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Showing posts with label Medellin Colombia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Medellin Colombia. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Colombian salsa singer Arroyo dies


Colombian salsa singer Joe Arroyo

Famed Colombian singer Joe Arroyo, composer of such salsa classics as La Rebelion and Echao pa'lante and Tania. died Tuesday after a monthlong hospitalization. He was 55.

The singer, whose given name was Alvaro Jose Arroyo, died at a hospital in Barranquilla, where he was being treated for hypertension and fluid in his lungs, his manager, Luis Ojeda, told The Associated Press.

Arroyo composed some 200 songs and performed with artists including Celia Cruz and Shakira.

He first appeared in the 1970s with the orchestra Fruko y sus Tesos, and formed his own band in Medellin in 1981 called La Verdad. Two years later, he moved to Barranquilla. (complete article.)

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

"Pablo Is Gone" Documentary in Medellin

Director Paola Perez will present a free screening of her new documentary "Pablo Is Gone" in Medellin's Santo Domingo barrio.

The film was produced with the help of many of the local children who live in some of poorest areas in Medellin where the movie was made.

Event: Special Screening of "Pablo Is Gone."
Date: May 14
Time: 10:00 am
Where: Santo Domingo Savio - Auditorio Parque Biblioteca Espana
Contact: 385 75 99



"Pablo Is Gone" official trailer

Sunday, May 9, 2010

Medellín's Architectural Renaissance

Young designers, encouraged by forward-thinking leaders, have created notable works in some of the city's poorest areas.

By Christopher Hawthorne, Los Angeles Times Architecture Critic



Over the last two or three years, a steady buzz has been building in architecture and design circles about developments in this city of 3.5 million, which through much of the 1980s and 1990s was infamous for its sky-high crime rate and viciously competitive narco cartels, including a particularly violent one led by Pablo Escobar.

Architects and urban planners who traveled to Medellín seemed to return telling some version of the same enthusiastic story about the renaissance taking place in Colombia's second-largest city, which has been driven in large part by investment in ambitious civic architecture.

After spending nearly a week in the city in late March, I'm happy to say I've joined the ranks of the Medellín evangelists. The city's commitment to public architecture, spearheaded by former mayor Sergio Fajardo, has — as advertised — produced a number of exquisitely designed libraries, schools and parks. Rising in some of Medellín's roughest neighborhoods, these projects are the capstones of a broader civic rebirth that has seen murder rates tumble nearly 90% from their highs of the early 1990s. Even the tourism business here has begun to make a fragile recovery.

It quickly became clear during my visit what contemporary architecture has meant for Medellín — for its civic identity, in particular, as well as for its long-battered international reputation. And yet the more of the city I was able to see, the more it struck me that an equally important set of lessons might be found by reversing that equation, by exploring what Medellín and its revival mean for contemporary architecture.

The architecture profession finds itself sharply divided these days into two camps, one concerned with experimental, often digitally driven design and the other primarily committed to social and environmental activism. The high-design architects sniff that the humanitarians are terrible designers, or at least unimaginative ones, while the humanitarians complain that the high-design architects are trapped in a hermetic onscreen world with little concern for the fate of overcrowded slums or a degraded planet.

Medellín is one of the few cities where these two very different sets of priorities have come seamlessly together — where buildings meant to uplift poor neighborhoods and offer residents a new range of social services are also strikingly inventive as works of architecture. In that sense its hard-won improvements are meaningful not just for its own residents but for architects and planners elsewhere, even if they never have the chance to set foot in Medellín.

The city's revival has its roots in the unorthodox approach of Fajardo, an energetic, charismatic former math professor who was elected mayor in 2003 despite a thin political resume. Not long after taking office, he and Alejandro Echeverri, the mayor's director of urban projects and an architect in his own right, pinpointed several districts in Medellín they thought would benefit from inventive and public-minded architecture. They were inspired, they've since said, by the way certain Barcelona neighborhoods were revived in advance of the 1992 Summer Olympics, as well some positive examples from Brazilian cities.

Their nascent efforts were aided by anti-corruption laws passed at the national level by the government of President Alvaro Uribe, including provisions requiring design competitions for nearly all sizable new public buildings.

Because the budgets for city projects in Medellín tend to be quite low by international standards, these competitions have drawn mostly Colombian architects, along with a handful from nearby Latin American countries. That fact alone is responsible for one of most unusual elements of the Medellín renaissance: In an age of globe-trotting celebrity architects, it has been propelled almost entirely by local firms. The city's new image has been sketched not by Zaha Hadid or Richard Meier but by small offices based in Medellín or the Colombian capital, Bogotá.

Under Fajardo's successor as mayor, Alonso Salazar, the city has continued to produce ambitious new architecture, including extensive new facilities for the South American Games, which were held in Medellín in March. A notable number of recent design-competition winners have been firms run by young architects; the impressive swimming complex for the Games, for example, was designed by a firm called Paisajes Emergentes, or Emerging Landscapes, whose founders are still in their 20s. Ctrl G, a local firm that in conjunction with Peruvian office 51-1 Architects recently won a competition for an eye-catching addition to the Medellín Museum of Modern Art, is run by a pair of female architects, Viviana Peña and Catalina Patiño, who also have yet to turn 30.

Perhaps most striking of all, Medellín's new landmarks have largely been built in the city's most violent and downtrodden neighborhoods, reflecting one of Fajardo's simplest — and most provocative — policy goals.

"Our most beautiful buildings," he liked to say, "must be in our poorest areas."



The best known among those projects is probably the Parque Biblioteca España, or Spanish Park and Library. Designed by the Bogotá-based architect Giancarlo Mazzanti, it is perched atop a crowded hillside neighborhood called Santo Domingo, which was particularly hard hit by the violence of the 1980s and '90s. Made up of three chiseled, rock-like forms sheathed in black slate, the library is one of a half-dozen complexes initiated by Fajardo's administration that combine new libraries with substantial park space.

Another remarkable achievement is the open-air Orquideorama, or orchid center, which sits inside Medellín's Botanical Garden and was designed by Plan B Architects, which is led by 34-year-old architect Felipe Mesa, and the firm JPRCR. It creates a large, shaded plaza under a spreading, wood-lattice canopy and also includes a handful of small, spare buildings for the botanical garden staff. Rainwater collected atop the canopy is funneled down through each of the design's trunk-like forms to sustain small gardens on the ground.

Plan B also won a competition for the centerpiece of the South American Games, a connected series of gymnasiums beneath a roof made of undulating green panels.

These new landmarks are not isolated works of architecture. In many cases they were built in conjunction with new roads, schools and transit lines — and as a physical extension of social programs meant to draw families once terrified by violence in their neighborhoods back out into public life. Fajardo — who is now running for the vice-presidency of Colombia, with national voting set for May 30 — has called the approach "social urbanism."

Some of the poorest and most remote areas in Medellín, where public buses have trouble navigating narrow dirt streets, are now served by a pair of so-called metro-cable lines — essentially, an urban version of the gondola systems in operation at many ski resorts — that carry residents to and from the city's main light-rail line. It is incongruous, to say the least, to see the metro-cable's suspended gondolas, which we tend to associate with alpine scenes and high-priced lift tickets, gliding just a few feet over the handmade houses that cling to many of Medellín's steepest hillsides.

