotels, transposable restaurants, prefabricated condominiums, pop-up retail and customizable glamping that represent trends in tourism, specialty retail and hospitality.
WITH the advent of green building and opting for better sustainable materials in our business districts, the landscape of home building begs to follow suit. This brings about the question: What kind of homes and structures should we be building today?
According to The Cities Alliance, the Philippines has been building and modernizing so rapidly that it now ranks among the highest in urbanization in the world. This is quite obvious, what with towering infrastructures, endless constructions and worsening traffic all becoming “parts of the norm” nowadays.
Filipinos in the Metro are constantly looking for residences within the urban areas, opting for condominium units and, thus, prompting even more vertical developments to be built as we speak. This leaning toward the “vertical lifestyle” is evidenced in the Residential Real Estate Price Index (RREPI) showing that majority of home loans were used to acquire condominium units. However, these structures are built in such redundant succession that the quality of building suffers along with sustainability, while rent and sale prices continue to increase.
As residential congestion rises and calamity and pollution continue to ravage the urban areas, there has been a slow resurgence in the advocacy of prefabricated homes. Revived in the local and international scene, the quickly built, durable, completely indoor-manufactured modular home has now made a welcome return.
Modular homes, created in “modules” of prefabricated materials to create quick and sustainable structures, are stereotypically pegged as square blocks that are functional, yet aesthetically, inferior to more complicated built houses and premium units. That led to a lack of interest in the market and modular homes were put in the real-estate backburner.
The mention of modular homes oft brings to mind either images of simple block-like houses or Minecraft, but in reality, these “square homes” can be the industrial innovation that our country needs to continue progressing in an economically and ecologically sustainable setting.
Recently, the prefab trend has begun to trickle back into the mainstream, with designers finding ways to make gorgeous modular homes that feel premium yet maintain their affordable and sustainably effective nature. With the quicker building time (you can have a finished home in less than 60 days), affordable building, sustainable materials and their strong resistance to various natural disasters, it’s not a hard decision to opt for modular.
A testament to the creative beauty that can be generated off this structure, Filipino real-estate developer Robbie Antonio launched “Revolution Pre-crafted Properties,” a project that gathered 39 architects from different countries to create premium modular homes (at a fraction of the usual high-end mansion prices). These were designed to look like customized art pieces that are liveable and ready to be shipped anywhere in the world within three months.
Many designers across the market are also using green materials that help preserve the environment around them, while also maximizing the space they occupy. Popular firms, like Hoek, Pugh + Scarpa Architects and Workshop/apd, have already used the recyclable platforms to create sturdy and beautiful homes that are LEED-approved.
Not only are these cost-efficient modules noted to be more energy efficient once built, they are also built to withstand floods, typhoons, hurricanes and earthquakes. These are the factors that make modular homes an even more enticing trend to jump into for the Philippines.
Mods in the PHL market
Not to be left behind, the Philippines is also beginning to make strides toward modular living spaces. With companies like Smarthouse Prefab, VAZBuilt and Revolution Properties, the Philippines is already equipped with the ability to choose modular homes now.
A standout project that made headlines is the “Waffle House,” engineered by Filipino company Solid and Insulated Poured Concrete Construction Corp. (Solidcon Construction). A modular home made with reinforced concrete and grade-40 metal, the P200,000 structure is said to have the ability to hold its ground against rough calamities while also being easily disassembled for easy relocation.
According to Solidcon, “this technology was conceptualized as a practical solution to address the growing concerns on mass housing, over-population and land-value appreciation, to name a few, at the most cost and time efficient way possible.”
As the modular home trend makes its way into the Philippine market, we may finally have the solution to our nation’s housing problems right before us. A quick and durable solution to our polluted and calamity-stricken areas has presented itself through the real-estate innovations of late, and like most gifts we receive, it seems to all come in a “box.”
Achieving the “unicorn” status for his real estate startup revolution Precrafted, Robbie Antonio has pole-vaulted his way to Forbes’ list of top billionaires around the globe.
Robbie, who is the youngest of the batch, joins his father Jose E.B. Antonio, chairman of Century Properties The father-and-son duo is now on the 28th spot with a combined net worth of $400 million, more than doubling the $195-million figure of the elder Antonio in last year?s list.
Talk about not just following his father?s path and making his mark but breaking barriers all the way. Congratulations, Robbie!
Revolution has teamed up with some of Hollywood’s best to design one-of-a-kind structures .
The movers and shakers of the real estate industry over the past couple of decades have predominantly been architects and designers, whose wealth of experience has borne iconic structures.
Recently design and art has begun to intersect with other disciplines. Art, design, architecture, and fashion are all means for self-expression, fashion being the closest and most personal of them all.
It does not come as a surprise that celebrities, musicians, style and fashion icons, gravitate towards expressing their craft through different mediums—from furniture to product design, interior design, as well as architecture.
