Property developer Ayala Land Inc. (ALI) is deepening its footprint in the Visayas, banking on the long-term promise of Negros Occidental as it rolls out a new upscale residential offering in Talisay City.
For more than 35 years, ALI has built some of the country’s most established master-planned estates, blending homes with offices, retail strips, schools and open spaces in a bid to create communities that hold value over time. In Negros Occidental, the listed developer has quietly anchored projects that helped spur local commerce and improve access to modern lifestyle spaces, drawing on its long familiarity with the province’s character and pace of growth.
Its upscale residential arm, Alveo Land Corp., is now taking that presence a step further with the launch of its first residential village in the province. The project will rise within Northpoint, Ayala Land’s estate in Talisay City, marking Alveo’s initial foray into Negros Occidental.


Alveo, known for its portfolio of more than 70 residential and mixed-use communities across 13 growth centers nationwide, has built a reputation for design-driven developments in key locations such as Nuvali, Bonifacio Global City, Makati and Alabang. Its projects range from high-rise condominiums to suburban residential lots and mixed-use enclaves, typically marked by generous open spaces and curated amenities aimed at fostering a sense of community.
In Negros, the new village is envisioned to carry these hallmarks, balancing privacy and openness, leisure and function, while responding to the natural landscape and rhythm of the province. The expansion signals confidence in Western Visayas’ growth corridor, as infrastructure upgrades and rising regional incomes reshape demand for premium housing outside Metro Manila.


By planting its Alveo brand in Northpoint, Ayala Land is not only widening its geographic reach but also reinforcing its position in the higher end of the residential market. For ALI, the move underscores a long-term view: that well-planned estates, anchored on sustainability and community design, can endure across generations—even beyond the country’s largest urban centers.







