INDEX 01
Introduction
4
09
Innovative Careers
94
02
The Building of Citizenship
6
10
Mega Events
98
03
The Generation of Wealth and Social Capital
8
• Inauguration
• Innovamoda
• Strategic Design Pavilion
• Public Art
• The National Lottery
• Pedaling Toward
• Culinary Battle
• Meditation for Peace
• Ceasar Guiness
• Mosaico Tijuana
• Fighting Breast Cancer
• The Agora
• Business Encounter
04
Volunteers
14
05
General Overview
21
06
From Tijuana to the World and from the World to Tijuana
22
• Speakers
• Industry
• Creativity
• Humanism
• Satellite Launch
12
A National Role Model
126
13
Communicating
128
08
Training, Education and Leadership
together
82
92
• Mexico City
• Media • Web and Networks
• Tijuana • San Diego
Tijuana Innovadora Collective
140
• Art in Industry
• Donation of Public Art • Project Managers
• Tijuanizando Mexico
• Recycling
• Staff/Volunteers
• Casa de Ideas
• Time Capsule
• Credits/Memoir 2012
(House of Ideas)
2
• Press Conferences
• Tijuana Innovadora
14
and Sponsors
• Closing Ceremony
124
• I’m a Tijuana local,
• Pavilion Exhibitors • Dinners
• The Binational Region
A Few Facts and Figures
• SD/TJ Stronger
Sponsors. Socially Responsible Investment
(Let’s dance Tijuana)
• Postal Stamp
11
who was born in...
07
(Tijuana Mosaic) • Pa’ Bailar Tijuana
Greatness • Cultural Program
3
INTRODUCTION T
ijuana went through a difficult period
vast majority used throughout the world, was
between the years 2007 and 2010, as it dealt
designed and manufactured in Tijuana.
image was thoroughly tarnished by the deluge
Following his recovery, he shared this fact while
of reports alluding to the dangers it harbored.
dining with friends, along with the pride he felt,
Its positive attributes, strengths, and the
knowing that many people throughout the world
opportunities it had to offer were little known,
carry with them “in their heart” a little piece
even to the very citizens of Tijuana.
of Tijuana. Subsequently, the conversation of
with a wave of crime and violence. Tijuana’s
those present (renowned architect and sculptor,
4
In the midst of this depressing situation,
Jack Winer; Senior Vice President of Operations
local business leader and philanthropist,
at Plantronics, Alejandro Bustamante; and
José Galicot, had the misfortune of requiring
accomplished marketer, Tomas Perrin) turned
an emergency heart-valve transplant. While
to an exchange of information regarding still
discussing the details of his pending surgery,
more products that were locally designed,
he discovered incredibly that the valve that
manufactured, assembled in Tijuana and then
would be inserted in his heart, as are the
exported throughout the world.
At that moment, Mr. Galicot made a decision: In the face of the difficult times Tijuana was experiencing, these positive, extremely encouraging achievements that were placing our city at the international forefront in numerous areas of science, the arts, education and technology must be made known to the nation and the world.
Show others that at the heart of our city beats the innovative, hard-working energy of its citizens!
5
THE BUILDING OF CITIZENSHIP What makes Tijuana Innovadora different from any other seminar, conference, meeting, festival or exhibition? Tijuana Innovadora was first conceived as a
regional and national media, professionals
sort of intervention by the business sector,
from wide-ranging disciplines, civil society
originally developed as a novel, short-term
organizations, as well as hundreds of
event, which would bring together an active
students and residents from Tijuana and its
and engaged community.
surrounding areas, all whose sole objective was the wellbeing of Tijuana.
Under the guiding principle that “The only protagonist is Tijuana,” people who called Tijuana home, whether by birth or by circumstance, came together –as a
Together, we restored our collective dignity as a city, promoting a sense of belonging and our own development as citizens.
counterbalance to the media’s message of Tijuana’s devastation and helplessness- and
During this course of events, Tijuana Innova-
effectively demonstrated the economic,
dora developed into an authentic grassroots
creative and innovative reality of the city.
movement fed by fundamental changes in the community spirit of hundreds of volunteers
6
The first event brought together a diverse mix
and active participants, producing a dynamic
of participants from the private sector, the
redefinition of goals and focus, sensitive to the
Federal, State and Municipal governments,
conditions of the region and its residents.
We motivated people from far beyond our borders to look into exactly what was taking place in Tijuana. Many different groups, organizations and projects began to spring up and were supported within this social context, looking to construct and rebuild social relations, generate economic development, and encourage and disseminate values, while promoting a regional sense of calling. Other supported projects focused on collaborative projects based on principles of mutual support and the thoughtful appropriation of public areas. Tijuana Innovadora also continued its search for innovative, participant-promoted projects in the areas of science industry, art and culture; some of these with governmental participation. In 2012, in this our second Tijuana Innovadora event, we sought to complement and enrich the original concept. The volunteer coordinators presented their proposals and Tijuana Innovadora set out three objectives: to strengthen binational relations; to stimulate the creation of new and innovative vocations; and to continue sharing the experience and methodology acquired collectively by Tijuana Innovadora. This was all of this had to be done under the one working principle: Advancing Tijuana toward greatness. 7
GENERATION OF WEALTH AND SOCIAL CAPITAL Why do we say that Tijuana Innovadora ceased to be just an event, as has become a movement?
8
Comité Binacional (Binational Committee),
the community-at-large
Innovación y Juventud (Innovation and Youth)
have met every Wednesday
– the main purpose of which was to maintain
from 8:00 to 9:00 in the morning to
the dynamics of and breathe new life into
share what’s going on in our individual
these new social, economic, educational,
areas of activity, as well as the achievements
environmental and cultural activities and
of different organizations, collective
spaces our citizens were experiencing.
projects, institutions and individuals that pursue common goals to those of Tijuana
This ongoing process of empowerment
Innovadora: To promote a feeling of belonging,
uring the intermediate period between
D
through cooperative, joint and volunteer efforts
generate economic growth, bring about
the first (October 2010) and second
encouraged a series of proactive behaviors
positive and sustainable changes in the
(October 2012) Tijuana Innovadora events, the
and attitudes. Under the precept “Yes we can!”
environment, facilitate access to knowledge,
organization was working on different issues
Tijuana’s citizens looked to generate new
skills and abilities, and to strengthen
through a number of committees-
economic and social development. For over
our capacities to live in friendly,
De Voluntarios a Lideres (From Volunteers to
two years, with our founder Jose Galicot as
respectful, solidarity with others.
Leaders), Tijuana Verde (A Greener Tijuana),
host, Tijuana Innovadora and members of
These are the fruits of these efforts.
9
THE AGORA
10
11
Discipline is the soul of an army. It makes small numbers formidable; procures success to the weak, and esteem to all. - George Washington.
12
The Tijuana Innovadora organization would like to collectively invite all those interested to find out what’s happening within our various committees and be brought up-to-date on our project schedule, as well as to exchange information relating to the activities and achievements of innovators from the Tijuana/San Diego region. We meet every Wednesday from 8:00 - 9:00 am at National Chamber of Commerce (CANACO) building in the Tijuana’s Zona Río area and also have periodic meetings in the U.S. The doors to the Agora, as we affectionately refer to it, are always open to anyone who is curious or interested in joining the Tijuana Innovadora Movement, as long as they join us in a rousing “Yes we can!”
13
VOLUNTEERS
14
15
T
he greatest example of Tijuana Innovadora achievements, and what we are
most proud of, has been the volunteer work of businessmen and women, professionals, academics and students; hundreds of men and women from all walks of economic, social, educational and cultural life, who willingly and willfully responded to the crisis situation our city was going through, consequently renewing community spirit within the region and enriching the meaning of the term “social responsibility� in the process.
16
What is the best example of TI and what we pride ourselves on? It is precisely these efforts that have sustained the strength and progress of the Tijuana Innovadora movement. The crisis has passed; however, the challenges facing our city are many. It is essential that we, as members of our community, be actively involved in organized efforts that transcend our day-to-day responsibilities, convinced that our grain of salt is beneficial and indeed vital, a reflection of our humanitarian spirit; this notwithstanding the fact that one invariably receives more than he or she gives, as this is truly stimulating work, where one makes many new friends and has a wonderful time in the process.
17
18
Leyva fotografĂa 19
20 Computer Engineering Chemical Engineering
Digital Graphic Design Engineering
GENDER
Male
Female
Industrial Chemistry
Education for preschool instruction
Professional Technical degree in Accounting
Nutrition
Medicine
Electronic Cybernetics Engineering
Logistical Engineering
Administrative management
Gastronomy
Philosophy
Sports
International Commerce
Arts & Communication – Telemedia
Psychopedagogy
Optometry
Nanotechnology
Industrial Maintenance
Hispanic Literature and Language Arts / Literature
Find the Differences Industrial electromechanics
Electro mechanics
instruction
Education for Primary and middle-school
Software programmer
Pedagogy /Education
Accounting
Commerce and Foreign Trade
Administration and political sciences
Customs processing
Computer Systems
Mechatronics Engineering
Biochemistry
Information technology
Electronics
Public Administration
Tourism and Marketing
Design
International Business
Mechanical Engineering
Chemical Sciences and Engineering
Information Technology
Architecture
Engineering
International relations
Psychology
Humanities
Industrial Engineering
Economics and International relations
Public administration and accounting
Marketing
Languages
equivalent
Education for High School instruction or
Information Systems
Economics
General requirements, undefined majors
Business Administration and related fields
Law
Communications
UNIDEP
UNEA
Instituto México
Instituto Cuauhtémoc
Inst. Tecn de Monterrey
Colegio Anglo Español
COBACH
CESUN
UTT
UNID
UDC
Normal Fronteriza de Tijuana
CIPCOM
CETIS
Southwestern College
CBTIS
CONALEP
No estudia
Xochicalco
Preparatoria Federal Lázaro Cárdenas
CECYTE
IBERO
CETYS
CUT
ITT
UABC
VOLUNTEERS A FEW FIGURES... SCHOOLS
MAJOR FIELDS OF STUDY
GENERAL OVERVIEW Creativity • Tijuana Verde • Education • Cinematography • Medical Excellence • Civic Participation • Mass media • Strategic Design • Culinary Arts
Industry • Electronics • Automotive • Energy • Organizational Excellence • Medical Industry • Aerospace • Science and Technology
Humanism • Leaders and Entrepreneurs • Humanitarianism • Economics • Digital City • Philanthropy • Innovative Greatness • Metropolitan Development Plan
21
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23
SPEAKERS 24
Paola Antonelli
Steve Berlin Johnson
Richard A. Boucher
Maurizio Corbi
Phillipe P. Cousteau
Wolfgang Flur
Richard Florida
Arturo Elías Ayub
Sebastian
Denise Dresser
Katherine Grigsby
Charlie Iturriaga
Eduardo Verástegui
Carlos Kasuga
Natalie Jeremijenko
Martin Krammer
Anand Mahindra
Blake Mycoskie
Richard Stallman
Ada Yonath
Steve Wozniak
Alejandro Ramírez
Enrique Norten
Silvia Torres-Peimbert
Claudio X. González
Carlo Ratti
Richard Yelland
Andrés Madrigal
25
26
Carlos Alazraky
Esra’a Al-Shafei
Raul Alcalá
Chris Anderson
Ricardo Arnaiz
Pedro Aspe
Mónica Aspe
Carolina Aubanel
Patricia Aubanel
Alan Bersin
Martin Borchardt
Lourdes Botello
Salvador Camarena
Iván Carrillo
Jorge Carrillo
Edoardo Chavarín
Salomón Chertorivski
Mily Cohen
Gabriela Enrigue
Maricarmen Flores
Jorge Garralda
Rick Goings
Federico Graef
Tonatiuh Guillén
Doug Jones
Robert Kaplan
Scott Kirsner
Pablo Latapí
Jeff Light
Amy Lyman
Viviana Martínez Moreno
Adela Navarro
Carlos Puig
Sarah Reinertsen
Liebano Saénz
Ezra Shabot
Yuriria Sierra
Armando Talamantes
Gabriela Warketin
Gianfranco Zaccai
Sharon Zaga
Sam Zien
Michel Rojkind
Carlos Sánchez
Ximena Valero
Enrique Villa Rivera
David Abeles
Maria Eugenia Acevedo
Luis Aguirre Lang
Francisco Javier Allard
Horacio Almanza
Miguel Ángel Alonso
Mario Anguiano
Rodrigo Arboleda
Rodolfo Argote
Claudio Arriola
Jorge Arroyo
Aaron D. Bare
Claudio Bartolini
Mark Baydarian
Felipe Bayón
Guillermo Bernal
Enrique Betancourt
Moritz Bilagher
Luis Ricardo Bonilla
Miguel Ángel Cadena
Claudia Calvin
Orlando Camacho
Jorge Camarillo
Jose R. Castillo
Jose Castillo
Derrik Chinn
Jae Chul Nam
David Cuartielles
Felipe Cuamea
Claudio Cossío
Joe da Rosa
David del Ser
Dale Dougherty
Hernando Durán
Michael Chu
José Luis Cordeiro
Margarita Díaz Lopez
Flavio Díaz Mirón
German Escorcia
Francisco Fernández Lagos
Raúl García
Rodolfo Gerschman
Jorge Ferráez
Ignacio Fimbres
Javier Firpo
Eric Frost
Marco Gallardo
Laura Gómez
Erika Gómez
Javier González
José Carlos González-Méndez
Graciela Guerra Rivas
27
Miguel Ángel Guerrero
José Miguel Guerrero Guerrero
Manuel Guevara
Martin Gutiérrez Lacayo
Carlos Guzmán Bofill
Rodolfo Ham-Zhu
Mark Hatch
Matt Hebert
H. Hendler
Áaron Hernández Vázquez
Juan Manuel Hernández Niebla
Luis Herrera-Lasso Mijares
H. Herrera
Kurt Honold
Gibrán Horemheb
Pascual Ibánez
Lourdes Ibáñez Aldana
Humberto Jaramillo
Richard Kay
Roberto Kobeh González
Kelly Koskella
Juan Pablo Kuri
Roland Kwemain
Michael P. Lasen
Armando León
Alexei Licea Navarro
David Livingstone Smith
Gloria López
Juan Antonio López Corvala
Jorge López Pérez
Yolanda Loria
Christina Anne Luhn
Nancy A. Marlin
Ana Laura Martínez
David Mayagoitia
Alejandro Maza
Kevin McGovern
Gastón Melo
Francisco Javier Mendieta
Maria Elena Miranda Pascual
Bruce Moore
Alejandro Mungaray Lagarda
Jordi Muñoz
Virgilio Muñoz
Alberto Núñez
Flavio Olivieri
Jorge Olmos Soto
Hernando Ortega
Ariel Ortiz Lagarde
Juan José Parceró Valdéz
Armando Pedrero
Rafael Peréz Hernández
28
Jesús Pérez
Eric Pilaud
Ismael Plascencia
Javier Plascencia
Alejandro Poiré
Halla Razak
Felix Recillas
Alfredo Renán González
Andrés Reyes Botello
Pablo Reyes Pruneda
Rivelino
Daniel Rubio
René y Uriel Salgado Velazco
Miguel Salinas Yáñez
Rodrigo Sánchez Ríos
Manuel Sandoval Ríos
Edgar San Juan
Martín San Román
Juan Sarracino Ruiz
Jason Short
Bob Slapin
Kit M. Song
Héctor Tajonar
Carlos Tamés Arjona
Jair Téllez Montaño
Ofelia Toledo Bacha Pineda
Marcela Valladolid
Martín G. Vázquez
Hugo Villa Smythe
George Whitesides
Cole Wilbur
Doretta Winkelman
Chris Yanov
Jorge Zavala
Carlos Zavala Ruiz
Arturo Zizumbo López
Albert Zlotnik
Waldo
29
30
A Greener Tijuana Education Cinematography
Medical Excellence Civic Participation
Media
Strategic Design
Culinary Arts
CREATIVITY 31
A GREENER TIJUANA The CESPT (State Public Services Commission of Tijuana) has taken measures to recycle water and to create a culture of conservation, such as the “Arturo Herrera” water plant, the InnovaCespt theme park, the plant at La Morita that includes an experimental vineyard, the infiltration project at Valle de las Palmas, and studies on systematization and lowest ecological cost, among others. - Hernando Durán, CESPT.