Medellín's new architecture has hardly been a cure-all. The poverty in the city's toughest neighborhoods remains extreme, and in recent months there has been a disturbing uptick in violence — so much so that some of the Medellín architects I met expressed concern about taking me to visit their projects in rougher areas, even during the day.

Still, by nearly all accounts, the libraries and other new public buildings remain popular and well-used by local residents. And for designers, critics and curators outside of Colombia, the Medellín story — and what that story says in a larger sense about shifting priorities in the architecture profession — continues to be an inspiration. Fajardo and Echeverri were winners last year of the Curry Stone Design Prize, a new award based at the University of Kentucky that seeks to recognize architects and policymakers "who harness their ingenuity and craft for social good."

When the National Design Triennial opens later this week at the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum in New York, it will include a pair of projects from Medellín: Plan B's Orquideorama and a science museum designed by Echeverri. The designs were selected for the exhibition by Matilda McQuaid, Cooper-Hewitt's deputy curatorial director, who traveled to Colombia last year. Medellín, she told me, "is a model of how a city can be transformed when architecture and social policy work in tandem."

In October, the Museum of Modern Art in New York will open an ambitious exhibition on similar themes called "Small Scale, Big Change: New Architectures of Social Engagement," which collects a number of recent examples of humanitarian design from around the world.

Medellín, in the end, is more than an isolated urban success story or an example of a city that has managed to bridge contemporary architecture's great divide. It also offers a timely model for Los Angeles and other cities that have long turned almost exclusively to New York and Europe for ideas about how architecture ought to look — and how cities ought to operate.

Just as Gustavo Dudamel, the 29-year-old Venezuelan conductor, has brought fresh energy and a new sense of social commitment to the Los Angeles Philharmonic, so Medellín and other successful examples of Latin American city-making have a role to play in helping Los Angeles reimagine its future.

For American cities and their leaders, what Medellín symbolizes most clearly of all is what we stand to gain by looking south as well as east — and to poor countries, when it makes sense, along with wealthy ones — for cultural inspiration.

christopher.hawthorne@latimes.com

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Medellin Trip Report



Medellin Colombia — After I win the Powerball drawing tonight, I think I might just pack up my belongings and move to Medellin Colombia.

Though the city was being labelled as "the most dangerous place on Earth" just a mere 8 years ago, it's a totally different place today. Thanks to VERY aggressive action by the Colombian government against FARC rebels, narcotrafficking crime organizations, and various paramilitary splinter groups, Colombia has become a FAR safer place for its citizens and for visiting foreigners. Nowhere is that change more apparent than in Medellin.

Today, Medellin life is as tranquil as any good-sized city of 2.5 million inhabitants anywhere else in the world. The arts community is surprisingly strong and there's wonderful nightlife with live music clubs, experimental theatre groups in the city center, large glitzy modern shopping malls for the consumers of the world, and a remarkably clean, modern, quiet Metro system that makes getting around easy and affordable.

Medellin does something with their Metro system that I've never seen done anywhere else in the world --- they incorporate cable cars into the mass transit network. This makes sense, given that the city lies in a valley, with rugged mountain peaks on all side (and with communities up in the hills, and on other sides of the mountains). They call the cable car system "Metrocable" and the cable cars connect seemlessly to the Metro trains (no extra cost either). Metrocable is great for the locals, but tourists love it too because you get wonderful views from up on the cables, plus its one of those things you just can't do anyplace else.

I highly recommend taking a good half day to fully explore the excellent Museo de Antioquia. It's an art museum, and a darn good one, focusing on Medellin's favorite local artist: Fernando Botero. I just LOVE Botero's works because he's got an apparent innocence to his style that belies his ability to cut deeply to the core themes that make human beings human. He's sometimes dismissed as "that artist who paints fat people", but his focus on using fat people helps him avoid the insignificant attention paid to physical appearance while focusing more tightly on actions, emotions, and values --- things that are sometimes harder to do in a purely visual medium. Most of the 4th floor of the museum is dedicated to its collection of Botero works, and there are galleries on the 3rd and 2nd floors with international contemporary artworks (many collected by Botero himself). The first floor has a gift shop and special exhibits --- they're currently doing an exhibit on Spain, which is excellent.

Getting to Medellin is easy. There's 2 airports: MDE is the international airport, located about 30 miles from downtown in the town of Rionegro --- it handles all large jet traffic. The smaller domestic airport, Olaya Herrera (EOH), is just off the main autopista near the upscale Poblado section of town. It's mondo convenient but only handles smaller regional aircraft (lots of turboprops and regional jets).

For nightlife, you have many options. There's small, funky bars downtown where you can hear the most cutting edge music, though tourists will feel more comfortable in places like Parque Lleras, where the streets are chock-a-block full of upscale nightclubs, bars, elegant restaurants, and the HOTTEST women who ever walked the face of this planet. I had no idea there could be one spot on earth with so many women who looked like well-tanned, swimsuit models. Ssssss!

There's several festivals throughout the year. Medellin boasts about its fashion festival and its festival of flowers. During the Christmas season, drive along the road that parallels the Rio Medellin --- the city puts on the most elaborate lights display you can imagine, and the reflections off the water only intensify the effect...stunning! But if you've got a bit of blood lust in you, this time of year could be right up your alley because their Festivo Taurino Macarena is all about classic bull fights, and there's a bull-fight every weekend through at least the end of February. (One of these days, I'm convinced, the bull will win...)

Medellin today is a modern, attractive city with fun things to do and see, a blistering hot nightlife scene. I can't wait to go back!

Nice Place to Visit, but a GREAT Place to Live!

Report By mrkstvns from Austin, TX - USA

Colombian Travel Guide Forums: Sign Up Here

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Medellín: Medical Tourism Destination

Medellín: The Spirit of Latin America
By Stephanie Falcone

The Medical Tourism Association hosted a Familiarization Tour to the everlasting place of spring time, Medellín, Colombia December 8th-12th 2009. Nine medical tourism facilitators, insurance companies and agents from the United States, Canada and the Caribbean explored the high quality of the healthcare system, accreditation, warmth and hospitality Medellín has to offer their patients.

Upon our arrival, after only a 3-hour flight from Miami we were immediately welcomed with open arms by representatives of the Medellín Healthcare Cluster. From the moment we stepped outside there was a sense of freedom and relaxation in the air. We came down through the forested locale to a breathtaking opening, where we were met by the astonishing view of the entire city of Medellín, revealing the radiant lights from the hillsides to the mountain tops. As we drove down the light-encrusted mountain it was easy to imagine how one might fall in love with this city.

The familiarization tour was sponsored by the Medellín Healthcare Cluster, organized with the goal of promoting Medellín as a competitive medical tourism destination. The Medellín Healthcare Cluster has set exceptionally high principles for applicants seeking Healthcare Cluster membership. All amenities must go through an intense application process and avowal to go through or apply for the Joint Commission International accreditation within the next two years to be accepted. The Familiarization Tour included visits to some of the top hospitals in Colombia such as: Hospital Universitario San Vicente de Pa l, Hospital General de Medellín, Clínica El Rosario, Centro Odontol g Congregaci n Mariana, Clinica Odontol gica Promta, Hospital Pablo Tob Uribe, Clinica Cardiovascular, and Clinica Oftalmolgica de Antioquia-Colfan. In addition, participants had the opportunity to visit State of the Art air-ambulance company SARPA.

