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BEN CAB MUSEUM Location & Info

General Information

Museum hours:
Open daily except Mondays, Christmas Day & New Year’s Day
from 9:00am to 6:00pm (last entry at 5:30pm)

Admission to the Museum:


General: PHP 100.00
Students and senior citizens with valid ID: PHP 80.00
Special rates for student groups with prior arrangement.

Note:

 Guided tours of the Museum and Gardens may be arranged at the reception.
 Outside food and drinks are not permitted in the Museum. Food and drinks are permitted only
in Café Sabel and may not be carried into the galleries or other areas.
 Smoking is not permitted anywhere in the Museum.
 Still photography for personal use is permitted. No flash or tripods allowed. Videotaping is
permitted in the lobby only. No photographs or videotapes may be reproduced, distributed, or
sold without permission from the Museum.
 Sketching is permitted in the galleries (pencil only, no ink or paint) with sketchbooks no
larger than 8 1/2 x 11 inches (21.6 x 27.9 cm). No easels, stools, or sketching while sitting on
the floor is permitted.

Transportation Access

Car: 15-minute drive from Baguio City center.


Public transport: Jeep to Asin from jeepney terminal near
Baguio market.

Km. 6 Asin Road, Tadiangan,


Tuba, Benguet, Philippines
Tel /Fax: (+63 74) 442 7165
Email: bencabartfoundation@gmail.com
Website: www.bencabmuseum.org
TAM-AWAN VILLAGE

Tam-awan Village is located at Pinsao Proper, Baguio City, Philippines. Entrance rates are Php50 for adults,
Php30 for students and seniors, and Php20 for kids.

While husband was busy entertaining and showing mother-in-law around, I drove up to Tam-awan
Village with my dad and Patch.

Tam-Awan Village is a cultural destination carved along a slope up in Pinsao, the mountain above the
Easter Weaving School. Tam-awan literally means “to view” or “to look”. On a clear, cloudless day
the South China Sea is visible from the Village’s top.

The Village features native Ifugao houses (can be rented overnight if you want a different kind of
hotel!), an art gallery showcasing the work of Baguio artists, a cafe (offers “pinikpikan“!) and lots
and lots of foliage. The trails in the coffee tree thickets kinda remind me of the old house where I
grew up.

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