Whoever solves the water problem wins two Noble
Baja California is the
Prizes; one for science and the other for peace.
aquarium of the world.
- Kevin McGovern, McGovern Capital LLC, quoting Kennedy.
- Phillipe Cousteau quoting his grandfather Jacques Cousteau.
...the production of the marine algae Aonori has been a great success because it’s comprised of 25% protein, 24% soluble fiber, and 27% minerals...at our farm in San Quintin, Baja California, the production cost is lower, because it requires sea water, and we have it just a couple of kilometers away. - Armando León, Aonori Aquafarms.
Urban Water Management: Examples and Challenges
Innovation in Solving the World’s Water Pollution Problems
Iván Carrillo
Kevin McGovern
Chief Editor, Revista Quo
Hernando Durán
Director General, CESPT
Bruce Moore
Specialist in water issues
Halla Razak
Director of Colorado River programs
32
Recovery of the Tijuana River: Reconnecting the Urban with the Natural. Premier of the Video “The Tijuana River Connects”
President, The Water Initiative
Martín Gutiérrez Lacayo Director, PRONATURA
Hernando Durán CESPT
Virgilio Muñoz Director, CECUT
As a result of the Tijuana River Restoration project, we expect to regain trees, such as willows, aspen, and oaks, as well as over 100 species of flora and birds that have not been seen along the Tijuana River for quite a while and will now return to this site. - Gutiérrez Lacayo, Pronatura.
…1.2 billion people in the world do not have access to water... due to the lack of access to this precious resource, seven thousand children die each day...half of the hospital beds in the world are occupied by cases related to the lack of water. - Kevin McGovern, McGovern Capital LLC.
We have published several texts in collaboration with the Tijuana-San Diego region,...Marine Oasis is our representative film. - Doretta Winkelman, SDNHM.
What changes the planet is conscience, and what changes conscience is education. - Margarita Díaz, Proyecto Fronterizo de Educación Ambiental A.C.
We have been relying on one single source of water, and that is the big problem. - Halla Razak, SDCWA.
We are all connected to the Colorado River. - Bruce Moore, SNWA.
Environmental Education without Borders
Aonori Aquafarms, A Sustainable Business on the Brink of Conquering Global Markets
Margarita Díaz López
Director, Proyecto Fronterizo de Educación Ambiental
Carlos de la Parra
Forging a Sustainable World in the 21st Century Philippe Cousteau
Armando A. León
President and Director, Aonori Aquafarms
Environmentalist, Explorer, Social Entrepreneur, and Defender of the Environment
Environmental specialist, COLEF
Doretta Winkelman
Director of Binational Education, San Diego Museum of Natural History
Moderators: Carlos de la Parra. Hernando Durán. Gastón Luken. Patricia Saharagui Ruiz.
33
EDUCATION Good grades do not guarantee a good job. Critical thinking and collaboration is what we need our youth to learn. - Javier Firpo, Khan Academy.
Latin America is generating, participating and contributing 3.5% of the world’s knowledge, the United States contributes 25%, and China collaborates with 17%. These numbers are proportional to the development of those regions and show the close correlation between knowledge and the evolution of societies. - Enrique Villa, Conacyt.
Make all programs are free, so that all users are free...Free software is a matter of Human Rights. - Richard Stallman, Free Software Foundation
Memory is part of our existence and the societies of knowledge find themselves with the challenge of recovering it, notwithstanding the incessant production of digital documents. - Katherine Grigsby, UNESCO.
Education and Innovation
All the Knowledge, All the People
Germán Escorcia Saldarriaga
Felipe Cuamea Velázquez
Nancy A. Marlin
Katherine Grigsby
Ezra Shabot
Tonatiuh Guillén López
Enrique Villa
President, International Academy of Science and Technology - AiTyC
Moritz Bilagher
UNESCO Regional Office for Latin America and the Caribbean
Javier Firpo
Director of Education for Latin America, INTEL
Richard Yelland
Division Chief, Directorate for Education and Skills, OECD
34
Rector, Universidad Autónoma de Baja California, 2011-2015 Director and representative, UNESCO México President, COLEF
Provost, San Diego State University Journalist, MVS Radio Director, CONACyT
The challenge of institutions such as ours...is to continue generating quality knowledge and making it available to everyone. The access to it should be universal. - Tonatiuh Guillén, COLEF.
...during the course of three decades of educational investment, it has not been possible to bring the knowledge of students up to the speed at which it is being generated...the role of the teacher is fundamental. - Nancy A. Marlín, SDSU.
Children are in school, but they are not learning. This is attrition! - Moritz Bilagher, UNESCO.
...there is a paradox because those who are the highest educated, are those with the highest unemployment. - Dinorah Miller.
...high performing teachers, produce high performing students...school leadership, the classroom atmosphere, classroom strategy, and parents are four areas fundamental to quality. - Richard Yelland, OCDE.
The educational system has focused on developing the cognitive aspect of students. However, the moral, artistic, civic, and physical aspects have been set aside and are being abandoned by teachers; thus it is not complying with the provisions referenced in Article 3 of the Constitution. - Gilberto Guevara, CIEYAPA, AC.
...3.5% of knowledge worldwide is contributed by the countries that make up Latin America, which places them at a distinct disadvantage, seeing that as of 2020, knowledge will be renewed every 27 days, as opposed
The priority of national education must be the education of the poor.
to today, when it is renewed every five years.
- Roger Díaz de Cossío, UNAM.
- Felipe Cuamea Velázquez, UABC.
Educate: A Verb in All of its Tenses
Free Software and Your Freedom
Roger Díaz de Cossío
Richard Stallman
Systems Engineering Coordinator, Engineering Institute, UNAM
President, Free Software Foundation
Gilberto Guevara
Specialist in Education
Gastón Melo
President, Espacio de Vinculación A.C.
Dinorah Miller
Academic and Researcher
Moderator: Márgara de León.
35
CINEMATOGRAPHY Mexico is becoming an economy based on efficient production...nevertheless, we register just one patent for every one million people, and this is contingent on the quality of education. - Alejandro Ramírez, Cinépolis.
Each time the movie studios have decided to set aside their fears and resistance to innovation, the film industry has grown. - Scott Kirsner, researcher.
...there is a very powerful weapon to further creativity, and it is the Internet...we must search for new things and not cease to learn. - Erika Gomez, Twitter.
There is very strong interest in making films right here in Baja California, and everything necessary to make it happen. - Maria Estela Fernandez, costume designer.
...I came to Tijuana to write the movie ‘Norteado’...the city embraced me, and I was able to present an image of Tijuana to the world...now, the people of Tijuana identify quite a bit with the movie. - Edgar San Juan, movie maker. Mexico has personnel crossing the border to generate and train production staff...I am not worried about investing money in someone that is going to remain with us for a long period of time. - Kelly Koskella, Hollywood Rentals.
Technology in Cinema; a Story of Mistrust
Creativity and the Cinematographic Art of Baja California
Scott Kirsner
René Castillo
Writer, journalist and movie critic
Film and television promoter
María Estela Fernández Costume Designer
Innovation and the Future of the Movie Audience Experience
Erika Gómez
Graphic Designer
Marco Niro
Art Director and Production Designer
Alejandro Ramírez Magaña President, Cinépolis
Josué Palos
Graphic Designer
Edgar San Juan
36
Producer and Director
One must watch cinema that elevates human dignity. - Eduardo Verástegui, Metanoia Films.
...the simpler the mechanism for receiving incentives, the more likely they’ll be to return to the country with a new production project. - Doug Jones.
...we have to educate more film industry professionals in Baja California. - Hugo Villa, IMCINE.
This state is expecting important investment projects in cinema and a year-long television series in which 150
million
dollars
will be invested and which will generate an
abundant
eco-
nomic spillover. - Kurt Honold, Baja Estudios.
...we must provide incentives for producers to come to Baja California, not only producers from the United States, but also from the interior of Mexico. - José Larroque, Baker & McKenzie.
México: competitiveness and foreign productions
“Little Boy” – Made in Baja California Eduardo Verástegui
Kurt Honold
Actor and Producer
Baja Estudios
Doug Jones Film Producer
Kelly Koskella
President Hollywood Rentals
José Larroque
Attorney, Partner at Baker & McKenzie
Hugo Villa Smythe
Mexican Institute of Cinematography
Moderators: Carlos Carrillo. René Castillo.
37
MEDICAL EXCELLENCE At the UABC (Autonomous University of Baja California) there are avenues of research projects in the areas of diabetes and hypertension. Drug and HIV problems are being addressed on a bi-national level. Advancements are also being made in the treatment of diabetic ulcers with silver nano-particles.
Genomics, through sciences such as molecular biology, biochemistry or computer science, among many other fields of research, allows us to foresee the behavior of, and ways of treating, diverse illnesses...Baja California is an ideal place for the development of biotechnology.
- Alfredo Renán, UABC.
- Albert Zlotnik, UC Irvine.
...this border is also the home to the ATLS and ACLS courses for medical graduates –or those about to graduate- and physicians, and it’s practiced in the best local hospitals; this results in Tijuana having the best hospitals, with physicians who are board certified and recertified up to four times, and therefore, the quality of the service is the most suitable. - Rigoberto Pallares Aceves, Hospital Ángeles Tijuana.
If we join robotics, the diagnostic capability, bionics, genome medicine, and progenitor cells, and we align them effectively, we are talking about reaching one hundred years of life expectancy within the next ten years. - Salomon Chertorivski, Ministry of Health.
There are only two duly certified hospitals
Diabetic and hypertensive patients, whose situations
in the city.
are not brought under control, affect world health.
- Carlos Zavala Ruiz, Ángeles Health International.
- José Antonio Hurtado, Universidad Xochicalco.
65% of infants that receive medical attention at Shriners Hospitals have no sort of medical insurance...10% are from Mexico...of those children coming from Baja California, 50% are from Tijuana... - Kit M. Song, Shriners Hospitals for Children.
The Training of Health Professionals
The Certification Process for Health and Patient Safety Services
Lourdes Botello
General Editor, Balance magazine
Miguel Ángel Cadena
Chief of the Health Science Center of the UABC, Valle de la Palmas Campus
Alfredo Renán González
Director of the School of Medicine and Psychology, UABC Tijuana
José Antonio Hurtado
Director of the School of Medicine, Centro de Estudios Universitarios Xochicalco
38
Tijuana’s Talents Flor Ma. Guadalupe Ávila Fematt
Pablo Barragán
Director of Research and Teaching, National Institute of Geriatrics
Rigoberto Pallares Aceves
Director, Center for the Training of Minimally Invasive Surgery in Tijuana
TV Azteca and Milenio Internal medicine, Investigative Committee member, Hospital Ángeles Tijuana
Rodrigo Robledo Silva
Head of the Medical Arbitration Committee of Baja California
Carlos Zavala Ruiz
Business Development Director, Angeles Health International
Juan Antonio López Corvalá Juan José Parcero Valdés
Cardiac Surgeon, Head Researcher, Institute of Regenerative Medicine
Sergio René Salgado Peraza
Chief, U.S. President’s Office for the Control of Malaria in Africa
When a life is saved, humanity is saved. - Sergio Rene Salgado Peraza, Office of President Barack Obama.
With stem- cell transplants it is possible to regenerate the damaged areas of the heart and to have them recover 100% of their function. The patients can get back to his/her or normal life and considerably prolong his/her life expectancy. - Juan José Parcero Valdés, Institute of Regenerative Medicine.
...we have 500 students distributed in the areas of medicine, dentistry, psychology and nursing... Valle de las Palmas is a focal point for the development of physicians in Baja California. - Miguel Ángel Cadena, UABC.
We are developing mechanical prosthesis of arms and hands controlled by the brain. This technology is already on the market, but their sales and maintenance could be less costly in Mexico and the United States than those manufactured in Europe and Asia. - Hernando Ortega, UNAM.
There are advancements in genetic reprogramming for therapeutic purposes, which is where the world’s great laboratories are currently placing their bets with regard to innovation, as they seek to develop medicines that correct molecular structural deficiencies of cancer cells or of illnesses caused by genetic mutations. - Félix Recillas Targa, UNAM.
For 22 years I’ve been teaching surgeons throughout the continent the surgical technique known as endoscopy...a surgery that is non-aggressive for our body...for the last few years, I have trained physicians in the U.S in the application of the gastric band...a method that fights obesity. - Juan Antonio López Corvalá, Center for the Training of Minimally Invasive Surgery in Tijuana.
In our country, there are 10 million elderly people, and that number will tend to double. - Flor María Ávila Fematt, National Institute of Geriatrics.
Tijuana occupies the forth spot nationwide in terms of offering the best medical treatment in Mexico, which has resulted in the promotion of medical tourism and the arrival of patients and users predominantly from Southern California. - Rodrigo Robledo, State Government of Baja California
The Medicine of the Future: Moving Toward Greater Life Expectancy
The Influence of Genomics Albert Zlotnik
Salomón Chertorivski
Mexican politician and economist
Gibrán Horemheb Rubio GBV-C/HIV Researcher
Professor of Physiology and Biophysics, UC Irvine
Shriners Hospital for Children: The World’s Greatest Philanthropy
Hernando Ortega
Research Institute in Applied Mathematics and Systems (IIMAS), UNAM
Félix Recillas Targa
Researcher in Molecular Genetics
Kit M. Song
Medical Director, Shriners Hospitals for Children
Moderator: Javier López.
