At A Glance
- DPWH Secretary Vince Dizon pledges P1.5 billion in 2027 to complete PUP buildings.
- Funding covers unfinished classrooms and administrative facilities across campuses nationwide.
- Over 100,000 students affected by hybrid learning and overcrowding.
- Nine-storey academic building at the main campus remains PUP's largest unfinished project.
- Completion will allow full face-to-face classes and expand overall learning capacity.
Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) Secretary Vince Dizon leads a campus job fair at the Polytechnic University of the Philippines main campus in Sta. Mesa, Manila on March 12, 2026, where he also pledged P1.5 billion in the 2027 budget to complete unfinished classrooms and administrative buildings across PUP campuses nationwide. (John Louie Abrina | MB)
Department of Public Works and Highways (DPWH) Secretary Vince Dizon on Thursday, Mar. 12, pledged P1.5 billion in the 2027 budget to complete unfinished classrooms and administrative buildings across Polytechnic University of the Philippines (PUP) campuses nationwide.
He made the commitment during a DPWH campus job fair at PUP’s Sta. Mesa, Manila main campus after meeting with PUP President Manuel Muhi.
Muhi highlighted that incomplete buildings across the main and satellite campuses have forced many programs to adopt hybrid learning.
He added that the delays have contributed to chronic overcrowding, affecting over 100,000 students.
“I committed to him that for next year, whatever they need for the completion of these buildings will be included in the 2027 budget,” Dizon told reporters.
The DPWH chief added that funding unfinished projects is a top priority before initiating new ones.
Muhi said about 10 buildings remain unfinished due to years of funding delays.
Among these is a nine-storey academic facility on the main campus, which will house classrooms, laboratories, and offices.
“Once the nine-story building is finished, we can use around 300 classrooms. Imagine the number of classes that could be conducted—it’s really value for money,” Muhi said, stressing that the project will allow PUP to resume full in-person classes.
The nine-storey building, PUP’s largest construction endeavor to date, was initially scheduled for completion in 2024 or early 2025.
Its completion is expected to significantly expand learning capacity and improve facilities across PUP campuses nationwide.