These people are among those whom Revolution Precrafted is collaborating with.
Founded by Robbie Antonio, Revolution Precrafted plays a role in the emergence of this new breed of designers and starchitects, by acting as a platform for artistic collaboration.
“We are very particular about choosing the brands that we work with, and this has been one of the most exciting aspects of the business. Searching for, collaborating with, and producing structures designed by the best minds in the world, is what drives us at the company,” Antonio said.
To date, Revolution has gathered over 61 of the world’s leading architects and designers to design one-of-a-kind structures exclusively for Revolution. Belonging to this formidable lineup of industry thought leaders are creatives from Hollywood’s glitterati and fashion icons.
Kravitz Design
Kravitz Design Inc. was founded by legendary music icon Lenny Kravitz. Focusing on residential, commercial, and product design, the firm touts a portfolio of noteworthy ventures.
Working with Revolution allowed him to channel his vibe into a house that is sensual and tough at the same time.
The Instrumental Home, a collaboration between his firm and Marmol Radziner, carries a smooth and masculine design. The dark grey finish and modern cabin-esque walls of the facade continues into the interiors creating a sinewy silhouette, while the overall monolith shape of the single-storey structure evokes a muscular allure.
STÆRK&CHRISTENSEN
Design duo Camilla Stærk and Helena Christensen are the brains behind STÆRK&CHRISTENSEN, a New York-based studio with a reputation for holistic work across the fields of fashion, interior design, furniture, photography, and film.
The marriage of Stærk and Christensen’s individual styles and interests gave birth to an aesthetic rooted in a Danish design heritage and mid-century modern sensibility, mixed with gothic, mythical themes as well as the haunting glamour of old Hollywood.
Soon, Revolution will be launching a home, a spa pavilion, and fitness structure crafted by the veritable design duo.
Daphne Guinness
The British heiress is possibly one of the fashion and style world’s most inventive characters. She has been thought of as unique, enigmatic, and a true maverick. But Daphne’s unique perception of beauty and her skill for creatively expressing it is seen second to none.
Daphne dabbles in various artistic pursuits such as fashion, music, film, and even perfumery. Her curiosity and eye for beauty eventually led her to venture into architecture.
The Skin House is a “fashion” house that reflects the style of Daphne Guinness. The façade is composed of a series of fixed and collapsible metal panels. When the panels are closed, the house assumes the form of a metal box. When opened, the “sculpture” transforms into a house: doors and windows are revealed behind the panels.
Daphne’s house reflects her style: modern and classic. The polished concrete floor, red elements, and golden spiral staircase create vibrant interiors that match neoclassical design and modern finishes.
The release of the Forbes Philippines’ 50 Richest list always makes the headlines, even if there are few surprises. This year, for example, SM mogul Henry Sy tops the list for the tenth time in a row, followed—again—by John Gokongwei and Enrique Razon.
It’s a different story when you look at the younger billionaires on the list. This is where you find new names and a few interesting stories. With more or less self-made fortunes, the under-45 tycoons here have earned their places on the list through lots of hard work, some smarts, luck—and sometimes a little bit of cunning.
IMAGE Rennell Salumbre
EDGAR SIA, 40 (Double Dragon Properties), ranked #21 with US$840M
At 40, Injap Sia is both the youngest on the Forbes list and also the highest-ranking among the under-45 set. More importantly, his fortune is entirely self-made: the young entrepreneur was only 26 when he opened the first Mang Inasal store, which he sold to Jollibee Foods Corp. for a total of Php5 Billion. Though he no longer qualifies as a dollar billionaire as of this year (he was listed at #17 with US$1.2B in 2016), it’s still a big improvement from the #34 spot he held in 2015. The surge was attributed to the rapid growth and expansion of Double Dragon Properties, a real estate development company that he owns alongside partners like Jollibee founder Tony Tan Caktiong.
IMAGE Edric Chen
ROBBIE ANTONIO, 40 (Century Properties), ranked #28 with US$400M (together with his father, Jose Antonio)
After landing on the cover of our July 2017 issue, Robbie Antonio joins his father, Jose Antonio, on the Forbes list, coming in at #28. It’s the family-owned Century Properties that earns them their position on the list, but Robbie’s own startup, Revolution Precrafted Ltd., gets special mention. The maker of prefabricated luxury homes is currently valued at US$256M, after launching in 2015.
IMAGE Forbes
MICHAEL COSIQUIEN, 43, and EDGAR SAAVEDRA, 42 (Megawide Construction), ranked #29 with US$385M and #31 with US$375M, respectively
Michael Cosiquien and Edgar Saavedra were only in their early 20s, just out of college, when the pair founded their own company in 1997. It was tantamount to “on-the-job training for us,” Cosiquien told Inside Business with Coco Alcuaz in 2014. Both civil engineers, it took courage to have put up Megawide Construction then, since the economy was in the depths of the Asian financial crisis. It wasn’t until around 2007 that the company began to really take off, after having bagged major projects from SMDC. Today, Megawide has expanded from their core business, and now has interests in the Mactan Cebu International Airport and even in power generation—the company owns three solar power projects that together supply about 100 megawatts to the national power grid.