39
CIVIC PARTICIPATION
...we want to support those who have no voice, and I devote myself to provide a voice or representation for those who feel they have no representation, to shake up some consciences and to sow some seeds of everlasting indignation... - Denise Dresser, ITAM.
...the outlook began to change once three elements fell into place: the political commitment at all three levels of government; the breakdown of established patterns of action, by involving the Army in surveillance; and above all, civic participation... - Carolina Aubanel, Síntesis TV.
Civic Participation in Mexico
Democracy and the Media
Carolina Aubanel
Adrián Michel
Orlando Camacho
Alberto Nuñez Esteva
Rafael Liceága Campos
Gabriela Posada
Director, Síntesis TV
Director, Fundación México SOS Founder, Tijuana Opina
Congressman for the Federal District
Denise Dresser
Political scientist, writer and professor
President, Sociedad en Movimiento Reacciona Tijuana, and Director, FGK Publicidad
Moderators: Rafael Liceaga. Patricia San Román.
40
In 2009, new phrases, such as ‘In spite of everything, Tijuana takes action,’ emerged and were painted on walls as examples of social activism that involved artists, publicists, and ecologists, and which have even been replicated in cities such as Medellin. - Gabriela Posada, Reacciona Tijuana.
Citizen Committees, where neighbors take part in making decisions regarding the implementation of their delegation’s budgets, are of great value. - Adrián Michel, Congressman.
...I have two great examples of Tijuana: The Penal Reform, where, believe me, nowhere else is this being better implemented, and the community organization demonstrated by the residents of Tijuana in dealing with problems head on. - Orlando Camacho, S.O.S. México.
...what is needed is to promote education and civic participation, as the citizens come first, set above the government and its politicians.”demonstrated by the residents of Tijuana in dealing with problems head on. - Alberto Núñez Esteva, Sociedad en Movimiento.
Tijuana Innovadora, the celebration of dignity. - Orlando Camacho, S.O.S. México.
41
MEDIA …The sources used by foreign media are police reports, press bulletins and the coverage provided by the Mexican media. One possibility could be that local media further develop their information with other threads about life in Tijuana. - Jeff Light, San Diego Union Tribune.
In Mexico, the media have two challenges, one of form and the other, substance: Of form, as we must learn from investigative journalism and reclaim the different journalistic genres; of substance, as this implies maintaining a distance from the government and closeness to the public; a returning to the principles of journalism. - Adela Navarro, ZETA.
In order to carry out altruistic work, one must first abandon their vanity and jealousy, and then begin to do something in earnest. I do it on television, because it is where I began in journalism, and this is my tool. - Jorge Garralda, TV Azteca.
...one must not confuse the “what” with the “how”...we can all be witnesses to a story...that does not make us all journalists or reporters... - Salvador Camarena, journalist.
The Foreign View of Mexico, from the Media’s Point of View Martín Borchardt
Media host and producer
Pedro Calderón
Social Responsibility in the Media
Interview: “Pablo vs. Pablo”
Jorge Garralda
Pablo Barragán
How the Social Networks Co-exist
Pablo Latapi
Jorge Camarillo Govea
New Challenges in the Handling of Information
Television journalist
TV host, Univisión, San Diego
Jeff Light
Editor, San Diego Union-Tribune
Business Thinking
Laura Gómez Twitter
Manuel Taméz
Head of Public Policy and Government Affairs for Mexico, Central America and the Caribbean, Google Inc.
42
Journalist, TV Azteca and Milenio Journalist, TV Azteca
Adela Navarro Co-director, Zeta
Society has begun embracing using another way to access information, and the media have changed along with the public’s access to social networks; they have been able to handle this transformation, and we are consuming information like never before, although I don’t know how willing we are to pay for it. - Gabriela Warketin, communications expert.
...unlike in the past, we will, now, actually be seeing real competition, which will get rid of the media that are lacking in content, allowing only those that provide content to survive. - Carlos Puig, Milenio.
Tijuana is no longer the country’s most danger-
...unfortunately,
ous border city. It has managed to turn things
all these
(notions)
are
nothing new. They have are ideas that have
around and become a city of investment and
been carried over from past decades.
infrastructure; a city that calls us together.
- Pedro Calderón, Univisión.
- Yuriria Sierra, Imagen.
Tijuana is like a woman who knows she’s not pretty, but knows she’s not ugly either. Still, she knows she is charming, she’s engaging, and she’s passionate. - Pablo Latapí. TV Azteca.
SOCIAL NETWORKS Google+ is not referred to as
Facebook is a platform for
Fifty-eight
percent
a social network; it is a tool
keeping up with the ac-
users
for socializing and for shar-
tivities of the people we
on through their mobile
ing your work product, and
know, while Twitter is an
devices, and in our country,
with all of the services that
open platform.
38% of the population use
this search engine offers. - Manuel Taméz, Google Inc.
of sign
this Social Network. - Laura Gómez, Twitter.
- Jorge Camarillo Govea.
Innovation in Social Networks and Communities Salvador Camarena Journalist
Carlos Puig Journalist
Yuriria Sierra
Journalist, Grupo Imagen
Gabriela Warketin
Communications expert
Moderators: Pablo Barragán, Alejandra Santos
43
STRATEGIC DESIGN ...to create is not just a question of sensitivity, but rather one of understanding that which moves us to do what we’re doing, that “something” that motivates us…the creation must also generate an air of respect with regard to that which already exits... - Michel Rojkind, Rojkind Arquitectos.
...a in order to design an automobile, one must not only be skilled in drawing, but also be knowledgeable in the fields of aerodynamics, ergonomics, mechanics, assembly and disassembly…it can take up to six years for an automobile to go from first sketch to market introduction.… - Carlos Sánchez, Italdesign-Giugiaro.
...the lack of choices was what led me to come up with the idea of “transformable fashion.” - Ximena Valero, designer.
There is a great deal of environmental pollution…and we think plastic waste is to blame; one solution would be recycling polymers for the creation of furniture, as well as recycling agroindustrial waste, such as sugarcane bagasse, which can also be reused for this purpose, as it contains cellulose, a material ideally suited for this. - Arturo Zizumbo López, Instituto Tecnológico de Tijuana (ITT).
Urban Design Trends of the XXI Century
Successful Tijuana Designers
The importance of Design in Economic Development
Mary Carmen Flores Alejandro Hernández
Journalist
Michel Rojkind
Automobile designer
Architecture critic and curator CEO, Rojkind Arquitectos
Carlos Sánchez Ximena Valero Fashion designer
44
Gianfranco Zaccai Industrial designer
The selection of furniture depends on practical and esthetic factors, where one must consider its functionality, based on size, shape, dimensions of spaces and distribution constraints. - Yolanda Loria, Muebles Dico.
...Baja California’s furniture tradition began during the sixties, reaching its highpoint in the nineties, when this type of craftsmanship was in high demand. - Armando Pedrero.
Passion gave me the strength to do whatever was necessary.
- Rivelino.
...my work stands out for the mathematic precision of its design, which goes beyond geometry…I’ve implemented this style in all that I do: fashion design, industrial design, transformable miniature figures, architecture, and of course, in my sculptures... - Sebastián.
Art is the soul of Mexico. - Héctor Tajonar.
Everybody wants to form a part of the community, but also, that their traditions are preserved and that their local culture is respected, for which reason it is recommended to combine the global with the local. - Gianfranco Zaccai, Design Continuum.
Lectures by Sculptors
Furniture and Household Equipment Design
Rivelino
Alma Bejarano
María Elena Miranda Pascual
Sebastián
Matt Hebert
Armando Pedrero
Héctor Tajonar
Yolanda Loria
Arturo Zizumbo López
Sculptor Sculptor
Journalist
Moderator Designer
Regional Director, Muebles Dico
Researcher and professor
Owner, Authentic Furniture de México Polymer specialist
Moderator: Alma Bejarano.
45
CULINARY ARTS Baja California’s restaurateurs aremaking history. - Javier Plascencia.
Traditional Mexican cuisine: Cultural Heritage of Humanity. - Gloria López, Mexican Gastronomic Culture Conservatory.
We have one of the best cocoas in the world; unfortunately, we have very little of it. - José Ramón Castillo, ¡Qué Bo!.
I like to promote cooking as a cultural legacy for our children... - Ofelia Toledo, restaurante Yu Ne Nisa.
The quality of the meal is simply the interaction between the individual and the food. - Pascual Ibáñez, Escuela de los Sentidos.
In Mexico, gastronomic journalism has existed for quite a while; nevertheless, it was limited to the restaurant reviews. Now, there are more gastronomic publications;...the Association of Gastronomic Journalists was founded to review and highlight national culinary art. - Rodolfo Gerschman, food editor and critic, wine columnist.
Reclaiming Our Gastronomy and History
From Tijuana for the World
Microphone on the Grill: Cooking Can Also Make You Famous
Luis Ricardo Bonilla Cazarín Ofelia Toledo Bacha Oaxaca chef
José Ramón Castillo Master chocolatier
Rodolfo Gerschman
Javier González
Director, Culinary Art School
Miguel Ángel Guerrero Chef
Food editor and critic, wine columnist
Javier Plascencia
Ana Laura Martínez
Martín San Román
Gloria López Morales
Jair Téllez
Deputy Director, The Culinary Art School Mexican Gastronomic Culture Conservatory
46
Culinary arts specialist
Marcela Valladolid
Chef, winner of Iron Chef
Sam Zien
Media personality “Sam, The Cooking Guy”
Chef Chef Chef
Moderator: Maribel Moreno.
The cuisine of Baja California...doesn’t dominate... it accompanies. - Javier González Vizcaíno, Culinary Art School.
The Baja Med concept has developed because there was no Baja California cuisine. I defend it and I live it, as I believe it goes beyond just providing the region with a cuisine. - Miguel Ángel Guerrero, chef.
We are focused on rescuing local cuisine, that cuisine preserved by the Kiliwas, Cucapah and Kumeyaay people. We have a lot to learn from them. We have to work to...make them noticed; have fishing returned to them; remove barriers so they can gather things; put them back on the map. - Ana Laura Martínez, The Culinary Art School.
...this place grew due to the demand for Baja California products in the United States. Based on said demand, producers began planting what the local gastronomy required, and from there, great chefs began using these products. - Martín San Román, chef.
In order to be universal, you have to be local. - Jair Téllez, chef.
The pride that Tijuana residents feel for their city hasn’t come free. - Sam Zien, “The Cooking Guy”.
I find an ‘innovative Tijuana’ that has decided to invest in its origins…that has embarked on this adventure, that has taken the pathway home. - Andrés Madrigal.
Waking up the Senses; Multisensory Gastronomy Pascual Ibáñez
Director, Escuela de los Sentidos
Cooking with Senses, Witness to the 21st Century Andrés Madrigal Chef
47
48
Electronics Automotive Energy Organizational Excellence Medical Industry Aerospace Science and Technology
INDUSTRY 49
ELECTRONICS What we do, we do openly so that anyone can use it in their products, whether for commercial purposes or not. That’s not of concern to us. - David Cuartielles, Arduino.
Using a Google map, our remote-control drones fly over the countryside to obtain data on matters such as reforestation, fauna and climatic conditions. - Jason Short, Smart Design.
The binational map system is a useful tool for businesses, as it facilitates locating potential clients or data necessary to develop their infrastructure and location. - Dave Hester, Kyocera International.
Tijuana has the potential to craft its own identity through the development of the animated film industry, this in addition its privileged geographic location close to Los Angeles and Hollywood where these are made. - Raúl García, animator.
Global Competitiveness
Open Hardware Madness
Binational Map
Mark Baydarian
David Cuartielles
Eric Frost
Adriana Eguía
Mark Hatch
Dave Hester
Juan Manuel Hernández
Jason Short
Christina Luhn
President, Leviton Manufacturing Co. Representative, Endeavor Businessman, Former President of Coparmex
Luis Aguirre Lang
President, CNIMME-INDEX
Eric Pilaud
President, Custom Sensors and Technologies (CST)
50
Co-Founder, Arduino President, TechShop
Director of Design and Image, Smart Design
Director, Viz Center, SDSU Kyocera International Director, Mega-Region Initiative
David Mayagoitia
Co-founder of in3 and DEITAC
One of Tijuana Innovadora’s themes is binational collaboration,... not only what this region has to offer the world, but also the benefits these efforts can bring about for the mega-region and how San Diego, the Imperial Valley, Tijuana, Ensenada, Tecate and Mexicali can work together. - Christina Luhn, Mega-Region Initiative.
It is a plant open to everyone; there are engineers, artists, fathers, mothers, working in the same space. - Mark Hatch, TechShop.
The city is being forged by numerous creative projects; the animated film industry and the content industry, which will be in a position to compete with foreign projects. - Andrés Reyes Botello, Boxel Interactive.
We’re strategically positioned in the Pacific; we have complementary abilities and we are not competitors. - David Mayagoitia, Deitac.
The Rise of the Manufacturers: Rethinking Innovation and Education
The Future of Baja California in the Production of CGI Content
Silicon Valley: A Culture on Innovation and Risk
Dale Dougherty
Raúl García
Rocío Galván
Andrés Reyes Botello
Laura Gómez
Founder, “Make” magazine
Boxel Interactive Founder and General Director, Boxel Interactive
Journalist Twitter
Moderator: Guillermo Romero.
51
AUTOMOTIVE ...we must think not only of the United States as our main buyer... Mexico is the world’s fourth largest exporter of light automobiles we surpass even the United States - this confers upon us a great responsibility...as leaders. - Luis Olive Hawley, PROMEXICO.
...the ‘thinking’ work, that of design, was done in the United States. Now, it has to be done here. Develop the talent. That is the trend. - Steven Willing, Delphi.
My industry has achieved a close relationship with the universities, while everyone else is thinking about materials...the people graduating from universities must have the skills that are needed in order to develop local suppliers. - Jorge Loyo, Autoliv.
Tijuana has the possibility of becoming a logistic enclave...at a fundamental point of influence with the United States – to the east and to the west -; with the Asia-Pacific traffic, and also, it is close to Europe – through the Panama Canal-... - Eduardo Aspero, Pacer México.
Requirements and Benefits of a Supply Chain in the Region Alfonso Carrillo
Undersecretary, SEDECO
Jorge Carrillo
Researcher, COLEF
Luis Olive Hawley
Chief, International Businesses Promotion Unit, PROMEXICO
Jorge Loyo
General Director, Autoliv
Steven Wiling
General Manager, Delphi
52
Baja California enjoys great wealth with regard to its human capital; developed within a binational culture … Mexican engineers are training their foreign colleagues abroad. - Alfonso Carrillo, Sedeco.