The City of Lights
Colombia is located in South America bordering the Caribbean Sea, between Panama and Venezuela, and bordering the North Pacific Ocean, between Ecuador and Panama. Colombia is the only South American country with coastlines on both the North Pacific Ocean and Caribbean Sea, and is persistently growing given the on-going development in domestic security since 2002. Medellín is the second largest city in Colombia, and Capital City of the State of Antioquia. With countless tourism activities for visitors, Medellín serves as a popular destination for international travelers. Medellín has breathtaking views of this magnificent city from every angle you may choose to look. During this time of year the city of Medellín hires 2,000 employees to string lights throughout the neighborhoods and countryside giving the city a magical feeling. The city gathers local traditions such as dancers, instrument players and multicolored characters as lights. Medellín created this project to attract international travelers, since most foreigners enjoy seeing unique places, food, and attractions while in another country. These lights are a tribute to the country demonstrating the most significant landscapes and icons from the region. Shortly after, the project was then implemented by other Latin American countries such as: Venezuela, Honduras, and Ecuador. Medellín began the renovation process in 2002, altering the aesthetic appearance of this beautiful city. Medellín is committed to position itself as one of the major players in the Health and Wellness sector of the Medical Tourism Industry. Between the years of 2005 and 2006, the number of foreigners visiting Medellín grew by 33.4%, from approximately 71, 000 to approximately 95,000 visitors, and grew another 20 % half way through 2007.

Local Cuisine
To start, one must sample the baked corn arepas (flat corn pancake) with butter and cheese alongside Colombian coffee. Colombian coffee is the ultimate desired beverage and is said to be the best in the world. Colombian coffee is primarily grown in Medellín, neighboring towns, and more mountainous areas such as Bogotá giving coffee a rich balanced flavor. Next, empanadas are a must have while in Colombia. Empanadas are typically made with shredded chicken, pork, beef, and ground meat but can be found filled with potato and vegetables; served with aji (hot sauce) and lime wedges on the side. In Colombia, empanadas are sold essentially everywhere in the city.

Hospital Universitario San Vicente de Paul
Hospital Universitario San Vincente de Pa l is a non-profit private institution with 96 years of experience and great national and international recognition. Hospital Universitario San Vicente de Pa l offers 648 beds to the public and is a Colombian Leader in healthcare generating health research, specialists in high complexity care, and experienced leadership in transplants. The hospital has alliances with the main universities in Medellín for education and research purposes in the training of doctors, nurses, nutritionists, and social workers, management engineering and social communication schools. Some of the hospital specialties include Cardiovascular and Thoracic Unit, Oncology Unit, Bone Marrow Transplants and Orthopedics.

Oral Home
Oral Home is a 24/7 dental clinic catering to emergency cases and general services to the community. Oral Home is not only a dental clinic, but has integrated the wellness sector even into their basic services. Oral Home has a 24/7 emergency mobile service which assists many international patients in comfort and satisfaction. Oral Home is equipped with the most advanced technology providing excellent results.

Hospital General de Medellín
Hospital General de Medellín is the only public hospital in the entire Medellín Healthcare cluster. Hospital General de Medellín is equipped with 423 beds, which provides intermediate and adult critical care and pediatrics services. Among its many achievements Hospital General de Medellín has become the first public hospital of third level to achieve National Accreditation (accredited by ISQUA) by the Social Protection Ministry of Colombia. Hospital General Medellín was also ranked in the 20 best hospital and clinics of Latin-America, ranked by America Econmicas, and is also participating in the first phase for the International Accreditation with JCI Standards that was organized with International Quality Resources Health Accreditation. The mission of Hospital de General Medellín is a social enterprise of the state that provides health services up to high complexity levels. Such services focus on patient safety and provide affection, confidence and satisfaction while promoting high-quality and good environmental practices.

Clínica El Rosario
Clínica El Rosario is a prestigious non-profit institution of religious nature that belongs to the society of Dominican Sisters of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin of Tour. Clínica El Rosario is a 240 bed multi-functioning hospital with two headquarters in Medellín. Clínica El Rosario is a pioneer in healthcare with a mission to contribute to life and health recovery through a comprehensive secure, humane and differentiated service with specialized personal and excellent management that ensures value creation for the target social groups, economic sustainability and performance in time. Clínica El Rosario’s international specialty services consist of Hip Replacement, Knee Replacement, Heart Value Surgery, and Radiology.

Centro Odontol g Congregaci n Mariana

Centro Odontol gico Congregaci n Mariana is a non-profit institution, with offices in the south and downtown areas of Medellín to provide general and specialized oral health to the public. Centro Odontol gico Congregaci n Mariana has a total of 16 rooms and three operating rooms. Aesthetic Dentistry, Oral Rehabilitation, and Dental Implants are the most sought after by international patients. Centro Odontol gico Congregaci n Mariana has a vision to consolidate in 2015 as the renowned oral health institution in the city for its technical quality and competitive pricing.

Clinica Odontol gica Promta
Clinica Odontol gica Promta has 21 years of experience providing the highest quality in comprehensive oral health services offering all dental specialties, with four clinics located strategically throughout Medellín. Clinica Odontol gica Promta serves 10,000 patients a month and has the capacity to treat 150 international patients, with 50 % of international patients being treated from the US and 35 % from Spain. Clinica Odontol gica is conveniently positioned only steps away from downtown hotels and only two blocks from popular international lodging.

Hospital Pablo Tob Uribe
Hospital Pablo Tob n Uribe is a non-profit institution with a mission to provide an incomparable complexity in the healthcare industry while contributing the most current scientific knowledge within a structure of Christian humanism. Hospital Pablo Tob n Uribe is the first and only hospital in Colombia to be both ISQUA accredited and receive the excellence institution certification of high complexity level of health in Colombia. Hospital Pablo Tob n Uribe is a 255-bed hospital specializing in Transplants, Advance Oncology, Palliative Care, Orthopedics, and Cosmetic Surgery.

Centro Cardiovascular Colombiano Cliníca Santa María
Since 1966, Centro Cardiovascular Colombiano Cliníca Santa María has treated patients with cardiovascular diseases in areas of prevention, diagnosis, invasive and surgical treatment. Centro Cardiovascular Colombiano Cliníca Santa María is another leader in Colombia healthcare, completing the first heart and lung transplant in Colombia and is a national and international reference center. Centro Cardiovascular Colombiano Cliníca Santa Mar a is committed to offering specialized services to its patients specializing in areas such as Angioplasty without Stent, Cardiac Value Replacement, Coronary Bypass Surgery, Cardiac Transplants and Hemodynamics. Centro Cardiovascular Colombiano Cliníca Santa María offers a total of 140 beds, 73 specialists, and has proven to be a leader with the highest quality standards in medicine.

