Manila Film CenterTragedy
A scaffold collapse during rushed construction of the Manila Film Center in Pasay City. The casualty record remains heavily disputed, with contemporary reports and later accounts giving sharply different figures.
Incident Overview
What happened
During construction of the Manila Film Center for the first Manila International Film Festival, scaffolding on the sixth floor collapsed. Workers fell into quick-drying cement.
The incident is commonly referred to as the Manila Film Center tragedy. It took place at the Manila Film Center / Manila National Film Centre within the Cultural Center of the Philippines Complex in Pasay City, Metro Manila.
Accessible sources do not support one settled final casualty figure. This page therefore treats the death toll and injury count as unresolved.
Evidence Position
Handle with care
Best-supported fixed details: date, project location, construction context, scaffold collapse, and major uncertainty over deaths.
Main risk: later accounts often repeat dramatic high-casualty claims without a clear contemporary casualty record.
See disputed details →Key Data
Reported Figures
Chronology
Known sequence
Reported Outcomes
Casualty uncertainty
Disputed Details
Unresolved points
The main issue is not whether a collapse occurred. It is how many workers died, whether bodies were retrieved, and how reliable later claims are.
Accessible sources range from contemporary bibliographic references of at least three dead and 20 feared dead, through a seven-death account, to later claims of 168 or 169.
Bulletin Today reference: “At Least 3 Dead.” Business Day reference: “20 Workers Feared Dead.” Endriga / Hong account: seven died and were retrieved.
Manila Bulletin Research notes alleged casualties as high as 169. Atlas Obscura states 168 workers died or were buried.
No final death toll was verified from accessible full-text contemporary records.
This remains one of the most repeated claims, but the accessible sources conflict.
Manila Bulletin Research quotes a witness account saying many bodies were not retrieved and only those on top of the pile were taken.
Endriga’s Inquirer letter says architect Froilan Hong denied the popular story and stated that all seven bodies were retrieved.
The claim should be described as disputed, not established fact.
Manila Bulletin Research says scarce news stories reported 40 to 45 workers at the collapsed floor. Later claims of 168 or 169 deaths/casualties would need a wider affected group or would be inaccurate. The sources found do not resolve that gap.
Not Verified
Unverified Details
Source Material
References
Sources include retrospective news, an opinion letter disputing the death toll, a later magazine/place feature, incident listings, UNESCO project documentation, and academic bibliographic references.
All Document URLs
Source Links
Direct links to the source material used in the report.