The migration of ‘the old school’ to the contemporary has been a gradual process, where I have made space for learning and assimilating new trends and thus be able to apply a global artistic expression in my work. - Maurizio Corbi, Pininfarina.
80% of our exports are in manufacturing, more than half of this is high-tech. - Carlos Guzmán Bofill, Proméxico.
This is my dream; that our state become the country’s best option with regard to automotive design and manufacturing... - Joe Da Rosa, Toyota.
Technology and Trends in Automotive Design
Regional Challenges in Infrastructure and Logistics
Maurizio Corbi
Eduardo Aspero
Senior Designer, Pininfarina
General Director, Pacer México
Carlos Guzmán Bofill
General Director, PROMEXICO
Joe Da Rosa
President, Toyota, B.C.
Moderator: Emmanuel Campillo.
53
ENERGY
PEMEX Exploracion has 31,256 wells that have been drilled in the country, 6,000 of these in production; sixty-five thousand kilometers of pipeline that run throughout the country; and 15 marine terminals. - Francisco Fernández Lagos, PEMEX.
The Logistics and Delivery of PEMEX and Refining
Energy Overview: Challenges and Opportunities
Francisco Fernández Lagos
Miguel Ángel Alonso Rubio
Deputy Director of Distribution, Pemex Refinación
General Director, Acciona México
Eduardo Andrade
Corporate Director, Iberdrola México
Claudio Bartolini
Geophysicist, Repsol USA Holdings Corporation
Felipe Bayón
Head of special projects, BP
54
...the main challenge that we will face will be to supply safe, reliable energy , sufficient for a growing population. - - Eduardo Andrade, Iberdrota México; Claudio Bartolini, Repsol USA Holdings Corporation; Felipe Bayón, BP; and Miguel Ángel Alonso Rubio, Acciona México.
This invention has the capacity to provide food and water to the population, to create an oasis in the middle of the dessert, to fight and reverse solar warming, and to provide decent and well-paid jobs to the residents of this region, and it is an innovation made in Tijuana. - Eduardo Oviedo Gonzalez, INOV Energía LEDSS.
Energy Sustainability Eduardo Oviedo González
Founder, INOV Energía and Co-founder, LEDSS La Era del Sexto Sol
Moderator: Jaye Galicot.
55
ORGANIZATIONAL EXCELLENCE ...we’ve been here through the good times and the bad. - Ignacio Fimbres, Calimax.
In order to achieve success, we must be clear on the goal to be achieve, have a strong foundation in order to be able to grow, bring together a great creative team, and learn, learn and learn... - María Eugenia Acevedo Márquez, Certus Laboratorio Clínico.
The key to success is based on the philosophy of a single mind, focusing on one sole objective... - Jae Cul Nam, Skyworks Solution de México.
Something very good about the city is that it is overflowing with talent, and we’re exporting it. - Aarón H. Vázquez, Turbotec.
Baja California Companies that Standout in the World
The Future of Pensions in México Dario Luna
María Eugenia Acevedo Márquez
Economist
Jae Chul Nam
Director of Economic, Social and Cultural Benefits, ISSSTE
Ignacio Fimbres Sánchez
Tijuana: Perception Trumps Reality
General Director, Certus Laboratorio Clínico
Pedro Vázquez Colmenares
General Manager, Skyworks Solution de México President, Grupo Calimax
Juan Manuel Hernández
Businessman, former president of Coparmex
Aaron H. Vázquez
Industrial sector specialist
56
Carlos Alazraki Publicist
It’s a very delicate matter that we cannot ignore; we must have a new national pension system, one that is comprehensive, financed and that covers the majority of Mexicans. - Pedro Vázquez Colmenares, ISSSTE.
Tijuana Innovadora is an ongoing effort, a fantastic event that I’ve not seen anywhere else in Mexico, not even in Mexico City. - Carlos Alazraki, Publicist.
This isn’t a contest, but rather a process, whereby companies are invited to form part of a model of efficiency that allows them to become better organizations, this requires quality companies. - Jonathan Díaz Castro, Baja California Institute for Quality and Competitiveness.
In Baja California there are around eighty-five thousand businesses, of which 99% are micro, small and medium, and which generate 68% of the jobs and distribute 45% of the wealth. - Alejandro Mungaray Lagarda, Ministry of Economic Development of Baja California.
The ‘secrets’ that have allowed us to grow: simple organizational structures, austerity measures, always keeping in mind the good times and the bad, productive assets, open-mindedness, and reinvestment of profits. - Arturo Elías Ayub, TELMEX.
Presentation of the 22nd Baja California Awards recognizing Quality and Competitiveness
Winning Organizations Category
Industry, Large-sized Jonathan Díaz Castro
Category
President, Baja California Institute for Quality and Competitiveness
Education, Medium-sized
Alejandro Mungaray
Category
Innovation: Competitiveness Against Competition
Category
Service Industry, Large-sized
Secretary of Economic Development for Baja California
Government Moderator:
Arturo Elías Ayub
Board of Directors, TELMEX and Uno Noticias
Miguel Gracia.
57
MEDICAL INDUSTRY ...to those of you young people who lose patience because you don’t see an immediate triumph, this is something achieved, bit-by-bit, over time. You don’t achieve success immediately. It comes with time, as a result of work, effort and sacrifice… - Raúl Alcalá.
We have various post-graduate offerings, thirteen engineer specialties, six master degree programs, four doctoral programs, and over 25,000 graduates. - José Guerrero Guerrero, ITT.
There are two types of stem cells: embryonic stem cells (ES) cells and adult stem cells… they can be obtained from bone marrow, fat, peripheral blood, the umbilical cord, etc. - Luis Romero Guerra, Progencell.
Through the student exchange program, approximately 400 students are studying at more than 72 universities in 20 different countries. - Luis Enrique Palafox, UABC.
We have to become specialized in certain processes. Graduates must go abroad and return. - Martín G. Vázquez, Carefusion.
I’m not telling you my story to impress you, but rather to leave a mark and to invite you to innovate. - Sarah Reinertsen.
Innovation in Education José Guerrero Guerrero
Luis E. Palafox
Jaime González Luna
Eduardo Salcedo
Juan Manuel Hernández
Miguel Salinas Yáñez
Salvador Lozano Luquín
Martín G. Vázquez
Director, Instituto Tecnológico de Tijuana Bucher Industries
Businessman and former president of Coparmex Director of Information Systems, Universidad Iberoamericana, Tijuana
58
Dean of the School of Chemistry, UABC Senior Vice President of DJO Global LLC Director of the School of Engineering of CETYS Vice President, Manufacturing Management, Carefusion
This procedure was first researched in Russia...there are
At our institution we have two
more than 35,000 stem cell trials and 8,700 laboratory
principal goals; to maintain our
tests going on right now in the Western Hemisphere.
relevance in the industry and
- Jackie R. See.
to constantly analyze our programs oriented toward international practices. - Miguel Salinas Yáñez, School of Engineering, CETYS.
Bariatric surgery consists in modifying the stomach or intestines so the patient eats less and loses weight … a third part of the population is overweight; this is 1.6 billion
Graduates should have global
people worldwide.
knowledge, but also local ex- Ariel Ortiz, OCC.
perience. - Salvador Lozano Luquín, Universidad Iberoamericana, Tijuana.
We need entrepreneurial talent. - Jaime González Luna, Bucher Industries.
There has to be a better prosthetic. I searched for it, and I couldn’t find it, so I decided to create it. - Sarah Reinertsen quoting Van Phillips, creator of the “Cheetah Leg.”
It’s no longer enough to just mass produce the ideas of a third party. - Eduardo Salcedo, DJ Ortho.
State-of-the-Art Medicine: Stem Cell Use in Ophthalmology
When the Medical Industry Meets the Indomitable Human Spirit
Tijuana, the cradle of information on bariatric surgery
Patricia Aubanel
Sarah Reinertsen
Ariel Ortiz Lagardere
Renowned clinical cardiologist
Athlete and motivator
Director, Obesity Control Center
Luis Gonzaga Romero Guerra
Orthopedist, Medical Director at Progencell
Jackie R. See
Pedaling from Within: The Tour of Life
Norma Niño Sulkowska
Raúl Alcalá Gallegos
Cardiologist, Pioneer in Stem Cell Research Pioneer in Stem Cell Use in Ophthalmology
Cycling champion
Moderators: Cynthya Rodríguez. Eduardo Salcedo.
59
AEROSPACE During the next twenty years, the number of flights will increase from 30 million currently to 60 million; passengers will increase from 3 to 6 million...and investment is projected to reach 120 billion dollars... educational institutions and young people should take a close look at the field of aeronautics: This represents a great development and investment opportunity for Tijuana and the rest of the world. - Roberto Kobeh González, OACI.
The certification that companies must obtain in order to be in the global market is AS9100...since 2010, the number of Mexican companies certified has increased by 32%. - Eduardo Solís, Eaton.
Mexico has many engineers...I you invite young people to study mathematics and the sciences because this is what Mexico needs. - Roberto Corral, Volare Engineering.
...there is an important task at hand because the world is setting its sight on Mexico; we are number one in terms of receiving investment...we represent 0.6% of the world-wide aerospace industry, so there is a huge market opportunity. - Tomás Silbaja, Baja California Aerospace Cluster.
In the aerospace industry we have a total of 266 companies that produce 33,000 direct jobs throughout the country. - Flavio Díaz, Bombardier.
Mexico’s Value Added in the Future of the World’s Aerospace Industry
Future Challenges in Civil Aviation Roberto Kobeh González
Roberto Corral
President, International Organization of Civil Aviation
Director of Sales and Marketing, Volare Engineering
Flavio Díaz Mirón
Manuel Sandoval Ríos
Virgin Galactic and the Space Company: Opening Up Space to Everyone
Tomás Sibaja
George Whitesides
Representative, Bombardier Executive Director of Prospective Analysis and Innovation, ProMexico President, Aerospace Cluster of Baja California
Eduardo Solís
Sales Manager, Eaton
60
President and CEO, Virgin Galactic
The creation of the ‘DIY Drones’ forums has served to inspire young talent to build small aircraft; an activity that in some cases has served as the basis for creating companies to manufacturing these devices to scale and to sell their parts and components. - Chris Anderson, Wired.
...we are hiring a lot of pilots for the command of spacecraft, and even though the capsules do not require a lot of steering, these types of vehicles have to be controlled manually...we need some of the world’s best pilots in order to fly safely into space. - George Whitesides, Virgin Galactic.
The exploitation of space in Mexico is in its infancy in comparison to aeronautics, - it only covers 2% - but the future looks bright because we have good work in the areas of telecommunications and satellites; we have talent, researchers, coordination and cooperation with space agencies such as NASA, RKA and JAXA. We have the science, but not the technology. - Francisco Javier Mendienta, AEM.
Projects and International Cooperation
DIY Drones: Open-source Innovation and its Affects on the Aerospace Industry
Francisco Javier Mendienta
General Director, Mexican Space Agency
Chris Anderson Wired Magazine
Moderator: Gilberto Macías.
61
SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY ...our research consists in isolating
...anticoagulant agents, proteins that are the
a marine protein with biological
basis for vaccines, as well as antioxidants that
activity to fight cancer, tuberculosis
can be useful in the prevention of illnesses
and diabetes.
have been discovered in the ocean. -Graciela Guerra, UABC.
- Alexei Licea Navarro, CICESE.
Mexico faces a fair number of obstacles to free competition: It has a lot of regulatory red tape...The government and banking institutions have financing programs, but they are earmarked for strong, already established markets and not for those that require encouragement. - Richard A. Boucher, OCDE.
...98% of bacteria are beneficial to plants, animals and humans. In search of these qualities, we’re working to isolate various proteins that have potential in the treatment of breast cancer...we have been working with bacteria for the last 15 years. We are going to look for metabolites to kill cancer cells and seek to have bacteria produce these (metabolites). - Jorge Olmos Soto, UABC.
...there are over 65,070 foot amputations of diabetic patients, mostly due to bacterial infections, which would justify the application of silver nanoparticles after the necrotic tissue has been removed. - Horacio Almanza.
The Role of Innovation as a New Source of Growth Richard A. Boucher
Deputy Secretary-General, OECD
Charting the future: The Impact of Science, Technology and Means of Communication in Modern Life Steven Berlin Johnson
Best-selling Author on the interaction of science, technology and personal experience
62
Mexican Scientists Horacio Almanza
Jorge Olmos
JosĂŠ Cordeiro
Silvia Torres-Peimbert
Graciela Guerra
First Mexican Astronomer, Women of science UNESCO. (Research: Chemical composition of nebulas).
Research Professor
Director, Venezuelan Node of the Millennium Project and Professor, Singularity University Researcher and Professor, UABC
Alexei Licea
Director, Biotechnology Division, CICESE. (Research: Diabetes, HIV, Tuberculosis)
Scientific, Biotechnology Innovator. (Research: Cancer) International Astronomical Union
...the success of people…will depend on their capacity to generate and access information…and to transform it into knowledge. - Javier Allard, AMITI.
...take those investments in hardware... and turn them into valuable information... - Eduardo Graniello, Intellego.
...the country’s research on the interstellar medium and the formation of stars is very important; these efforts require support and high technology. - José Cordeiro, Project Millennium/ Singularity University
...we work in high tech; we do a lot of development of instrumentation and computing techniques for the purpose of expanding our knowledge of nature, the understanding of our solar system, stars, gas among the stars...we want to know it all. - Silvia Torres Peimber, UAI.
...Tijuana’s principal institutional buildings will be incorporated into the group consisting of the 40 most important cities, which will be linked by Internet with an upgraded broadband of between 100 megabytes and 10 gigabytes per second... - Mónica Aspe Bernal, SCT.
ICT: A Disruptive Development Factor
Solving Mankind’s Challenges through Innovation
Javier Allard
Eduardo Graniello
Claudio Arriola
Armando Talamantes CNN México
Director, Venezuelan Node of the Millennium Project and Professor, Singularity University
Mónica Aspe
Manuel Taméz
Federico Graef
General Director, AMITI Director, BIT Center
Coordinator, Information and Knowledge Society, SCT
Founder, Intellego
Mexican Internet Association
José Cordeiro
Director, CICESE
Juan José Martínez
Claudia Calvin
CEO, Vydra
General Director, Mexican Board of Intl. Affairs and Founder, Mujeres Construyendo
Ismael Plascencia
Research Coordinator, School of Accounting and Administration, UABC
Moderators: Andrea Flores. Héctor Uraga.