Clinica Oftalmolgica de Antioquia-Colfan
Clinica Oftalmolgica de Antioquia-Colfan is modernly designed for all patients to receive the most proficient care and specializes in Phacoemulsification Cataract Surgery, Refractive Surgery and Corneal Surgery for international patients. Clinica Oftalmolgica de Antioquia-Colfan has a total of 59 specialist physicians, allowing this innovative facility to receive additional international patients.
Servicios Aereos Panamericanos “SARPA”

Sarpa is a charter airline company with offices in both Medellín and Bogotá that offers charter services, air ambulance services, domestic and international flights including load and passenger transportation. Sarpa is the first and only Colombian entity certified by the Colombian Civil Aviation Authority. Sarpa has attended to international patients in countries such as Aruba, San Marteen, Costa Rica, Peru, Ecuador and many more. This air ambulance group has 25 specialists, five anesthesiologists and 10 emergency specialists for all adult general illness, trauma, pediatric and newborns. Sarpa goes over and beyond expectations with safe and dependable transportation when it is most needed with revolutionary technology and human warmth.

About The Author
Stephanie Falcone is Membership Coordinator, and involved in managing the Social Media & Marketing Department for the Medical Tourism Association. Stephanie provides recruitment, coordination and retention support for members of the MTA. In addition, she supports the Health Tourism Magazine. She may be reached at stephanie@medicaltourismassociation.com or www.medicaltourismassociation.com.

Discover The Transformation of Medellin, Colombia.

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Pablo Escobar (Dec. 1, 1949 – Dec. 2, 1993)



On this date in 1993, Pablo Escobar was gunned down in Medellín.

Above photo: Members of Colonel Martinez’s Search Bloc celebrate over Pablo Escobar’s body on December 2, 1993, in a photograph taken by DEA agent Steve Murphy. Pablo’s death ended a fifteen-month effort that cost hundreds of millions of dollars. It was the deathblow to the Medellín cartel–it became fragmented and the coke market soon became dominated by the rival Cali Cartel, until the mid-1990s when its leaders, too, were either killed or captured by the government.

At the height of his empire’s power in 1989, Pablo Escobar (1949-1993) was estimated to be the seventh-richest man in the world with a personal wealth of close to $4 billion, while his Medellín cartel controlled 80 percent of the global coke market. A hero to many in Medellín province (especially the poor people), he was a charismatic man who worked hard to cultivate his “Robin Hood” image. He built football fields, multi-sports courts, houses and churches for the locals. The locals provided him with necessary eyes and ears to elude CIA and international efforts to arrest him.

On December 2, 1993, the Search Bloc triangulated him using the radio signals. How Escobar was killed during the confrontation has been debated but it is known that he was cornered on the rooftops and, after a prolonged gunfight, suffered gunshots to the leg, torso, and the fatal one in his ear. It has never been proven who actually fired the final shot into Escobar’s head, whether this shot was made during the gunfight or as part of possible execution or suicide.

Great Time Magazine time capsule article

Thursday, November 26, 2009

Empresas Publicas de Medellin


Empresas Publicas de Medellin Headquarters

It is not often or expected of State Owned Utilities Companies to commit their resources to helping improve the lives of their customers by dedicating their resources to developing social programs within the communities that they serve, Empresas Publicas de Medellin invests in the future of the people of Colombia.



Empresas Publicas de Medellin (EPM) is an integrated state owned Utilities Company, which is property of the Municipality of Medellin, administrative entity of this city, capital of the Department of Antioquia, Republic of Colombia.

It provides electricity energy, natural gas, water, sanitation and telecommunications services with the highest international quality standards in order to meet customer needs, while implementing business practices that guarantee long term sustainability and company growth.



Since it’s creation in 1955, EPM has strived to generate enough resources to finance its activities and promote growth, without receiving external contributions. Every year it delivers dividends to its owners to invest in development programs for Medellin. At the same time EPM holds a wide Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) policy that benefits the communities in which it operates.



It currently projects its growth in the Latin American market in order to escalate its knowledge and experience, offering its social responsibility focus and efficient project management, in technical, commercial and planning operations, both in the water and energy business.

For EPM, Medellin and the metropolitan area of The Valle de Aburra. are its two major markets, with 3.6 million inhabitants. In Colombia, EPM is present in Antioquia, Bogota, Manizales, Armenia, Pereria, Bucaramanga, Cucuta, barranquilla, Cartangena, Cali, and Quibdo.



This is EMP, a modern company that evolves and every time moves closer to the people, and with its dynamism goes beyond its normal business boundaries, attributes that have characterized it throughout its history and have given EPM world wide recognition for it’s investment in the people it serves.

Friday, November 13, 2009

Sins Of My Father: Pablo Escobar


Pecados de mi Padre - Sins of My Father: Pablo Escobar Documentary

This is the incredible story of Pablo Escobar, the infamous boss of Colombias Medellin cartel, told for the very first time by his son, Sebastian and his widow Maria Isabel Santos.

In Nicolas Entels film Sebastian tells of his extraordinary childhood, growing up with a father he loved but whom he knew to be Colombias enemy number one. He tells of times of extraordinary luxury and extravagance, and other times on the run. And Sebastian and his widow open the family vaults to share their private and long hidden archives.

But this is also the story of two of Escobars most prominent victims, the Minister of Justice and a politician about to be elected President of Colombia, as told by their sons. They were among hundreds that Escobar had ki11ed in the 1980s. The film follows Sebastian as he tries to break the cycle of revenge and assassinati0n by seeking reconciliation with the sons of his fathers victims.

Discover The Transformation of Medellin, Colombia

Sunday, May 10, 2009

Happy Mother's Day From Colombia


Mystery Solved: Why Moms Really Love Flowers on Special Day

For over a hundred years, mothers in the United States have been honored on Mother's Day, traditionally celebrated with beautiful bouquets of flowers. New research suggests that the positive power flowers have on feelings may be the real reason mothers prefer to be given beautiful blooms on their special day. According to a behavioral research study conducted by Nancy Etcoff, Ph.D., of Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, when fresh-cut flowers are in the home, people feel more compassionate toward others, have less worry and anxiety and feel less depressed.

"Without question, mothers appreciate flowers for their natural beauty," said Augusto Solano, president of Asocolflores, the Colombian Association of Flower Exporters. "And beyond the emotional excitement of receiving flowers, there are proven benefits that flowers provide on human behavior. Moms have long recognized the power of flowers, and now we know why! For over-stressed moms, it's no wonder they look to flowers for a proven pick-me-up."

Solano suggests treating moms to flowers not only on Mother's Day, but throughout the year. Flowers are not only great to look at, but have powerful "attitude-adjusting" qualities that can be enjoyed by busy moms, too.

Just in time for Mother's Day, millions of flowers will be shipped to the U.S. from Colombia, The Land of Flowers. Two out of every three flowers sold in the U.S. are grown in Colombia's rich, fertile soil and the country's beautiful year-round climate.

And a majority of those fresh cut red roses come from Medellin, Colombia the "city of eternal spring."

The first person I called from my hotel room on my first trip to Medellin was my mother, which I called to not only tell her I was safe because she worried about me traveling to Colombia, but I wanted to tell her that everything she had heard about Medellin in the US news was all in the past.

