THE community will feature 12 residential buildings and over 2,000 units spread across the property. PHOTOGRAPHS COURTESY OF SMDC
LIVING SPACES

Rise of southern living among young professionals

Today’s youth want something more Sustainable. A lifestyle that feels lighter. More flexible. More intentional.

Pauline Joyce Pascual

In 2026, success looks different. For a new generation of young professionals, the dream is no longer tied to squeezing into tiny condos near the city center, spending hours in traffic, and paying premium prices simply to stay close to work. The old formula still exists — but it no longer feels like the only path worth taking.

Today's youth want something more sustainable. A lifestyle that feels lighter. More flexible. More intentional. They still want ambition and opportunity, but not at the expense of peace of mind. They want access without exhaustion. Growth without burnout. And increasingly, they're realizing those things don't always have to be found in the middle of Metro Manila.

That's part of why more young Filipinos are quietly looking South. Not in the same way previous generations did — where moving to Cavite often meant sacrificing convenience for affordability — but in a completely different way. The South today feels less like a compromise and more like a lifestyle shift. And somewhere in that conversation, General Trias is starting to stand out.

Over the past few years, the city has evolved into one of Cavite's fastestgrowing residential corridors. New infrastructure projects have changed the way people move around the region. Commercial developments continue expanding deeper into Cavite. Cafés, retail spaces, business hubs and residential communities are rising side by side, creating a different kind of energy from what the area once had.

There's momentum in the South now. A sense that people are arriving before everything fully peaks. For young professionals and firsttime buyers, that timing matters.

Because this generation approaches homeownership differently, too. In 2026, buying a first home is no longer about immediately securing the biggest property possible. It's about finding a place that actually fits everyday life — practical spaces, manageable cuts, accessibility, and an environment that supports both productivity and rest.

THE project focuses on efficient layouts, open spaces and accessibility to nearby commercial areas and transport routes.

That shift is reflected in developments like SM Development Corporation's Zeal Residences in General Trias. Designed for young professionals, starting families and first-time property seekers, the 6.5-hectare low-rise community focuses less on excess and more on efficient living. Open spaces, functional layouts, and proximity to commercial centers and transport routes make day-to-day life feel simpler and more connected.

With 12 residential buildings and over 2,000 planned units, the development reflects what many younger buyers prioritize today: homes that feel realistic, well-connected, and aligned with modern routines.

And unlike years ago, accessibility is no longer the challenge it once was. Infrastructure developments continue reshaping Cavite's landscape. Projects like CALAX, the ongoing LRT-1 Extension, and the continued expansion of CAVITEX are steadily making movement between Cavite and Metro Manila more seamless.

For many residents, these changes are already redefining what southern living looks like. Commutes feel more manageable. Commercial districts feel closer. Areas once considered "too far" now feel genuinely livable for longterm, city-adjacent life.

At the same time, General Trias itself continues to evolve commercially. Retail destinations like SM City Rosario, SM City Tanza and Robinsons Place General Trias support the area's growing communities, while nearby industrial zones and mixed-use developments continue strengthening economic activity across Cavite.

But perhaps what makes the South especially attractive right now is its sense of possibility. It still feels emerging. Still growing. Still becoming. And for a generation that values potential just as much as prestige, there's something deeply appealing about building a life somewhere before everyone else arrives.