Juan Sarracino
President, Sarracino & Sarracino Consulting
63
...it’s to
in
the
implement
government’s
hands
technology...as
...according
to
the
Report
on
Global
we
Competitiveness, Mexico occupies the 117th
implement new computing tools on a
position out of 139 in terms of the incorporation
large scale, to find patterns in order to
of women within the labor market...behind
make predictions, and make decisions
Croatia,
that have an impact on the country’s
cannot be built up if half of the population is
economy and in people’s lives.
not incorporated into productivity.
- Manuel Tamez, AMI.
Nepal,
Senegal...competitiveness
- Claudia Calvin, Mujeres Construyendo.
Capitalism is focused on generating wealth, but it forgets to share it. - Ismael Plascencia, UABC.
...CICESE has been granted 9 patents, 10 are currently being processed; copyrights and brands. - Federico Graef, CICESE.
...observation, perpetual questioning, experimentation, the development of networks and association of ideas are the skills of innovators. - Juan Sarracino, Sarracino & Sarracino Consulting.
64
...an innovative team requires an intellectual diversity amongst its members. - Steven Berlin Johnson.
...the company has an audience of ...the other area we believe has a lot of potential is education...the adoption of technology...and this has dual characteristics: It creates a new market...and boosts productivity. - Claudio Arriola, BIT Center.
five million people that read their magazines and now 17 million that read their [Internet] portals... we’re facing is different method of keeping oneself informed... - Armando Talamantes, CNN México.
...the four technologies of the future are: nano, bio, cogno and
info...Japan
could
be
manufacturing brains in 2018. - José Cordeiro, The Millennium Project.
From an energy perspective, the field of efficiency offers the
most
possibilities
for
innovation. - Juan José Martínez, Vydra.
65
66
Leaders and Entrepreneurs Humanitarianism Economics The Digital City Philanthropy Innovative Greatness The Metropolitan Development Plan
HUMANISM 67
LEADERS AND ENTREPRENEURS ...we must avoid the ABC syndrome of our generation: A stands for ‘Accuse’- accuse everyone else; B for ‘Blame’- blame everyone else, and C for ‘Complain’- complain about everyone else. - Roland Kwemain, Junior Chamber International.
Break the mental chains of colonization, the thinking that everything good comes from abroad. - Anand Mahindra.
Show Mexico and the rest of the world the Tijuana modus operandi. - Gaby Roldán, Yo Tijuaneo.
...here in Tijuana, neighboring California, we have no excuse for not initiating projects. - Jordi Muñoz, 3D Robotics.
There is no story of leadership that does not entail work; regardless of at what level, many of hours of sacrifice and organization are required, and above all, efficiency, intelligence and a lot of determination... - Jorge Ferraez, Líderes.
Yo Tijuaneo ¿y tu? (I Tijuaneo! And you?)
Innovation within India
Representatives of Tijuana’s Youth
Anand Mahindra
Leadership Worthy of Trust Amy Lyman
Businessman, philanthropist, New Delhi
The Impact of One: The Ability of Youth to Create Positive Change
Rodolfo Ham-Zhu Bioengineering
Juan Pablo Kuri
Specialist in new technology
Viviana Martínez
Co-founder, A Great Place to Work Institute and Expert in Leadership
Leaders
Young Tijuana Professionals in the Silicon Valley
Roland Kwemain
President, Junior Chamber International
Radio host
Rodrigo Sánchez Ríos
Master’s degree student in business and private capital investor
Jorge Ferraez
President, editorial board, Líderes magazine
68
Carlos M. Tamés
Project Director and Consultant, Project Management Advisors, Inc.
Have a cause! - Fermín García, Sosvia, Inc.
Learn to listen…get rid of your ego - Andres Reyes Botello, Boxel.
Our objective is to transform Mexico. - Alejandro Maza.
...we are experiencing the ‘humanization’ of pets. - Marco Gallardo, Power Pet.
Break the paradigms within the construction industry. - René and Uriel Salgado.
...I eliminate the stereotypes.
Look for Mexican talent...
- Derrik Chinn, Turista Libre.
- Ricardo Arnaiz, Animex.
...we seek the use of energies that don’t harm the environment. - Eduardo Durazo Watanabe.
Doing what one truly loves, becomes a calling. - David Abeles, TaylorMade Golf Adidas.
Entrepreneurs, capital does exist; dust off those ideas and let’s get to work! - Hernán Fernández, Ángel Ventures México.
...in our company, we’ve created the technology that we required but couldn’t find on the market... - Charlie Iturriaga, OLLIN VFX.
There is no leadership without trust. - Amy Lyman, Great Place to Work Institute.
Mexico’s Most Outstanding Entrepreneurs Eduardo Durazo Watanabe Technology entrepreneur
Jorge López
Mexican entrepreneur
Alejandro Maza
Co-founder, “Yo propongo” (I propose)
Uriel and René Salgado Innovators in construction
Innovative Youth Transcending Borders
Entrepreneurs Transforming the Region
The strange case of the Mexican Behind the Oscar
José Manuel Aguilar
Ricardo Arnaiz
Charlie Iturriaga
Jordi Muñoz Bardales
Hernán Fernández
The Global Game of Golf: Economical and Social Impact
Biologist with a master’s degree and Ph.D. in biotechnology President, 3D Robotics
Enrique Betancourt
Executive Director, National Center for Crime Prevention and Citizen Participation
Founder, ANIMEX
Founder, Angel Ventures, México
Fermín García
President, Sosvia, Inc.
Edoardo Chavarín
Marco Gallardo
Derrik Chinn
Andrés Reyes Botello
Brand developer and creator of the NaCo clothing line Creator of Turista Libre
Christopher Yanov
Founder, Reality Changers
General Director, Power Pet Founder and General Director, Boxel Interactive
Special effects producer
David Abeles
David Abeles, Senior Vice President and General Manager, Taylor Made Golf Adidas and Ashworth Golf
Moderators: Laura Araujo. Miguel Marshall. Gabriela Roldán.
69
HUMANISM Be punctual, honest, hard-working, studious, and respectful. - Carlos Kasuga, Yakult.
...there are no instances of universities, schools, research centers or governments studying and tending the phenomenon of dehumanization. - David Livingstone Smith.
What’s happening here in Tijuana and San Diego will happen along the border, from here to Matamoros and Brownsville, to people from both countries. - Alan Bersin, Department of National Security of the United States.
...the best practices in border regions in any part of the world do not usually originate in the federal capital cities. It is the local communities, the people and authorities, which can really know and understand the underlying dynamics of the problems and the ways to solve them. - Luis Herrera-Lasso, Grupo Coppan.
Japanese-style Quality and Productivity, Applied to Small and Medium Businesses
Less than Humans; Understanding the Psychological Roots of War, Genocide and Atrocity
Carlos Kasuga
David Livingstone Smith
Tijuana, the Frontier between Development and Knowledge Alan Bersin
President, Yakult
Philosopher and author
Assistant Secretary of International Affairs, U.S. Department of Homeland Security
Luis Herrera-Lasso Mexican diplomat
Moderator: Magnolia Pineda.
70
ECONOMICS
...the banking system in Mexico has remained solid due to strong regulation and monitoring of lending institutions.
Mexico’s economic policy has been well managed, and we’ve overcome the mistakes of the past. - Pedro Aspe Armella.
- José Luis Ochoa, Institute for the Protection of Savings in Banks.
...integrity is not explained; it is seen, it is felt, it is noted. - José Carlos González, McDonald’s.
Leadership...Talent; Something Acquired or Developed?
Outlook on the Economic Situation of Mexico
José Carlos González
Pedro Aspe
Senior VP-Global CSR, Sustainability and Philanthropy, McDonald’s Corporation
Economist and Mexican politician
The role of Innovation as a Source of Growth José Luis Ochoa
Executive Secretary, Institute for the Protection of Savings in Banks
Moderator: Jaye Galicot.
71
DIGITAL CITY ...we have faith in you, our bilingual, bicultural border young people... - Claudio Arriola, BIT Center.
...when the objects come back to us, they’re able to tell us unexpected stories. - Carlo Ratti, MIT SENSEable City Lab.
There is a deficit of five thousand computer engineers in San Diego. - Bob Slapin, Executive Director, San Diego Software and Internet Council.
...it is the responsibility of the Federal Government to establish public policies that foster knowledge; access to digital information…has gone from 6,000 public locations with Internet access to 36,000... - Mónica Aspe, SCT.
We have the idea that it’s difficult to go and sell to the United States, and I’m not going to tell you it’s not; but it’s also difficult for them to sell here; it is a huge business opportunity. - Jorge Zavala, TecBa.
Tijuana, the Path to a Sensible and Digital City
The Binational Digital Agenda Mónica Aspe
Carlo Ratti
Director, MIT SENSEable City Lab
Information and Knowledge Society, SCT
Claudio Arriola Director, BIT Center
Jorge Arroyo
Founder and CEO, Arkus Nexus Software Nearshoring Services
Flavio Olivieri
President, Tijuana EDC
Bob Slapin
Executive Director, San Diego Software and Internet Council
Jorge Zavala
72
Chief Digital Officer, TechBA
Digital Education in Latin America Rodrigo Arboleda Halaby
Chairman and CEO, One Laptop per Child Association
The Montessori philosophy that considers that children learn better by playing should be reformed, as it has been proven that students learn better by doing. - Rodrigo Arboleda OLPC.
If you want to work with the best, you have to have the best. - Miguel Mejía, TRESS International.
...as a result from our participation in Tijuana Innovadora 2010, we were invited to run pilot tests in Silicon Valley schools. - Lourdes Ibáñez, Club LIA.
Globally, we are the second leading country with regard to social applications. Tijuana has 1 million people interacting daily. - Claudio Cossio, Maestros del Web (Webmasters).
If you don’t develop your people, you are not going to grow your company. The engine must always be innovation. - Ángel Sánchez, Arkus Nexus.
Creativity knows no race, gender or orientation, nor does it differentiate between people; it emerges from its environment. - Richard Florida .
we need to take advantage of our relationship as neighbor to the United States; there should be “ambassadors”...who cross the border to preach the capabilities that exist in Tijuana. - Jorge Arroyo, Arkus .
Success Stories in Digital Development
Creative Economy, a New Calling for Baja California
Claudio Cossio
Richard Florida
European Editor, Maestros del Web
Expert in Creative Economy
Tanya Escamilla Journalist
Lourdes Ibáñez
Co-founder and General Director, Club LIA
Miguel Mejía
Director, Grupo Tress Internacional
Ángel Sánchez Arkus Nexus
Moderator: Enrique Jiménez “Ejival”.
73
PHILANTHROPY ...there are three parties in any genocide: the perpetrators, who tend to be a small group of people; the victims, who are much more numerous; and the indifferent, who make up the vast majority. - Mily Cohen, Co-founder, Memory and Tolerance Museum, Mexico City.
Compassion without action makes no sense. - Sharon Zaga, Co-founder,Memory and Tolerance Museum, Mexico City.
In philanthropy, it is necessary to plan what one is going undertake, what will be done, what the mission will be, the objectives, strategies...create big ideas. - Cole Wilbur.
...the mobilization of time, talent and treasure to benefit our fellow human beings...are ways in which philanthropy can be expressed. - Michael Chu, Harvard University.
We must find better ways to foster these ways of working together between the public sector and private social organizations, such as here...in Tijuana. - Alejandro Poiré, Secretary of the Interior, Mexico.
We have to reevaluate the role of companies and of people in a world where the wealth is concentrated among only a few... - Rick Goings, Tupperware.
Work together to share knowledge. - Robert Kaplan, IAF.
What We Do with Our Emotions
Conscientious Capitalism and the Future of Business
Alternative Business Models for the Creation of Social Value
Blake Mycoskie
Esra’a Al Shafei
Mily Cohen
Vice President and Co-Founder, Memory and Tolerance Museum
Sharon Zaga
TOMS Shoes
President and Co-Founder, Memory and Tolerance Museum
Problematic Educational Issues: Challenges and Solutions Claudio X. González Guajardo Moderators: Antonieta Beguerisse. Patricia Hernández.
74
President, Mexicanos Primero A.C.
Founder, CrowdVoice.org
David del Ser Founder, Frogtek
Gabriela Enrigue González Founder, Prospera
Javier Lozano
Founder, Clínicas de la Azúcar
Alejandro Poiré
Alejandro Poire, Secretary of the Interior, Mexico
People want to see you are do well, that you are successful. - Blake Mycoskie, TOMS Shoes.
With regard to charitable donations, the tax regulations in the United States are more attractive than those of Mexico. - Richard Kiy, ICF.
From the beginning with its first event in 2010, Tijuana Innovadora had a large-scale effect in terms of its influence, which extended far beyond the state. Its impact is national and international. - Claudio X. González Guajardo, Mexicanos Primero A.C.
One thing that is really important is to partner with other entrepreneurs. - Gabriela Enrigue González, Prospera.
Investment is reflected in the savings we provide Mexico in investments and in healthcare. - Javier Lozano, Clínicas del azúcar.
Nothing in this world is more valuable than hope.
We chose to concentrate our efforts on a specific type of customer.
- Esra’a Al Shafei, CrowdVoice.org.
- David del Ser, Frogtek.
Philanthropy and Social Investment in Mexico and Latin America: Lessons in Tijuana Michael Chu
Professor, Harvard University
Rick Goings
President and General Director, Tupperware Brands
Robert N. Kaplan
President and CEO, Inter-American Foundation (IAF)
Richard Kiy
CEO, International Community Foundation (ICF)
Cole Wilbur Philanthropist
75
INNOVATIVE GREATNESS
The challenge lies in the content and in the means of communicating, in that in this new era represents a shift in paradigm. - Liébano Sáenz.
The Past, Present and Future of Technology
Stephen Gary Wozniak Co-Founder, Apple Computer
76
A Shift in Paradigm?
Liébano Sáenz Political analyst President and CEO, Gabinete de Comunicación Estratégica (GCE)
spaces as a means of communication, such as a land, a community where areas of disagreement are exposed and areas of agreement are discovered; even when these are temporary and precarious agreements - Enrique Norten.
Institutions don’t teach students to be skeptics, to question their teachers. They don’t invite us to explore. Those students are labeled as rebellious. - Stephen Wozniak.
Here, the people are not cured. They redefined their health. We don’t call them ‘patients’, but rather ‘inpatients’, because they are anxious to remedy their situation. - Natalie Jeremijenko.
The drums are physical labor. The synthesizer is mental. - Wolfgang Flür.
I was a Robot
This will kill that
Qué sigue en innovación y diseño
Wolfgang Flür
Enrique Norten
Natalie Jeremijenko
Electronic music pioneer, Kraftwerk
Founder, TEN Arquitectos
Scientist and digital artist, New York University Moderators: Jaye Galicot. Jorge Izquierdo.