Discover The Transformation of Medellin, Colombia (click here)

Sunday, May 3, 2009

"The Expedition Condor" Travel Adventures Throughout Colombia



“The Expedition Condor” tours in Colombia was developed with a wide variety of adventures sports activities along with a cultural integration to learn about the towns they visit on the tours. This is the first program of its kind in Colombia.



The Expedition Condor successful, “Colombia Is All An Adventure” expedition covered more than 10,000 km and 50 municipalities throughout Colombia.



This expedition gave the many participants the opportunity to face many exciting challenges along their travel adventures which included climbing mountains, whitewater rafting, paragliding, hiking, exploring caves in the emerald mines in Muzo Boyacá, and even a ride overlooking the beautify countryside on a helium balloon.



The primary goal of the “The Expedition Condor” tours is to promote Colombia as a tourist destination for adventures travelers looking to explore the culture, history, routes, and most importantly, its people.



At the present time “The Expedition Condor” is developing the program for the next travel adventures through Colombia which the group plans on visiting the departments of Guajira, Bolivar, North of Santander, Sucre, Amazon, Nariño, Huila, the Cauca, Goal, in addition it will again travel through Antioch, Cundinamarca, Casanare, Magdalena, Santander, Valley, Quindío, Tolima and Boyacá as they search new extreme adventures in to promote Colombia at national and international level.





La Expedición Cóndor de los Andes es un proyecto de carácter deportivo y de integración cultural, sin precedentes en la historia de nuestro país. Esta travesía recorrió en la primera etapa de su Fase Uno, “Colombia Toda Una Aventura” más de 10.000 kms y 50 municipios del territorio nacional.

Dicha aventura que inició el 18 de febrero de 2007, dio al grupo de la expedición la oportunidad de enfrentar entre sus retos, altas montañas, ríos caudalosos y hasta las profundidades de la tierra en las minas de esmeraldas en Muzo Boyacá.

Su objetivo principal es mostrar a Colombia como un destino turístico de aventura, ideal para la practica de deportes extremos, el cual además por características como su flora, su fauna, sus paisajes y lo mas importante su gente, posee un gran potencial y proyección a nivel internacional.

En estos momentos se realiza la pre-producción de la segunda etapa de aproximadamente 3 meses. En dicha etapa el grupo de expedicionarios tiene proyectado visitar los departamentos de Guajira, Bolívar, Norte de Santander, Sucre, Amazonas, Nariño, Huila, Cauca, Meta, además recorrerá nuevamente Antioquia, Cundinamarca, Casanare, Magdalena, Santander, Valle, Quindío, Tolima y Boyacá en busca de esa Colombia



For more information: Travel Adventures in Colombia

Friday, May 1, 2009

Colombia's First Environmental Film Festival



The festival "Cine Ambiental VOCES" is the first environmental film screening series to be held in Colombia. The festival is the work of Pablo Velez Tobar. Tobar grew up in Colombia and studied environmental engineering at the University of Medellín. He then moved to Toronto to study environmental protection technologies. After graduating in May of 2008, Pablo began planning the festival.

Greatly concerned over the environmental future of his home country, Pablo decided to plan a film screening series in order to raise awareness. As Colombia modernizes and gains stability, Pablo is concerned the natural resources will be exploited. Pablo sees "the festival VOCES supporting a generation of green technologies and green projects for years to come."

Pablo is also greatly concerned over the inequality he sees in Colombia. Environmental issues such as clean water, clean air, polluted soil, etc, adds to the struggles the underprivileged face. Pablo hopes the festival can have a direct impact on these issues.

Pablo began screening films in early March in the city of Medellín. He screened the films at cultural centers, universities, schools, and in the surrounding barrios (neighborhoods). Pablo screened a mix of documentary, experimental and narrative, changing up the program to fit the various audiences.

After the initial screenings, the festival entered the "mobile" phase. Pablo began screening the films in various small towns throughout the Antioquia region of Colombia.

One of the small towns Pablo visited was Santa Rosa de Osos, a farming community 2 hours outside Medellín. Pablo spent three days in Santa Rosa screening films and hosting discussions with school children. He also screened a selection of films for the local government, including the mayor.

Pablo originally had 30 screenings set up, but continues adding more. Currently there has been over 43 screenings. The festival wraps up with a few final screenings at the University of Antioquia. Pablo estimates the festival will reach close to 2,500 people.

Pablo hopes to continue the festival for years to come. His goal for this year was to "reach as many people as possible and from different ages, economical situation, gender, education, interest and basically leave a reflection on the environment that surrounds them." In future years Pablo hopes to turn the festival into a "festival with action." He plans to develop a series of sustainable projects to introduce to the communities where he screens the films.

Universidad de Medellín

El I Festival de Cine Ambiental VOCES ha sido concebido por un grupo independiente e interdisciplinario de personas que pretenden propiciar la reflexión, desde una perspectiva ambientalista, a través de imágenes y medios audiovisuales.

Desde el Festival VOCES consideramos que al resignificar la estrecha relación que existe entre la especie humana y su entorno, en sus dimensiones natural y artificial, basados en el respeto por el otro y lo otro, es posible alcanzar una vida con dignidad, equidad y responsabilidad, facilitando así el bienestar de la sociedad en su conjunto.

El Festival VOCES pretende abrir un espacio en donde el público logre expresar sus pensamientos e inquietudes sobre las problemáticas sociales y medioambientales que enfrentan en su contexto local, acercando a diferentes públicos a trabajos audiovisuales independientes.

festicineambientalvoces.blogspot.com/

Monday, April 27, 2009

Artists Explores The Sounds Of Colombia



Fonseca, the Latin Grammy-winning Colombian artist, in concert at the Fillmore at Irving Plaza, where he performed cuts from his recent albums “Gratitud” and “Corazón.”

Fonseca proclaims, “Long live the music of my country!” in “Gratitud,” the title track of his 2008 album, and he means it. His country is Colombia, as affirmed by audience members waving flags and wearing Colombian straw hats at the packed Fillmore at Irving Plaza on Friday night, not to mention the Colombia tourism videos shown before and after his set. The music of his country that Fonseca stays grounded in is vallenato, the button-accordion-pumped style that arose on the Caribbean north coast.

Fonseca (whose full name is Juan Fernando Fonseca) won Latin Grammy awards for his 2005 album, “Corazón” (“Heart”), and its hit single “Te Mando Flores” (“I Send You Flowers”). He clearly has his eye on a wider audience. His New York concert was part of an extensive United States tour.



He’s not a preservationist clinging to a venerable form. Fonseca leads a modern Latin band, with synthesizer and electric guitars. His songs are pop tunes, with singalong hooks, climbing melodies and lyrics about love. He sounds well aware of fellow reedy-voiced pop songwriters like Sting and, from the Dominican Republic, Juan Luís Guerra; his music can turn toward jazzy pop or Mr. Guerra’s pan-Caribbean lilt. If they were in English, songs like “San José” or “Paraíso” could easily be sung by George Michael.