IMAGE Congressman Mikee Romero Facebook
MICHAEL ROMERO, 44 (GlobalPort 900), ranked #47 with US$135M
One of the most colorful characters on the list, Michael Romero has certainly had his ups and downs over the past year. Romero was elected to Congress as the 1-Pacman Party List representative in May 2016; months later, a court ordered his arrest over charges of embezzlement from the family-owned company Harbour Centre Port Terminal, Inc. Even before that, Forbes reports that Romero’s holding company, GlobalPort 900, “was delisted from the Philippine Stock Exchange and trading suspended in May 2014 in what he described then as a temporary software mix-up.” Romero is currently in hiding, with his whereabouts unknown since the warrant for his arrest was issued in January 2017.
Three bedroom pre-crafted home by Tom Dixon PHOTO COURTESY OF REVOLUTION PRECRAFTED
Robbie Antonio, founder and CEO of Revolution Precrafted, speaks the language of art and design. As a real estate mogul, he has spearheaded projects all over the country in collaboration with design greats like Philippe Starck, Versace, Missoni and Armani, just to name a few.
His home, which also happens to be the first to be build by Priztker prized architect Koolhaas in the Philippines, served as a take off point for the founding of his passion project Revolution Precrafted. Like any other work of art, his residence is referred to as Stealth. The dark structure resembling boxes stacked one over the other houses an impressive collection of commissioned artworks ranging from Damien Hirst to Jeff Koons and Takashi Murakami. Curiosity about his home inspired him to come up with a new proposition to building homes–one that would disrupt the industry. “I thought, what if I did this for a lot of people? Why not channel this curiosity for people to obtain but in a more expeditious way?”
Interiors of a Tom Dixon designed pre crafted home PHOTO COURTESY OF REVOLUTION PRECRAFTED
The idea was ambitious to say the least: collaborate with the world’s greatest architects, designers and style icons to design homes. Getting these design icons on-board was just the tip of the iceberg. Finding the technology to make this possible and affordable to a larger market was another story. It was at this juncture that that concept of producing prefabrication homes came into play. “The technology was a means to an end,” the art enthusiast said.
A one bedroom pavilion by Kravitz Design PHOTO COURTESY OF REVOLUTION PRECRAFTEDA modular glass house by Philip Johnson Alan Ritchie Architects PHOTO COURTESY OF REVOLUTION PRECRAFTED
It was in 2015 when Revolution Precrafted was launched and the company has since then enlisted the world’s top design names and collectives to create prefabricated homes. One of the challenges, Robbie admits, is finding middle ground where function and aesthetic meet. It is one thing to create a home that is beautiful and another to produce and sell one that is practical, functional and reasonably priced. “Fabrication of mockups is the longest and hardest. There are technicalities and a lot of adjustments.” One model can take up to six months to create to make consideration and compromises for a comfortably, liveable home.
Eden by Marcel Wanders PHOTO COURTESY OF REVOLUTION PRECRAFTEDAn artistic render of a pre crafted home by Ronald Ventura PHOTO COURTESY OF REVOLUTION PRECRAFTEDExteriors of a home designed by Daphne Guinness PHOTO COURTESY OF REVOLUTION PRECRAFTEDInteriors of a Daphne Guinness designed home PHOTO COURTESY OF REVOLUTION PRECRAFTEDA fashionphile’s dream bedroom turned into reality by Daphne Guinness PHOTO COURTESY OF REVOLUTION PRECRAFTEDDaphne Guinness breathes her own brand of style into the design of her homes for Revolution… [+] PHOTO COURTESY OF REVOLUTION PRECRAFTED
The homes and pavilions now included in the collection of Revolution Prefabricated is a clear indication of how Robbie has turned vision into reality. He offers insight on this new approach to building homes. “It’s also creating desire. When someone desires something so much, there is no price limit. You will go for it. What is art? It is a piece of canvas that one is willing to pay a fortune for. It’s the same concept. I want to create a desire so palatable that you need to have it.”
A pre-crafted home by award winning architect Ed Calma PHOTOS COURTESY OF REVOLUTION PRECRAFTEDMinimalist design by Ed Calma for the living space PHOTO COURTESY OF REVOLUTION PRECRAFTEDA fully functional kitchen for an Ed Calma designed home PHOTO COURTESY OF REVOLUTION PRECRAFTEDSweet dreams inside in the private chambers designed by Ed Calma PHOTO COURTESY OF REVOLUTION PRECRAFTED