77
METROPOLITAN DEVELOPMENT PLAN
...in the past, Rosarito belonged to the Municipality of Tijuana, and now that it has become a municipality, it reintegrates itself, but now, within this innovative greater metropolitan area.
The concept of city has seen a broadening of meaning to include economic, social and cultural perspectives.
- Raúl Islas Espinoza, CDR.
- Rafael Pérez Fernández, IBERO.
...a metropolis such as Tijuana merits long-term planning.
...we must continue working, so as to not put future generations at risk.
- Humberto Jaramillo, CDT.
- José Manuel Jasso, CCET.
Within the Strategic Metropolitan Plan, the three cities, Tijuana, Tecate and Playas de Rosarito, will no longer be independent, though they will conserve their own identity.
...of the 56 metropolitan areas that exist in this country, the area encompassing Tijuana, Playas de Rosarito, and Tecate occupies the 6th spot nationally in terms of economic development; and registers 21st within Latin America.
- Sergio Montes Montoya, B.C.
- Rodolfo Argote, IMPLAN.
The strategies...include generating means for the economic growth, project evaluation and follow-up with the development teams that are working on the plans, and seeking financial alternatives in response to these actions. - Daniel Rubio, IMPLAN.
Digital Opportunities in Emerging Markets
Metropolitan Strategic Development Plan: Tijuana, Tecate, and Playas de Rosarito Rodolfo Argote
Aarón Bare
Global entrepreneur, Aaron Bare & Co.
Video: Agentes de Cambio (Agents of Change) José Castillo
Co-founder, Arquitectura 911sc
78
Director of Land Planning, Metropolitan Planning Institute
Raúl Islas Espinoza
President, Economic Development Advisory Board, Playas de Rosarito
José Manuel Jasso
President, Advisory Board, Economic Development of Tecate
Humberto Jaramillo
Executive President of the Board, Tijuana Economic Development Council (CDT)
Sergio Montes
Deputy Secretary of Infrastructure and Urban Development, State of Baja California
Rafael Pérez
Art and Design Department, Universidad Iberoamericana, León, Guanajuato
Daniel Rubio
Executive Director General, Metropolitan Planning Institute
The new type of design is also old; whenever we want to be constructive and positive with regard to the future, we also need to reflect on the past. - Paola Antonelli, MoMA.
...in creative cities, disciplines such as architecture, design, gastronomy, music, literature are applied. Cities are not only sustained by economics, but also by creativity. - Martin Krammer.
The city dies when its citizens fails to participate. The one who innovates is the one who physically takes to the street. - José Castillo, Arquitectura 911sc.
This era has given rise to the phenomenon of disruption, in other words, of those technologies and innovations that provoke the disappearance of other products in the marketplace. - Aarón Bare.
I want to urge all women of the world to dedicate themselves to science, to potentiate their expertise; if this isn’t done, the capacity of the human brain is being wasted, because we represent half the population... - Ada Yonath, Noble Prize Laureate.
Life Expectancy: Rhetoric and Reality
Creative Cities and Cultural Development
Ada Yonath
Martin Krammer
Noble Prize Laureate in Chemistry
Creative Economy
The New Frontiers of Design Paola Antonelli
Curator, Museum of Modern Art (MoMA)
Moderators: Raúl Cárdenas. Ana Martínez.
79
Germany
United States of America
Argentina
France
Australia
Honduras
Bahrain
India
Brazil
Israel
Bulgaria
Italy
Cameroon
Japan
Canadรก
Malta
Chile
Mexico
Colombia
United Kingdom
South Korea
Venezuela
Spain
ORIGIN OF THE SPEAKERS 80
81
SPONSORS
SOCIALLY RESPONSIBLE INVESTMENT 1
20
21
24
19 2
22
23
18
3
17
16
15
14
13
27
4
12 5
7
9
6
This event is not about making money; it’s about earning respect
8
11
s we’ve mentioned elsewhere, the idea of
A
and Tijuana Innovadora 2012, Bound for Great-
Tijuana Innovadora came about as the
ness were made possible thanks to the contri-
result of a conversation among friends, which
bution of economic resources, time, talent and
was then brought to fruition: An event that would
the collaboration of businesses, government,
present, both to locals and those not from our
educational institutions, charitable organiza-
City, the innovative reality of Tijuana, as opposed
tions, the media, students and local citizens.
to the image presented by the media. Under the disciplined leadership of Jose Ga-
- Alejandro Bustamante.
Tijuana Innovadora 2010, the Intelligent Frontier
82
10
licot, we have worked to generate human
38
37
25
40
53
39
52 41
51
42
50
36
26 35
34
49 33
43
32
44
48
28 30
29
31
46
45
47
and economic resources that allow for the
the investment in an event that promotes and
sources, tickets purchased for gala dinners,
project’s self-sustainable growth. The Tijuana
markets the city’s virtues and potential.
conferences and panels, as well as their input
Innovadora Movement is now registered as a not-for-profit, charitable organization.
regarding program management initiatives. Tijuana Innovadora 2012, Bound for Greatness, is profoundly grateful to the businesses, go-
Together, we once again demonstrated, regio-
Furthermore, we’ve sought that all the involved
vernment entities, charitable organizations
nally, nationally and internationally, the origi-
organizations, manufacturing plants, busi-
and individuals that collaborated and showed
nal and innovative nature of Tijuana; a national
nesses, institutions, collective projects, artists,
their commitment through direct and in-kind
role model to be followed.
etc., benefit both directly and indirectly from
investment in pavilions, the channeling of re-
83
54
70
67
55
68
71
69
56
66
72
57
75
74
73
65
58 64
59
76
60
61
62
63
77
80
78
79
PAVILION EXHIBITORS AND SPONSORS (COLORS)
(PICTURES)
1. ABC Aluminum
11. Capta
23. D’Volada
35. HARMAN
47. Kyomex
2. Aeroméxico
12. Carl Zeiss Vision
24. DJ Orthopedics
36. Heineken
48. L.A. Cetto
3. Agencia Aduanal Jorge Díaz
13. Cecyte
25. El Informador
37. Hermosillo y Asoc.
49. La Estrella de Michoacán
4. AIMO/CST
14. Cervecería Tijuana
26. El Mexicano
38. Ibero
50. Loginam
5. Arte Público.
15. CESPT
27. Endeavor: Indegsa / BTB /
39. IMERK
51. Logística BLS
40. Innovatec Baja CDITBC
52. Macroplaza
Cardinal 5. Ciudad Habla.
Motiva / PowerPet
6. Axis
17. Clínica de Ojos de Tijuana
28. Focus
41. Inpade
53. MAR Intl.
7. Baker & McKenzie
18. Coca Cola
29. Foxconn
42. Instituto de Ciencias
54. Mental Tech
Abogados, S.C. FIC
19. Conacyt
30. G Tel
8. Calimax
20. CDT / FIDEM
31. Gasmart
43. Interpoint Security Systems 56. Mind Hub
9. Canacintra - Clúster
21. Corrugados de Baja
32. Gobierno del Estado
44. IOS Office
57. Morzan
33. Grupo ATISA
45. IPN / CITEDI
58. Morzan
34. Grupo Tress Internacional
46. Kyocera
59. MVS
mueblero 10. CANACO Tijuana
84
16. CETYS
California 22. Cotuco
Cardiovasculares
55. Milenio Radio
93
94
96
98
95
100
97
99
92
101
91
88
90
87
103
89
102 86
104 81
83
84
105
82
85
60. Nihon Robotics Institute 61. Nissan 62. Panasonic
72. Secretaría de Educación Pública
84. Televisa
97. Unifront
85. Televisa
98. Uniradio
73. Secretaría de Gobernación 86. Telnor
99. Uniradio
63. Parque Industrial El Florido 74. Sedesol
87. Telvista
100. UNIVER
64. Periódico Frontera
75. SEICA
88. Teska
101. Univision
65. Periódico Frontera
76. Sempra
89. The Union Tribune
102. Univision
66. Medios PPI
77. Síntesis
90. Tijuana Duty Free
103. Universidad Xochicalco
67. Procopio
78. Síntesis
91. Total Logistics
104. Xolos de Tijuana
68. Publimedios
79. Sol de Tijuana
92. Toyota
105. XX Ayuntamiento de Tijuana
69. Radio Latina
80. St Petersburg Vodka
93. Turbotec
70. Santander
81. Tacna
94. Tv Azteca
71. Secretaría de Economía /
82. Techmaster
95. Tv Azteca
83. Telcel
96. UABC
ProMéxico / Pymes
Promoters: Liliana Castellanos. Javier Espinoza. Patricia Hernández. Tomás Perrín. Jack Winer.
85
86
87
DINNER
FELIPE CALDERÓN PRESIDENT OF MEXICO
We need the commitment of the people who are promoting, demanding, opining, constructing, suggesting, and complying with their civic responsibilities. - Felipe Calderón.
Music by Do Re Mi Network Project, conducted by Eduardo Barrios, Director of the Baja California Orchestra, Tijuana Opera Company: Norma Navarrete, María Vargas, Andrés Olivares, Oscar Angulo, and Charlie Chávez, accompanied by Aiko Yamada on the piano
88
DINNER
ÁNGELES MASTRETTA MEXICAN WRITER AND JOURNALIST
This, our country, is breaking down with each and every day, and according to most all of the news, there seems to be remedy. Philanthropists, nevertheless, believe there is. That is why they are so valuable. - Ángeles Mastretta.
Music by the “Arcano” duo, comprised of siblings Erika and Vick del Real Alvarado
89
DINNER
ALFONSO ROMO GARZA MEXICAN BUSINESS LEADER
I’m a bit embarrassed. I’m here to speak about changes in attitude; precisely here, where you have already achieved your doctorate in change of attitude. - Alfonso Romo.
Music by DJ Chris Ruelas
90
DINNER ANAND MAHINDRA
BUSINESS LEADER AND PHILANTHROPIST (INDIA)
This is a wonderful evening I will never forget. Tijuana Innovadora is a project that I would love to replicate in my own country, so that the world will also know of all the good things India has to offer. - Anand Mahindra.
CARLOS FALCÓ MARQUIS OF GRIÑÓN (SPAIN)
I hope to come back many times, because I’ve enjoyed everything that I’ve seen. - Carlos Falcó, Marquis of Griñón.
Music by tenor, Marco Antonio Labastida
91
TRAINING, EDUCATION AND LEADERSHIP F
rom the inception of Tijuana Innovadora,
and improve the quality of life as a direct
we have sought to be “educators.” We
result
of
the
collaboration
see teaching as a process that, among
businesses,
public
other
institutions;
and
things,
includes:
Reflecting
on
one’s ideas and prejudices; having the
and
between
educational
empowering
both
individuals and society alike.
opportunity to transform society through sound communication, listening to others
The
and, certainly, to one’s self; developing
channeling of resources and activities has
attitudes, talents and vocations that revive
been designed to comply with our concept
personal preferences and passions; having
of education, described above, through the
an
mainstreaming of innovative leadership,
innovative
disposition;
developing
competencies that enhance productivity
Tijuana
Innovadora
Movement’s
solidarity and thinking.
The decidedly educational labor of Tijuana Innovadora seeks to enrich formal and informal education efforts and to collaborate in the comprehensive development of our region. These efforts include the designation of resources to a significant number of initiatives and not-for-profit organizations; the Volunteer and Leadership Program; the Education Committee with its Innovation Awards, guided tours and numerous workshops; as well as the Arte en la Industria (Art in Industry) program and participation in the Casa de las Ideas (House of Ideas) project. 92
93
INNOVATIVE CAREERS
94
SUBJECTS
WORKSHOPS
8
A Greener Tijuana
23
10
Education
10
9
Cinematography
11
7
The Media
8
3
Strategic Design
3
6
Culinary Arts
56
1
Electronics
4
1
Automotive Industry
13
2
Organizational Excellence
2
1
Aerospace Industry
1
10
Ciencia y TecnologĂa
10
9
Leaders and Entrepreneurs
19
1
Humanism
1
2
Digital City
2
6
Philanthropy
6
76
169
TOTAL SUBJECTS
TOTAL WORKSHOPS
95
WORKSHOP FACILITATORS
96
Life Project Solar Oven
Celeste Castillo y Rocío Ibarra Carlos David Castro López
A GREENER TIJUANA Compost Bin
Organic Agriculture
The Green School
Ecological Garden
Conservation and Reuse of Water in Tijuana
Infiltration in the Tijuana River Basin
Hydroponic Cultivation
The Use of Wikipedia in the Classroom Memory of the World A Heroic Imagination as an Antidote to Bullying in Schools Educamp ITC for Teachers
Omar Pérez, Montserrat Alarcón y Enrique Soto Brenda Gonzalez Vazquez y Marlene Serrano Rojas
Aseret Brito, Danna Priscila García Chavez, Elizabeth Torres y Anahí Sánchez Rosa Angélica Hernández Galán, Alma Leola Guerra Canizalez y Delia Judith Gonzalez Zuñiga Adrian Posadas
Ing. Alejandro Caloca Galindo
Iván Martínez Rosa Ma. Fernández De Zamora Darío Sánchez
Dialogues Concerning Royalty-Free Licenses The National Sound Archive of Mexico: We Preserve the Memory of Sound for the Future
Fundamental Skills for the Manufacture of Vehicles
Guadalupe Curiel Defossé y Ricardo J. Jiménez Rivera
Richard Stallman, Yuridia Itzel Sierra y Ivan Martinez Tito Ávila Moran
Access to Resources at a Symbolic Cost, as a Platform to Further Entrepreneurship
Diana Caballero
MATH2ME: Mathematics for All (Class)
José Alejandro Andalón Estrada
MATH2ME: Mathematics for All (Mini Conference)
José Alejandro Andalón Estrada
Gerardo Brizuela Altamirano Israel Mendoza García
AEROSPACE INDUSTRY
The Nanocharacterization and Research Unit
Carlos Cesar Apodaca y Sharon Jacqueline Villeda
Oscar Edel Contreras López
SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY Synthesis Methods of Nanomaterials and Biomaterials
Nanotechnology of the XXI Century
Learn to Develop Technological Ideas and Projects with Club Digital
Astronomy for Children
Cloud-based Platform Collaboration: Office 365 for Education
Gabriela Anaya, Juan Guzman
ORGANIZATIONAL EXCELLENCE The Key to the Universe
Blanca Margarita Parra Mosqueda, Deyanira Castilleja De León y Ana Cristina Bórquez Garcés
Raúl Montoya, Jesús Caín, Oscar Nuñez y Guillermo Romero
AUTOMOTIVE INDUSTRY How to Win the Noble Prize for Quality: The Design of an Innovative Business Model
Terpsicore Tabares Torres
EDUCATION
The National Digital Periodical Library of Mexico
ELECTRONICS Innovation with Drones
Workshop on Light Polution
Solar Energy
Revlux, How to Identify a Quality LED Product
Gustavo Alonso Hirata Flores Leonel Susano Cota Araiza Eduardo A. Durazo Carlos Roman
Fernando Ávila
Uri López, Cecilia Aguillon y Hector Uraga Alexei Miridonov y Kuotaro Sanay Robles
Introduction to Biotechnology Basic Sound Effects Workshop
Saulo Cisneros
Visual Effects Workshop
Rodrigo Álvarez
LEADERS CINEMA AND TOGRAPHY ENTREPRENEURS HUMANISM MASS DIGITAL CITY MEDIA Aerial Cinematography Exhibit
Mass Acting Workshop “Silence, Camera, Action”
IMCINE, Support for Film Production Cinematographic Lighting Demonstration Aerial Cinematography Exhibit
Cinematographic Lighting Exhibit
Cinematographic Lighting Workshop
Constructive Creativity
Ivor Shier
How to do Business in Mexico
Eduardo Cisneros
Women as Key Factors in Business
Conscientious Leadership
Hugo Villa Smythe
Startup Weekend
Victor Duran
Do You Save or Do You Invest?