Mostly, however, Fonseca is following through on the pop breakthrough of Carlos Vives, who merged vallenato with rock guitar and drums to make international hits in the 1990s. Fonseca performed a song Mr. Vives recorded, with an apt title: “El Cantor de Fonseca.” Even when Fonseca’s songs have the structure and sentiments of pop love songs, they flaunt the trappings of vallenato.

His band’s accordionist, Taty Manzano, gets far more solo time than the guitarists, often keeping up a call-and-response counterpoint with Fonseca’s vocals.



Fonseca plays the nice guy in his songs, with lyrics full of romantic yearning and kindly thoughts. “Arroyito” (“Little Creek”), his finale, declared, “You are the negative of the photo of my soul/You are the holy water that grows my crops,” to the clip-clop beat of a Colombian son, one of the basic rhythms of vallenato.

Fonseca can croon like a Latin pop singer, but he can also take up the quaver, yelp and near sob of traditional vallenato.

For the first part of the set, he showed his internationalist side, touching on pop and light rock. Then he headed decisively homeward, keeping the accordion up front and ratcheting up the tempo, culminating in an ecstatic “Lagartija Azul” (“Blue Lizard”). After the set ended, Fonseca returned and polled the crowd on what he should play for encores. Fans shouted the names of hits they had already heard, but he sang old vallenatos (from Diomedes Díaz) instead.

Friday, April 24, 2009

Colombian Cinema In Cannes 2009

PARIS -- First-time directors will be center stage at this year's 48th annual International Critics Week, where eight of nine announced competition titles will be up for the Camera d'Or.

The nine-day event will close with a double screening of Gregoire Colin's debut short "La baie de renard" followed by Colombian director Camilo Matiz's "1989," which stars Vincent Gallo in an English-language story, the only Colombian movie in the Critics Week lineup.


The multi-talented Vincent Gallo stars in Colombian film "1989."

Colombian feature "1989," directed by Camilo Matiz and starring Vincent Gallo, who apparently acted in the film on his days off from the shoot of Francis Ford Coppola's "Tetro" movie, will be presented on closing night at Cannes.



Interview, en espanol, with Colombian director Camilo Matíz on the making of his film "1989" starring Vincent Gallo.

Another Colombia feature at Cannes this year is “Los Viajes del Viento.” A story about a old troubadour who travels with his young apprentice across Colombia in a journey to return a cursed accordion back to his teacher. The film is about dreams, about learning, about artistic sacrifice, about looking for our place in this world. It touches upon matters that pertain to all human beings, but it does it from our perspective, from our experience, our culture, our wealth, things not very often displayed in cinematography," affirmed Colombian filmmaker Ciro Guerra.



"Los Viajes de Viento" by Colombian filmmaker Ciro Guerra

The last time Colombia competed in Cannes was 11 years ago with Víctor Gaviria's 'Rodrigo D: No Futuro' and 'La Vendedora de Rosas.'



"La Vendedora de Rosas"(1998) by Víctor Gaviria.
13-year-old Monica leads a street life, making her living by selling flowers to couples in local nightspots, she is joined by 10-year-old Andrea who runs out of her house in an effort to avoide her abusive mother.

Cannes' 48th Critics' Week will feature predominantly debuting films.
Latin American films continue a strong showing, with Chilean helmer Alejandro Fernandez Almendras' "Huacho" and Uruguayan director Alvaro Brechner's "Bad Day to Go Fishing" both included in the sidebar's seven-film competition.



"Rodrigo D: No Futoro"(1990) by Victor Gavaria
Rodrigo, a poor and troubled teenager in the barrios of Medellin, Colombia, struggles to find hope in a world ravaged by violence and chaos. An aspiring drummer in a punk band, he uses his music to try to drive the despair out of his thoughts.

"Latin American films are less present than in previous years," the fest's artistic director, Jean-Christophe Berjon, told Daily Variety. "But having Latino fare at Critics' Week continues to be an important tradition."

Back in Medellin, Colombia...



Juan Uribe shoots "El Azul del Cielo" on location in Medellin, which should wrap shooting on April 23.

Writer/director Juan Uribe makes his debut feature film in the barrios of Medellin in a story that will depart from many popular Colombian themes in an effort to showcase the transformation of Medellin, Colombia.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Colombian Poet Mario Rivero Passes Away


Colombian poet Mario Rivero

Colombian poet, art critic and editor Mario Rivero, known as the forerunner of the country’s urban poetry, died in Bogota, sources close to the poet said. He was 74.

Rivero, a native of Envigado near the northwestern city of Medellin, died from a heart attack Sunday at his home in the Colombian capital, where he lived for four decades.

The author burst onto the Colombian literary scene in 1966 with “Poemas Urbanas” (Urban Poems), a title covering the most ordinary everyday experiences he used to spark the country’s urban poetry trend that was just in its beginnings.

This volume of verse was followed by another 13 volumes, including two anthologies and a long interview, which Rivero published in the course of his literary career right up to his final work, “Balada de la Gran Señora” (Ballad of the Great Lady), in 2004.

Among a long list of titles, the poet published “Noticiario 67” (Newscast 67) in 1967, “Y Vivo Todavia” (And I’m Still Alive) in 1972, “Baladas sobre Ciertas Cosas que No Se Deben Nombrar” (Ballads about Certain Things that Shall Remain Nameless) in 1973, “Los Poemas del Invierno” (Poems of Winter) in 1984 and 1996, “Mis Asuntos” (My Affairs) in 1986, “Vuelvo a las Calles” (Back to the Streets) in 1989, “Del Amor y Su Huella” (On Love and the Marks It Leaves) in 1992, “Flor de Pensa” (Flower of Pensa) in 1998, together with the anthologies “Baladas” (Ballads) in 1980 and “Mis Asuntos” (My Affairs) in 1995, and the interview “Porque Soy Poeta” (Because I’m a Poet) in 2000.

As an editor, Rivero founded in 1972 the magazine Golpe de Dados, which he directed until his death.

Rivero created the magazine together with poets Aurelio Arturo, Fernando Charry Lara, Giovanni Quessep and Jaime Garcia, all from Colombia’s “disillusioned generation” of the 1970s that critics gave the name that they applied to the publication, Golpe de Dados, or Roll of the Dice.

In a biographical sketch of the author, the Casa de Poesia (House of Poetry) Silva, a cultural center in Bogota of which he was an assiduous collaborator, says that “before focusing on writing the works that would establish him as one of the most important poets of the later generations of the century in Colombia, (Rivero) tried many things and had multiple experiences.”

Rivero, adds the Casa Silva, was “a volunteer in the Korean War, a tango singer, theater actor, a book and artwork salesman; he lived his youth in constant movement, wandering through Central and South America with excursions to Europe as a seminary speaker and guide for artistic tours.” EFE

Sunday, April 5, 2009

Robin Finley un Californiano en Medellín

Robin Finley vive en Medellín

"Quiero una arepa alegre", le pidió Finley al diseñador. Éste dibujó una con sombrero y corbata en forma de Suramérica. Es el logo de la revista. Nunca antes había comido arepa. Sólo unas tortillas delgadas y de fábrica, en su país.

