In 2018, it was declared a heritage edifice by virtue of San Pablo City Local Ordinance 53–2018, which also declared the San Pablo Heritage zone, recognizing its historical and aesthetic significance.
[2] Built by spouses Eusebia Fule and Potenciano Malvar, the first appointed mayor[3] after the approval of Commonwealth Act No.
[4] The mansion was finished in 1915,[5] designed by architect Abelardo Lafuente García-Rojo.
[6] The mansion was bequeathed to their nephews and nieces who eventually sold it to National Life Insurance Company in 1966.
Acquired in 1988 by the Philippine American Life Insurance Company which restored it to its previous form in 1990[7] which maintained the building till its departure from the premises in 2021.