Ivor Shier
Cross-Border Journalism
Applying the Use of Social Networks to Civic Participation How do You Get to the Truth? Journalism in the Digital Age Television Workshop
Presentation of the Book, “A Chorus of Monologues” Behind the Cameras with Televisa Tijuana
Simon Somohano Rocío Álvarez
Miguel Ángel Isla Zavala / Axialent Omar Jacobo Monroy Soltero Wendy Montaño Gómez
Victor Duran
Business Geometry
Marco Alfonso Lepe Cisneros
Victor Duran
Business Culture for an Innovative Tijuana
Marco Alfonso Lepe Cisneros
The Search for Mobile Applications Opportunities: Word-of-Mouth and User Acquisition
Marketing Strategies Using Social Networks
Andrés Araujo Sanz
Claudio Armando Cossio Saucedo
Armando León Valladolid y Jorge Camarillo Govea Laura Castañeda, Carmen Escobosa y José Luis Jiménez
Yoga and Emotions
Esteban Camacho
Protolab Movil: “Interactive Electronics for Children”
Carmen González
Enrique Davis Mazlum Dean Miller
Guillermo Wilkins
Music and the Music Industry, Today and Tomorrow / Demonstration of Reactable
Raul Rodriguez
Mari Pili Becerra, Patricia Álvarez, Rigoberto García, Félix Guarello, Pablo Martínez e Iván Quezada y Maricarmen Flores
Philanthropic Contributions by Foundations for Hispanics-Latinos in the U.S. and Latin America
Pepe Mogt y Ramón Amezcua (Bostich + Fussible)
Gracia Goya, Michael Layton, Andy Carey
STRATEGIC PHILANTHROPY DESIGN CULINARY ARTS Municipal Citizenry, Government and Democracy
Creativity in Fashion Design The Creative Process to Design a Collection
New Trends in Experimental Design
Governmental Transparency, What’s Next? “In coordination with the Institute of Transparency and Access to Public Information of Baja California (ITAIPBC)”
Daniela Villa y Emedel García Hector Alejandro Hinojosa
Today, You Get to Touch Yourself
Roberto Lara Valenzuela
Civic Intelligence, Strategies and Tools
Are you an Activist and Live Day-to-Day?
The Barrel Monologues
Craft Beer Brewing
Andrés Hofmann
Roxana Salcedo y Homero Fuentes Alejandro Maza Ayala
Gabriela Enrigue González, Macarena Hernández De Obeso y Sandra Fernández Rodríguez
Dionisio Del Valle, Rodolfo Gerschman
Roberto Riatiga López y Omar Lopez Toscano
Coffee Appreciation Workshop: Extraordinary Coffee, No Sugar, No Milk...Enjoy It!
Alberto Song Trujillo
A Week of Coffee Tastings at Sospeso: Coffees from Around the World
Alberto Song Trujillo
The Culinary League for Special Youth
Chef Luis Castro
Innovation in Coffee: Creating a New Style and Method of Distinguishing Coffee
Marcos Reyes
Alberto Song Trujillo
97
98
99
INAUGURATION
100
…you have, once again, demonstrated (…) your profound love for Tijuana, which, once again, places you at the front and center of national public opinion and a good part of International public opinion, and for all the right reasons; for the reasons that Tijuana should always be on everyone’s mind. - Felipe Calderón.
101
PUBLIC ART Cardinal 5
102
T
aking into consideration the axes of TI
booths and at the Puente Mexico bridge, were
generating an audiovisual interpretation of
2012, creativity, industry and humanism,
then assembled to form one huge canvass,
the data, that is transformed into a musical
as well as the concepts of personal roots and
alluding to the interwoven social fabric of
score
identity, we created the “Cardinal 5” project.
Tijuana. Here, we also created “Textil Cardinal,”
according to the quantity of individuals and
Citizens completed: “What I most like about
a piece which repeat 33 times a pattern
the quickness and resolve of the guardians
Tijuana is...,” “I am a Tijuanense (citizen of
representing the connection between the
to get these people through the San Ysidro
Tijuana) from...,” “Tijuana is...” and “I work at...”
referenced sites. The piece on the Interne is
Border Crossing.
At each of these locations, which included
a work in algorithmic composition that takes
the international airport, main bus station,
data in real time from the RSS (news channel)
the lighthouse at Playas de Tijuana, toll-road
of the US Department of Homeland Security,
for
24
instruments
sequenced
Creators Iván Abreu, Olga Margarita Dávila, Luis Garzón, Illya Haro, Eric Morales el “Dr. Morbito”, Ángeles Moreno, Gabriela Posada, Jhosell Rosell, Catalina Silva.
Without a doubt, this magnificent coordination between artists, the state, and the activism of a non-forprofit organization (Tijuana Innovadora) can be considered the social application of Relational Aesthetics, as formulated by Nicolas Bourriaud, but above all, this is symptomatic of the multiple relationships that make up the social, cultural and political fabric of a city like Tijuana.
Ciudad Habla (City Speaks)
- Eduardo Egea, Arte al Día.
Tijuana Innovadora, in coordination the public art collective Arte Público Reacciona Tijuana, created the Ciudad Habla project as a part of the renewal and continuity process of the “Con Amor a Tijuana” (To Tijuana, with Love) project created by the Tijuana Image Committee founded by Jose Galicot. With the participation of local citizens, in addition to artists such as Once Cero Dos, Mode Orozco, Spell, Pablo Vega, and Shente Elizondo, and also, students and graduates of the UABC’s Faculty of Arts, images were captured reflecting the feelings of those who pass through the San Ysidro Border checkpoint. To date, work has been undertaken on walls located under the bridge a few meters away from the México border crossing when entering by car from San Ysidro and in two more places along the area between the pedestrian walkway and the Sentri Lane as you approach the US border crossing on your way out. 103
BATALLA CULINARIA (THE CULINARY BATTLE)
Tijuana´s culinary scene has taken a huge leap forward... - Sam Zien, “The Cooking Guy”.
T
rends, concepts, trademarks, festivals, food pairings, and wine tasting trips; Like
its people, the region’s gastronomy reflects a mixture of regions, ingredients and cuisines… the election, transformation and combination of ingredients that awaken our senses...The region’s gastronomy is another seductress that could not be left out of Tijuana Innovadora. This included the Batalla Culinaria (Culinary Battle), Culinary Expo; Gastronomic Pavilion, and master classes by renowned chefs.
104
Hosts Marcela Valladolid and Sam Zien, “The Cooking Guy”. Master Classes by Renowned Chefs Stephanie Armenta, 100% Organic, Macrobiotic Vegan Cooking; Ofelia Toledo, Pre-Hispanic and Isthmian Cooking; José Ramón Castillo, Evolutionary Mexican Chocolate Making. Culinary Battle, Participating Chefs Roberto Alcocer, Drew Deckman, Martín González, Miguel Ángel Guerrero, Diego Hernández, Paul McCabe, Javier Plascencia, Chad White. Chefs Serving as Judges Ricardo Bonilla, José Ramón Castillo, Bill Esparza, Javier Gonzales, Pascual Ibáñez, Ernesto Jiménez McFarland, Andrés Madrigal, Martín San Román.
Gestora Maribel Moreno.
105
CAESAR GUINESS
...much to the pride of Tijuana’s residents, this salad has transcended borders, finding a place in many of the world’s leading restaurants.
in honor of having set a Guinness Record for world’s largest Caesar Salad back in 2007, hundreds of people joined in tasting the traditional Caesar salad, which is yet one more example of innovation in Tijuana.
- Chef Andrés Madrigal, quoted from the Huffington Post.
To break the Guinness Record in 2007, 3 tons 287 kilograms of salad were prepared. For the 2012 occasion, approximately 110 kilos of lettuce were used.
T
out in collaboration with CANIRAC (the restaurant
creation of the Caesar Salad by Italian im-
industry chamber), Caesar’s restaurant, and the
migrant Cesar Cardini on October 20, 1927, and
106
Remembering “Caesar Guinness” was carried
o commemorate the anniversary of the
students of the Culinary Art School of Tijuana.
FIGHTING BREAST CANCER
Is it hard for us to stop being indifferent? - Mily Cohen and Sharon Zaga, Memory and Tolerance Museum.
T
he Fundacion Papalotl Mujeres en Movimiento and Tijuana Innovadora joined forc-
es to raise breast cancer awareness in men and women, coloring the Tijuana Cultural Arts Center (CECUT) pink, presenting the workshop “Hoy te toca tocar� (Today, You Get to Touch Yourself) and we dressing in pink to emphasize the importance of detecting cancer at an early stage.
107
BUSINESS ENCOUNTER Everyone is an innovator. Not one of us knows where is next Steve Jobs is going to come from. - Dale Dougherty.
aja California’s driving force companies of
SECTOR
No. OF PURCHASERS
DEMAND (USD)
No. OF APPOINTMENTS
INPUTS IN HIGHEST DEMAND
presented an exhibition of the inputs they
AEROSPACE
5
50 000
310
Machining, coatings and finishes, calibration
require for their production processes. We then
FOOD AND BEVERAGES
2
3M
155
Packing, packaging, laboratory supplies and equipment
held Business Encounters with regional small
AUTOMOTIVE
1
468 000
76
Industrial maintenance, abrasives, industrial safety equipment
and medium companies (referred to in Mexico
ELECTRICALELECTRONIC
13
23 M
732
Machining, packing, coatings and finishes
B
as PYMES) to identify potential suppliers.
MEDICAL
8
18 M
836
Injection molding, packaging, extrusion molding
FURNITURE
2
6M
193
Injection molding, waste management
The primary industrial sectors represented in-
OTHERS
12
-
289
Packing, stationary, printing
cluded: Aerospace, Food, Promotional Articles,
TOTAL
43
50.5 M
2 591
Automotive, Beverage, Electrical, Electronic, Printing, Medical, Metalworking, Metrology, Furniture, Optical, Paper, Chemical, Recycling, and Transportation. The main certifications required: AS 9100 and NADCAP, HACCP, ISO 9001 and ISO 14001, and JPMA. We have a lot of work to do!
108
Classification of Leading Companies
Principal Sectors Represented
Packing Machining
1 5
4 33
Mexicali Tijuana
9
11
Plastic 14
Tecate Rosarito
Services
37
8
40
24
Coatings and Finishes
Coordinators
Chemical Products
Rodrigo Caballero. Jorge Figueroa.
Transport
SATELITE LAUNCH
What we do, we do openly so that anyone can use it in their products, whether for commercial purposes or not. That’s not of concern to us. - David Cuartielles.
U
nder the coordination of Eduardo Guizar from NASA, the group Jovenes de Baja
California Unidos en el Espacio 71 (Baja California Youth United in Space 71), made up of students from the Universidad Iberoamericana, the Universidad Autónoma de Baja California, the Centro de Capacitación #6 and the Politécnico de Baja California, launched two nanosatellites into space: “Cimarrón Sat 1” and “Lobo Sat 1”. Coordinator Eduardo Guízar, NASA.
109
INNOVAMODA
Coordinators Esperanza Collin. Ana Gurría. Claudia Muñoz. Jefte Padilla.
110
Designers Ximena Valero, Louis Verdad, Ermedel GarcĂa, Daniela Villa and Llenuel.
111
THE NATIONAL LOTTERY
...Tijuana is considered one of the most important cities in the world; it is a city that has witnessed a positive and transcendental change, to become a place filled with life and progress; this is reflected in projects such as Tijuana Innovadora, in which we are proud to participate. - G贸mez Moreno.
Coordinator Jaye Galicot.
112
MEDITATION FOR PEACE
There is something that is as necessary as our daily bread, and it is our daily peace; the peace without which even our bread tastes bitter. - Amado Nervo.
Honorable GurĂş Javier Ferrara.
Coordinator Esteban Camacho.
113
MOSAICO TIJUANA
(Tijuana Mosaic)
Safety Ecology Public Spaces Employment Development Mobility Education Civic participation Culture Didn’t respond Content with things as they are Economy Reputation Didn’t propose anything
A Tijuana Innovadora research project carried
Technology
out with support from Maria Luz Bravo and
Migration
Yo Propongo.
Health Sports and Recreation
1. Process of civic participation: Tijuana Innovadora sought to learn what worries Tijuana residents about their city and how these things can be remedied. 2. Video: Thirty-two Tijuana residents, who were born in other states, share why the stayed in Tijuana. 3. Photos: An aesthetic approach by photographers to document these immigrants. Photography Carmela Castrejón. Roberto Córdoba-Leyva. Angélica Escoto. Luis García. Jofras. Itzel Martínez. David Maung. Julio Orozco.
114
PA’ BAILAR TIJUANA (Let’s dance Tijuana)
I am Netzahualcoyotl, I am the singer, I am the parrot with the great head. Take your flowers and your fan, and dance with them! - Nezahualcóyotl.
¡La Ciudad Despierta! (The City Awakes!) The musical group La Ballena de Jonás and the Lux Boreal dance company, respective creators of the song and the dance.
Coordinators Eunice Sandoval. Henry Torres.
115
STATEGIC DESIGN PAVILION
Ten or eleven years ago, we had 1500 factories in Tijuana with 25,000 employees. Now, only 22 of these remain, and we want to see them flourish once again. - Ivรกn Ilko, Furniture Cluster.
Coordinator Alma Bejarano.
116
PEDALING TOWARD GREATNESS
With the necessary discipline, it is very easy to achieve success. - Raúl Alcalá.
Coordinators Alfredo Pérez. César Pérez.