El Diamante y La Arepa

ROBIN FINLEY ES un californiano radicado en Medellín desde hace cuatro meses. Decidió quedarse a vivir aquí, atraído por el espíritu espontáneo de la gente. Fundó una revista para turistas: La Arepa.

"Hace 30 años, en Colombia me robaron la bolsa. ¡Hoy, me van a robar a mi hijo!"

Fue la exclamación de Mrs. Ann, la mamá de Robin Finley, cuando éste le contó hace unos meses que había decidido mudarse a Medellín.

Él es un gringo de 31 años, que se cansó de la rutina de 10 horas diarias de oficina, sentado frente a un computador de la Google y otras empresas, sin un cambio, como debe ser la descripción universal de la monotonía.

Y echó a andar por América Latina.

Antes de avanzar en la aventura de Finley, digamos que la primera parte de la expresión de su madre se debió a que en una visita suya a Bogotá, hace 30 años, un raponero le arrebató su bolsa y ella quedó convencida de que Colombia es un país peligroso, en el que no se puede andar sin que le roben a uno sus cosas. La segunda, a que a su hijo le robaron aquí el corazón. No una mujer, ni varias, sino las ciudades, el clima, la apertura de la gente de esta parte del continente.

Graduado en Ciencias Políticas de la Universidad de Berkeley, carrera que nunca ha ejercido, "vivía en California, un lugar lleno de latinos, pero no me podía comunicar con nadie". Decidió viajar a Guatemala a aprender español.

Estuvo allí cinco meses hasta que compró una motocicleta para seguir viajando hacia el sur. La llamó «El Diamante» e hizo pintar este nombre en un sitio visible de su vehículo. Llegó a Panamá a principios de 2008 y se montó en un barco con su moto y llegó a Cartagena. Pagó 350 dólares por esa travesía de ocho días que disfrutó como un niño. Bellas le parecieron las islas de San Blas y simpáticos los delfines que rodearon mucho tiempo la nave.

"¡Súper bacanos!" Dice con ese español que no termina de domesticar.

Apenas desembarcó en la Heroica, halló un corrillo de lugareños en la calle y se acercó para contarles un chiste. Y desde ese momento sitió que Colombia era el país para él. Que hasta los guatemaltecos resultaban fríos y reservados en comparación con la relación espontánea y cálida de los colombianos.

Siguió su viaje en moto hacia el interior. Se detuvo en los pueblos, hizo una crónica de Valdivia, municipio que le atrajo por ser una muestra típica de Antioquia.

Y con solo tres días que estuvo en Medellín descubrió que era la ciudad del mundo en que quería vivir.

Tardó casi un mes en convencer a su madre de que este país no es el sitio de horror que ella creía y le pintaban los medios de comunicación. Que la economía colombiana está mejor que la de su país en estos tiempos de recesión y, por eso, había más oportunidades para él si se mudaba. Además, le dijo, haría realidad un viejo sueño: fundaría una revista para extranjeros.

Y aquí está el gringo desde hace cuatro meses. Ya sabe decir, además de "súper bacano", "me parece el colmo", "mañé", "parce", "chimba", "sisas", expresiones que le causan gracia.

Y no encontró elemento más simbólico que la arepa para bautizar su revista. "El guaro también, pero no es tan sonoro".

Vive en Laureles, en una casa que comparte con otras seis personas, entre estudiantes de la Universidad Pontificia Bolivariana y dos extranjeros más.

Entre sus metas está conocer cada día algún sitio distinto de la ciudad. Por eso, cuando le pregunté dónde quería que habláramos, dijo que en la Biblioteca de La Ladera. No porque la conociera sino, precisamente, porque no la conocía. Y con ese espíritu pragmático de los de su cultura, me dijo: "así puedo conversar y, al mismo tiempo, conocer un lugar nuevo". Se asombró al saber que allí, en otro tiempo, funcionó una cárcel, de la que algunas columnas quedan para recordarlo. Con la ciudad al fondo, explicó que El Diamante es él, y así le dice a las mujeres. Contó que espera a su madre en junio y que le mostrará los metrocables, la llevará a Guatapé y le hará cambiar la idea de Colombia que ella conserva en su mente desde hace 30 años.

La revista

La Arepa, cuyo primer número aparecerá a fines de abril, es una publicación en inglés. Es guía cultural y de vida nocturna de Medellín.

Trae mapas, instrucciones sobre transporte, sitios agradables: restaurantes y atractivos turísticos. En el N° 1 incluirá una entrevista con una maquilladora de modelos, otra con el grupo musical Don Kristóbal, un reportaje gráfico de pescadores en el Caribe, cómo aparentar ser menos forastero usando el "pues" y el "vos", una crónica de Valdivia y mucho más.

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Newfound Faith In Medellin, Colombia



Bienvenidos a Medellin, Colombia

THE IADB AT 50 Colombians and foreigners are seeing the new face of a city that symbolizes the nation’s progress. How did it happen?

Not long ago, a big white banner was draped from an abandoned building in southern Medellin. In bold black letters its message said: “This building never belonged to Pablo Escobar.” Anyone walking along El Poblado Avenue, one of the city’s main drags, could see it. The point of the building’s owners was to debunk the urban myth that the structure was one of the numerous properties belonging to Escobar, the notorious kingpin who was killed in 1993. With Escobar gone and narco-related violence no longer the city’s only stand-out feature, the banner serves as a subtle declaration of the Medellin renaissance.


This building never belonged to Pablo Escobar

True, the city still faces many challenges, like ongoing violent crime. But over the past five years the capital of Antioquia province has made so many advances that that Medellin now stands as a symbol of urban progress around the world.

Key to these changes has been massive investment in public education. Every month, it seems, city officials inaugurate a new school, library, kindergarten or park. These projects are high-profile examples of how education has become the fundamental strategy in the making of the new Medellin.


The parks offer a great place for residents to enjoy the day

The best examples of this new model are the so-called “quality schools,” 10 centers of learning that sport sophisticated architecture and are helping to cover gaps in educational coverage. In addition, projects like the Citadel of Brotherhood and the Citadel of Technology on El Volador hill will soon give the city more than 15 hectares for education, recreation, sports, pre-schools, daycare centers, senior citizens’ services, and many new spaces for cultural events.

The four library parks built in the most impoverished areas of the city have won several international prizes for architecture. But beyond their impact in barrios like San Javier or La Ladera, the library parks are providing access to quality education for the poorest of the poor.

All of this has changed people’s perceptions of politics and politicians, such as Medellin Mayor Alonso Salazar who attracted a huge number of votes. In the past, the city’s mayor was elected with about 130,000 votes. But more than 270,000 people cast ballots for Salazar. This kind of enthusiastic public backing, which first emerged for Salazar’s predecessor, Sergio Fajardo, demonstrated to the country that a mathematician and a journalist could replace traditional politicians and politics as usual. The only prerequisite, according to Salazar, was to “remove ideology from politics.”


A great view of Medellin from high above the metro cable

It’s no accident, therefore, that Medellin’s development plan has been singled out by the National Planning Department as the best in the country.

