Although Ayala Land’s decision to sell its interest in Alabang Town Center was made in a low-key, almost courteous manner, the ramifications have been felt in coffee shops and boardrooms alike, especially in the southern part of Metro Manila where the mall has long been a reliable landmark rather than a glitzy destination.
For many years, Alabang Town Center operated more like a neighborhood commons than a retail establishment. It welcomed families, students, and retirees with equal ease, absorbed daily routines with remarkably steady confidence, and proved to be an incredibly dependable source of income without ever requiring constant reinvention.
With the PHP 13.5 billion deal, the Madrigal family, Ayala Land’s longtime joint venture partner, will now own 50% of the company. This completes a cycle that started generations ago when the Madrigals sold the vast parcels of land that would eventually become Ayala Alabang, Madrigal Business Park, and the mall itself.
From a balance sheet standpoint, the deal is remarkably similar to actions Ayala has taken in the past, monetizing assets that are mature, stable, and no longer capital-hungry while rerouting funds toward projects intended to scale more quickly, adapt more flexibly, and react to changing customer behavior.
Executives at Ayala have made the intention quite apparent. Almost 700,000 square meters of gross leasable area will be added over the following five years through a leasing pipeline that will be funded by the revenues. This plan is especially advantageous for a business that wants to double down on recurring revenue rather than one-time development advantages.
Like a swarm of bees coordinating movement without a single visible command, retail and office assets increasingly function as interconnected systems, feeding data, foot traffic, and demand into the next. This approach has proven remarkably effective across Ayala’s broader portfolio.
On the other hand, Alabang Town Center had developed into a paradigm of serene maturity. Rather than dramatic transformation, it was a perfect fit for value crystallization because it produced cash on a regular basis, needed little reinvestment, and filled a niche that had not significantly improved or diminished.
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Property Sold | 50% stake in Alabang Town Center (via Alabang Commercial Center Corp.) |
| Seller | Ayala Land Inc. |
| Buyer | Madrigal Family (joint venture partner) |
| Sale Value | PHP 13.5 billion |
| Year Mall Opened | 1982 |
| Reason for Sale | Capital recycling for future leasing pipeline |
| Future Plans | Nearly 700,000 sqm of new leasing space over five years |
| Notable Quote | “We build, we stabilize, and we unlock value at the right time.” – Meean Dy |
| External Source | Inquirer.net |

The purchase, which gives the Madrigal family complete control over a property situated on land that is strongly connected to their own past, reads less like an extension and more like a consolidation. It also opens up previously shared or limited redevelopment choices.
Though no official announcement has yet confirmed that approach, rumors regarding possible partners and future ambitions have already started. Rockwell Land is frequently cited as a highly creative operator whose design language might drastically alter the site.
This adjustment will unavoidably alter the mall’s essence, giving up some of its open, leisurely nature in favor of density, verticality, and higher-yield uses. Similar changes have been made to several similar properties throughout Metro Manila, with varying responses from the people.
However, redevelopment does not always mean erasure. Developers have progressed dramatically in recent years in fusing new formats with legacy aspects, maintaining emotional familiarity while introducing more effective layouts, enhanced sustainability features, and a variety of money streams.
Ayala presents the sale in a way that emphasizes discipline above nostalgia. President and CEO Meean Dy used language that conveys confidence rather than retreat when he explained the move as part of a dynamic cycle that builds assets, stabilizes them, and unlocks value at the proper time.
As I listened to that explanation, I couldn’t help but notice how infrequently, even when both sides are clearly true, emotional attachment exactly coincides with corporate scheduling.
The business has taken pains to make it clear that it is not leaving the South. Remaining commitments to estates such as Arca South, Vermosa, Evo City, and the Cerca Estate imply that the departure from Alabang Town Center is more about portfolio balance than geographic withdrawal.
It is very crucial for Ayala to free up capital today. In the upcoming years, there will likely be more competition for quality tenants, particularly in mixed-use complexes. Having finances that are easily deployable enables the business to act much more quickly when possibilities arise.
This flexibility is becoming more and more valuable as consumer behavior continues to change. Malls are now evaluated not only on retail sales but also on their capacity to host activities, accommodate flexible work schedules, and incorporate digital infrastructure that maintains foot traffic.
Despite its advantages, Alabang Town Center was never intended with that future in mind. Its appeal was not in reinvention but in consistency, which, although desirable, may subtly limit upside in a market that favors flexibility.
The sale holds a subtle emotional weight for locals who grew up visiting its delicate courtyards and shaded walkways—not because anything has closed, but rather because stewardship has changed and with it the presumptions about what the property might become.
