The local government initiated rehabilitation efforts, which was started in April 2022, through a 15 million Philippine pesos grant from the National Commission for Culture and the Arts.
A panoramic view of the city unfolds from its vantage point, the stone crucifix on the outdoor patio of the hotel's second floor.
To take advantage of tax exemptions, the order set up a seminary named Colegio del Santissimo Rosario[3] in June 1915 but due to the very small enrollment, the school closed two years later and the building was reverted to its original use.
Their secret police known as the Kempeitai, committed barbaric acts[4] in the place such as torturing, raping, and decapitating priests, nuns, as well as refugees.
The hotel was managed by Antonio Agapito "Tony" Agpaoa, a Baguio-based entrepreneur and faith healer famous for psychic surgery.
The Housing and Urban Development Coordinating Council, formerly known as the Ministry of Human Settlements, took over the ownership of the hotel which soon became an asset for the Presidential Management Staff (PMS).
In May 2012, Baguio inaugurated two new function halls in the hotel as part of the development of the property as a preserved heritage site and to promote tourism.
"[6] Phantom Japanese soldiers, headless nuns, disembodied crying voices, moans and screams as well as apparitions in photographs taken within the property have been reported.