Thanks to this new confidence in city politics, Antioquia’s business class is once again showing its civic solidarity with urban projects. “It’s a modern kind of philanthropy,” Salazar says. The fact that prominent companies like Argos, Bancolombia and Nacional de Chocolates, just to name a few, continue operating in the city has brought enormous benefits to Medellin residents, especially in terms of education. For example, high-level executives from each of these companies dedicate some of their office hours to the adopt-a-public-school program which began under the Salazar administration.


Medellin Mayor Alonso Salazar takes a few gringos on a tour

What was once a form of executive resistance against the violence and narco trafficking of the '80s and '90s has emerged today as a vote of confidence in a model of city management.

This newfound faith in the future of Medellin is perhaps the main reason why the city was chosen to host the annual assembly of the Inter-American Development Bank. (Note: it’s also due to the influence of bank president Luis Alberto Moreno).

Warnings that Medellin is a no-go zone no longer apply. In a way, that white banner on the building in El Poblado symbolizes the transformation of an entire city.


Fenando Botero sculptures on display in Parque de San Antonio

Also emblematic of the changes are the Fernanado Botero bird sculptures now on display in the central plaza. In 1995, one of them was partially destroyed by a bomb that killed 23 people and injured 100. The explosion also perforated the wings of the bird sculpture and left a gaping hole in its breast. Five years later, in an act of solidarity with the new Medellin, Botero gifted the city with another bird sculpture that was positioned alongside his damaged work of art in San Antonio Park. He said it was the best way to show that the days of fear and uncertainty in Medellin had given way to a time of defiance and dignity.

Article published Semana International

To learn more about the Transformation of Medellin, Colombia

Monday, March 30, 2009

Latin Rhythms And Jazz: Andrea Tierra



The Music of Andrea Tierra

Andrea Tierra is a 27 year old singer-songwriter from Medellin, Colombia. She has been performing traditional Colombian music since the age of twelve. Andrea is the result of innovative mix of popular Latin-American rhythms with jazz, flamenco and the essence of her own poems which she brings to life on all her performances.

Her songs are progressive with a shade of irony and are often politicized against world injustice. Her contralto voice touches the hearts of the audiences with her interpretations of contemporary love songs as well as new generation songs. Andrea transcends the age gap with the intensity that only a musical leader can do.

Andrea’s talent is a family tradition that has been growing within her since her childhood. At an early age she was part of her father’s theater company as a singer and actress traveling throughout United States with great success.

The beautiful thing about jazz is that it can be fused with many different musical styles creating a whole new jazz form. As most people know jazz has a history of being fused with Latin music from Afro-Cuban to Tango.

Colombian vocalist and poet Andrea Tierra pushes the jazz musical fusion to another level by adding her Spanish poetry to the mix.


Latin-American Rythmn and Jazz artist Andrea Tierra

Tierra expresses her heart and soul both lyrically and melodically in her CD “Melodía Verde” which means “Green Melody.” The CD takes you on a musical trip through Latin America but focuses on the musical traditions of Colombia.

“The idea behind the album was to express my feelings musically and to try to make a change in the world and if possible in some ones’ heart,” says Tierra.

When asked why she chose the name “Melodía Verde” for her first CD, she said it is because of her concerned on global warming and the damage we are doing to our planet. Simply put she feels if nothing is done to correct this we are standing on a ticking time bomb.

For more information visit www.andreatierra.com



Andrea Tierra - "Melodía Verde"



Andrea Tierra - "Canto"

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Former US President Bill Clinton Arrives In Medellín For IDB Assembly


Bill Clinton Arrives in Rionegro Army Base

Former U.S. President Bill Clinton arrives in Medellin, Colombia for the annual meeting of the Inter-American Development Bank Assembly.

President Clinton and IDB President Luis Alberto Moreno will lead a public dialogue on the global economic crisis and development on Saturday, March 28, at 6:00 p.m., at Plaza Mayor.

Medellín’s Plaza Mayor Convention Center and Exhibition Hall
Medellín’s four-year-old Plaza Mayor is Colombia’s most modern convention and conference complex, situated in the city’s administrative and cultural epicenter and readily accessible from the main hotel and tourist hubs.

In the wake of the boom sparked by this facility’s construction, Medellín is emerging as a new business event destination. The city now can play host to high-profile gatherings like the recent Thirty-eighth General Assembly of the Organization of American States.


Plaza Mayor Convention Center

Framed by beautiful Medellín cityscapes, the Plaza Mayor Convention Center offers all the requisite services and amenities for the Fiftieth Meeting of the Board of Governors of the Inter-American Development Bank and Twenty-fourth Annual Meeting of the Board of Governors of the Inter-American Investment Corporation.



Medellin Mayor, Alfonso Salazaar offers former US President Bill Clinton a violin created by Edgar Arboleda hand made in Medellin at Empresa Cultural para la Fabricación de Instrumentos Musicalesas.


Former US President Bill Clinton and Medellín Mayor Alfonso Salazaar

As founder of the William J. Clinton Foundation, the former president is working on a wide range of global issues that call for urgent action, creative solutions and measurable results. In addition to the IDB Annual Meeting, President Clinton will visit projects of the Clinton Giustra Sustainable Growth Initiative.

The IDB, the leading source of long-term financing for economic and social development for Latin America and the Caribbean, is marking the 50th anniversary of its establishment this year.

Discover The Transformation of Medellín, Colombia

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Tourism In Medellín, Colombia



According to government figures, about 1 million international tourists visit Colombia every year. Officials are expected to see that double in the coming years as word gets out from travelers returning home, spreading the word about Colombia's picturesque landscapes, tropical rainforest, snow-capped Andean peaks towering over countless valleys throughout Colombia. In addition, its beautiful Caribbean and Pacific coasts, with plenty of warm beaches are other great destinations. A traveler's dream come true.

The city of Medellín and the Antioquia region are the second most important economic and industrial hubs in the country and the epicenter of Colombian entrepreneurship.

Medellín is synonymous with opportunity, a stellar example of social urbanism that makes every resident part of the life of the city and turns the city itself into an economic, education, tourist, cultural, sports, and research hub.



Today one of Colombia’s —and indeed Latin America’s— safest cities, Medellín has taken its place again in the world and the global community.

Having captivated world attention, Medellín is being touted as a not-to-be-missed destination for those who seek to understand the heart of Colombia. Foreign visitor arrivals have soared in the past three years, as has the number of national and international events. In 2008 the city played host to the successful Thirty-eighth General Assembly of the OAS; in 2009 it is preparing to welcome the Governors of the IDB and others who will gather for the IDB’s Annual Meeting, which this year coincides with the fiftieth anniversary of the formal establishment of this organization, which has been a strategic partner and promoter of major development projects in Medellín.



Today Colombia and its favorite city, Medellín, are engaged in a spectacular economic and social transformation. Decorated by many beautiful flowers, this supremely favored land awaits your visit soon.

Department: Antioquia
Departmental population: 5´911.851
Department size: 63,612 sq. km
Geography: Nestled in the Andes Mountains, traversed north-south by the West and Central cordilleras
Population of Medellín: 2.223.660
Temperature range: 18ºC to 28ºC / 64ºF to 82.4ºF
CGeographic setting of the city: In a valley ringed by mountains
City size: 382 sq. km

To learn more about Tourism in Medellin, Colombia: click here