Megaworld Corp., the property development arm of tycoon Andrew Tan, has strengthened its position as the country’s leading developer of green office spaces after securing another sustainability certification for its growing portfolio.
The property giant said its newly completed Enterprise Two office tower in Iloilo Business Park has earned LEED Gold certification from the U.S. Green Building Council, bringing Megaworld’s total number of LEED-certified and registered office properties to 32—the highest in the Philippine real estate sector.
The aggressive push of the listed property developer towards sustainable development is underpinned by rising demand from multinational firms and business process outsourcing tenants seeking energy-efficient and environmentally compliant workspaces.
With the addition of Enterprise Two, Megaworld now has 24 LEED-certified office towers, evenly split between Gold and Silver ratings. Several more developments are in the pipeline for certification, reinforcing the firm’s long-term strategy to embed sustainability across its office portfolio.
Located within the 72-hectare Iloilo Business Park, Enterprise Two is a 12-storey building offering 39,000 square meters of leasable space. Its large floor plates of up to 4,000 square meters cater to IT-BPM firms and expanding enterprises in Western Visayas, a region gaining traction as an alternative business hub outside Metro Manila.
The building integrates a range of green features, including rainwater harvesting systems, double-glazed windows, reflective roofing, and water-efficient fixtures—design elements aimed at lowering operating costs while reducing environmental impact.
The growing roster of certified buildings of Megaworld reflects a broader shift in the office market, where sustainability is increasingly tied to tenant demand, cost efficiency, and regulatory compliance.
By scaling up green developments in emerging regional hubs like Iloilo, the company is also positioning itself to capture decentralization trends, as firms diversify locations while maintaining global environmental standards.






