TACLOBAN
CITY, June 6 (PNA) -– The Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical
Services Administration (PAGASA) has started rebuilding their office 30 months
after super typhoon Yolanda razed their building to the ground.
PAGASA
Tacloban station chief Mario Peñaranda said that under original timeline, the
new building will be done within five months, but unfavorable weather in the
second half of the year, may push completion date.
“This is
safe from storm surges since it is a two-storey building and it will have a
rooftop,” Peñaranda said.
Construction
works for the perimeter fence has started last month and it will be followed
with civil works for the new building.
The new
PAGASA station will rise on a lot near the Philippine Air Force unit camp at
the Tacloban Airport complex.
The state
weather bureau kicked off the construction after the Civil Aviation Authority
of the Philippines designated an area within the airport complex for PAGASA
station building and other government offices such as the Philippine Coast
Guard and the Leyte police provincial office.
“Our
presence at the airport is very important because we provide weather data,
information and advice for aviation activities,” Peñaranda said, justifying
their location at the airport complex badly hit by big waves.
Weather
forecasters currently use an office space in one of the laboratory rooms of the
Department of Science and Technology in Government Center, Palo, Leyte.
Despite
absence of office building, their regular operations have been restored using
old and newly acquired instruments, according to Peñaranda. (PNA)
FFC/SQM
FFC/SQM
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