117
CULTURAL PROGRAM
Expositions
Cultural Kiosk
Materia de Deseo (Matter of Desire), by Xawery
Guitar and Bass Duo, Péndulo Cero. Norma Na-
Wolsky. La Línea (The Line), by Francisco
varrete and Aiko Yamada. Briz’s Latin Jazz Band:
Toledo. Trascendencia y Vanguardia desde
Jazz LatinoRay. Hozé Melendéz, Judy Garland.
Tijuana (Transcendence and Vanguard from
Lux Boreal. La Ballena de Jonás, Colin McAllister.
Tijuana), by Benjamín Serrano.
Subterráneo Danza Contemporánea. Trio Elixir Solar. Proyecto Lizárraga. Tijuana Camareta.
Coordinator Virgilio Muñoz.
118
Cinema
Luna Azul. SAOKO. Jorge López and Rubén Her-
Metropolis, by Fritz Lang. 2001: A Space
nández. Pavlova Dance Company, Madame Ur
Odyssey, by Stanley Kubrick. Modern Times
y sus Hombres. Luna Clásica. Jorge Villalobos
by Charlie Chaplin. Las Buenas Hierbas (The
and Friends, Ticos Big Band. Lorena Villaseñor
Good Herbs) by invited guest, María Novaro.
and Francisco Guerrero. Soprano Trio Concerto
Chalán and La Sirga, by invited guest, Edgar
Recital. Grupo Ecléctica. Corazón de Piedra Ver-
San Juan.
de. Ticuán Dance Company. Ópera Ambulante (Traveling Opera) with the Mariachi Águila.
POSTAL STAMP
We want people to talk about Tijuana and to speak well of it! We thank the Mexican Postal Service, Correos de MĂŠxico, for having responded to our request and shown us their support and solidarity for the issuance of this stamp!
In acknowledgement of the cities and architectural icons of Mexico, the Mexican Postal Service is issuing a special postal stamp, Grandezas de Mexico: Tijuana Coordinator
- SPM, Correos de MĂŠxico.
Jaye Galicot.
119
BINATIONAL REGION
33.6 million United States residents are of Mexican origin. - 2011 American Community Survey.
120
Tijuana-San Diego is the largest metropolitan area in the world, situated in two countries, with a total population of 4.7 million. - San Diego Chamber of Commerce / INEGI 2010 Regional.
We created the Binational committee to enrich and strengthen our binational, crossborder and intercultural relationships. Did you know that 53 million Hispanics live in the United States? We love you, Paisanos! Come join us as we prepare for Tijuana Innovadora 2014: We’re linking ideas, and we’re building realities. The Diaspora!
Coordinator Tatiana Martínez. Laura Araujo.
121
CLOSING CEREMONY
T
he 2012 Closing Ceremony was a mandate from TI 2010. After Pa’Bailar Tijuana, the pub-
lic in attendance called for an event that would allow the people of Tijuana and visitors alike to continue celebrating our city. We prepared a program with Hernán del Riego that would include a performance of Tijuana’s DO RE MI Comunidad youth orchestra together with the Baja California Orchestra under the direction of Garcia Barrios, plus a review of our most popular events, performances by Azul Monraz, Effectronix, Pa’Bailar Tijuana with Lux Boreal, and La Ballena de Jonas, a message from our founder, Jose Galicot, and as our finale, performances by Nortec, Bostitch & Fussible; all of them, proudly, Tijuana artists.
122
Sí se puede... - José Galicot.
Coordinators Jorge Izquierdo. Hernán del Riego.
123
STAFF 18 permanent and temporary
22
Gastronomic pavilion and closing ceremony participants
Workshop attendees
14,800
104
Attendees via School Tours
198,561
Suppliers
Culinary Battle, Expo, and Master Class Attendees.
2,050
3,000 Participants in Pedaling Toward Greatness
Pa Bailar Tijuana (rehearsal and event)
14,900
Public Art Participants
300,000 18,766
Closing Ceremony Activities
228 96 70 Committee meetings
Wednesday Plenary meetings
Binational meetings
Over
300 Conference speakers invited
Collective Canvas/Cardinal 5/City Speaks projects
Mosaic Tijuana
7,000 (surveys)
Innovamoda Attendees
1,200
Pavilion Antendance
501,477
Esplanade Cultural Program Attendees
Dinner Attendees
1,400
18,500 Caesar Guiness Attendees
2,480
124
National Lottery Presentation Attendees
800 200,000 TI Postal Stamps Issued
Meditation for Peace Participants
346 Binational Region Events (Terrace)
1,386
Satellite Launch
700
873
Fighting Breast Cancer
700 43
Purchasing businesses, Business Encounter
Xolos Soccer Match Spectators
84,000
Attendance for Individual Events
80
SD Press Conference
300
Mexico City Press Conference
Tijuana Press Conference
380
SAN DIEGO
Media reps
250
Agora attendees
9,600
2,591
Small/Medium businesses making offers
506
127 60 3 Participating Models
Castings for Models
Media Placement
September 2012/November 2012 Mentions Generated
5,816 Metropolitan Strategic Development Plan
100
Matches
Innovamoda
Event Banners in
985 350
Time Capsule
Business Encounter
Agents of Change events
5,500 Inauguration
70
Press conferences during the event
Accredited Mexican and foreign journalists
255
Workshop facilitators
Workshops provided
105 169
Furniture Cluster Fair
11,200 125
A NATIONAL
ROLE MODEL Mexicali
Sacramento
Rosarito
Ensenada
W
hen facing crisis situations, as hu-
Comarca Lagunera
man beings, we can react in dif-
ferent manners. The incredible value of
Culiacรกn
the Tijuana Innovadora Movement lies in the fact that diverse areas of society, with distinct individual interests, joined collectively to discover the power of supportive nexus for the greater common good. In its infancy, the Movement had to learn and
La Paz
demonstrate its congruency, and much as a rolling snowball, it gradually began to grow, strengthened by the outspoken, native, migrant, diverse and exceptional community that is Tijuana.
Mazatlรกn
Los Cabos
126
Puerto Vallarta
El Paso
Washington
Oviedo
Cd. Juárez
Chihuahua
Various cities have approached us to get an understanding and grasp of Tijuana Innovadora’s know-how, and in Distrito Federal Poza Rica
an exercise of humility, commitment, congruence, philanthropy and love for our country, we have shared and continue to share – what we’ve learned with our fellow citizens. In this process, we’ve shared the message of
Cd. Nezahualcóyotl
our city and made many new friends; the most precious part of our journey. We thank you for your trust. Here is a small sampling... Distrito Federal
Cuernavaca
Morelia
127
I’M A
TIJUANA LOCAL WHO WAS BORN IN______
Alejandro Ramírez Cinépolis 128
129
SD/TJ
STRONGER TOGETHER 130
PRESS CONFERENCES SAN DIEGO
131
MEXICO CITY
132
TIJUANA
133
TIJUANA
INNOVADORA
134
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Gritarán Lotería en Palacio Municipal.
Instalarán pabellón MiPyme en TI2012.
Realizan sorteo de lotería nacional en conmemoración a EnTi.
Fuente: Ciudad Tijuana.
Fecha: 12/03/12.
Autor: Redacción. Género: Comunicado de prensa. Tema: Mipymes. Tendencia: Positiva. Sección: General. Hora: 00:00:00 Duración: 00:00:00
Página: Portal. Comunicado: Sí. Costo: 4400 No. LINK Impactos:
Fuente: Uniradio. Autor: Redacción. Género: Comunicado de prensa. Tema: Sorteo. Sección: Noticias.
Fecha: 09/10/12. Página: Portal. Costo: 4000. Tendencia: Positiva. LINK
Fuente: Ciudad Tijuana. Autor: Redacción. Género: Comunicado de prensa. Tema: Sorteo EnTi Sección: General.
Fecha: 07/10/12. Página: Portal. Costo: 3500. Tendencia: Positiva. LINK
Comentarios: se realizará mañana (martes) a las 18:00 horas, en Palacio Municipal, aunque las puertas abrirán a las 16:30 horas; cabe destacar que los boletos de este magno sorteo llevan impreso el logo de "Tijuana Innovadora"
MEDIA
Comentarios: La SE instalará un pabellón Mipymes en Tijuana Innovadora 2012.
Comentarios: Debido a la trascendencia de este evento, la LN llevará a cabo el sorteo como parte de las actividades del EnTI 2012.
Notas por medios San Diego
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San Diego Source > News > Tijuana plans conference to boost biz
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NEWS | SAN DIEGO
Tijuana plans conference to boost biz By TIERNEY PLUMB, The Daily Transcript Thursday, August 16, 2012 Article
Comments
San Diegans are invited to Tijuana’s massive-sized housewarming party this fall to potentially open up lines of business, culture and communication. Tijuana Innovadora, which will take place Oct. 11 to 21, aims to educate San Diegans and the world about what Tijuana has to offer. The event showcases innovation occurring in the region in such industries as automotive, aerospace, clean tech, electronics and medical devices, as well as strategic design, mass media and cinematography. Only 9 percent of San Diegans currently think Tijuana is important for them, and conference founder Jose Galicot wants to raise that figure. “This is not a tourist program,” he said. “We want two neighbors to know each other.” Some of the best minds in the world will flock south of the border to shed a light on Tijuana's leading — yet widely unknown — role in manufacturing and exporting. Confirmed speakers include Steve Wozniak, co-founder of Apple Inc. (Nasdaq: AAPL); entrepreneur Blake Mycoskie of Toms Shoes; Nobel laureate Ada Yonath; Richard Florida, bestselling author; and Emilio Azcárraga, who heads the largest media network in Latin America. Galicot gave an overview of the event at a press conference Aug. 14 at the Mingei Museum.
RELATED SPECIAL REPORTS International Business
“The first time we did it we were trying to make a noise so people will look around and see what is happening in Tijuana,” he said, referring to the inaugural Tijuana Innovadora held in 2010. This time, he said, planners are bringing in more educators, engineers, architects and artists from all over the world. Other notable expected attendees include New Delhi powerhouse Anand Mahindra, who heads 100 companies; Philippe Cousteau Jr., grandson of undersea explorer Jacques Cousteau; and Earl Anthony Wayne, the U.S. ambassador to Mexico. A goal is to educate outsiders on what Tijuana is doing and making in its factories every day, ranging from TVs to telecommunications equipment for airports and astronauts to heart pacemakers. “Tijuana is exporting $85 million a day in technology. We have 50 years of quality products that we make for the world,” Galicot said. Tickets cost $35 for a half day, including keynote addresses and panels, or $70 for a full day. The event also includes an expo to showcase small businesses on both sides of the border, as well as dozens of workshops. Planners are expecting about 50,000 Americans to attend, with an additional 5,000 from other countries. When the conference was last held in 2010, there were about 30,000 people north of the border who attended, according to event organizers. Round-trip transit to and from San Diego is being offered for $15. Starting Sept. 1, downtown San Diego will be sprinkled with banners publicizing the event. There will be about 80 banners in the Gaslamp area, including along Market Street. The San Diego region has 3 million people, compared to Tijuana’s 2 million. “We have more engineers in Tijuana than in San Diego. We can make a difference together and create more businesses and more ideas,” Galicot said. He said 2,000 volunteers are on board to help orchestrate the event and drive down costs. The event will also highlight Tijuana’s fashion industry, with an international “InnovaModa” fashion show Oct. 14. Locally-based designers will include Louis Verdad, who has designed for Madonna and other entertainers, and Ximena Valero, who once designed for Victoria’s Secret. Chefs from Tijuana and San Diego, including Food Network star and San Diego resident Marcela Valladolid, will whip up their best dishes during a culinary battle Oct. 13 at the Tijuana Grand Hotel. Leave Your Comment Name: E-mail: Comment: 1000 char. max.
http://www.sddt.com/news/article.cfm?SourceCode=20120816czd&_t=Tijuana+plans+conf... 9/4/2012
San Diego Source > News > Tijuana plans conference to boost biz
Page 1 of 2
Enter Keywords or SourceCode Tuesday, September 4, 2012
Follow Us:
Subscribe | Log In
NEWS | SAN DIEGO
Tijuana plans conference to boost biz By TIERNEY PLUMB, The Daily Transcript Thursday, August 16, 2012 Article
Comments
San Diegans are invited to Tijuana’s massive-sized housewarming party this fall to potentially open up lines of business, culture and communication. Tijuana Innovadora, which will take place Oct. 11 to 21, aims to educate San Diegans and the world about what Tijuana has to offer. The event showcases innovation occurring in the region in such industries as automotive, aerospace, clean tech, electronics and medical devices, as well as strategic design, mass media and cinematography. Only 9 percent of San Diegans currently think Tijuana is important for them, and conference founder Jose Galicot wants to raise that figure. “This is not a tourist program,” he said. “We want two neighbors to know each other.” Some of the best minds in the world will flock south of the border to shed a light on Tijuana's leading — yet widely unknown — role in manufacturing and exporting. Confirmed speakers include Steve Wozniak, co-founder of Apple Inc. (Nasdaq: AAPL); entrepreneur Blake Mycoskie of Toms Shoes; Nobel laureate Ada Yonath; Richard Florida, bestselling author; and Emilio Azcárraga, who heads the largest media network in Latin America. Galicot gave an overview of the event at a press conference Aug. 14 at the Mingei Museum.
RELATED SPECIAL REPORTS International Business
“The first time we did it we were trying to make a noise so people will look around and see what is happening in Tijuana,” he said, referring to the inaugural Tijuana Innovadora held in 2010. This time, he said, planners are bringing in more educators, engineers, architects and artists from all over the world. Other notable expected attendees include New Delhi powerhouse Anand Mahindra, who heads 100 companies; Philippe Cousteau Jr., grandson of undersea explorer Jacques Cousteau; and Earl Anthony Wayne, the U.S. ambassador to Mexico. A goal is to educate outsiders on what Tijuana is doing and making in its factories every day, ranging from TVs to telecommunications equipment for airports and astronauts to heart pacemakers. “Tijuana is exporting $85 million a day in technology. We have 50 years of quality products that we make for the world,” Galicot said. Tickets cost $35 for a half day, including keynote addresses and panels, or $70 for a full day. The event also includes an expo to showcase small businesses on both sides of the border, as well as dozens of workshops. Planners are expecting about 50,000 Americans to attend, with an additional 5,000 from other countries. When the conference was last held in 2010, there were about 30,000 people north of the border who attended, according to event organizers. Round-trip transit to and from San Diego is being offered for $15. Starting Sept. 1, downtown San Diego will be sprinkled with banners publicizing the event. There will be about 80 banners in the Gaslamp area, including along Market Street. The San Diego region has 3 million people, compared to Tijuana’s 2 million. “We have more engineers in Tijuana than in San Diego. We can make a difference together and create more businesses and more ideas,” Galicot said. He said 2,000 volunteers are on board to help orchestrate the event and drive down costs. The event will also highlight Tijuana’s fashion industry, with an international “InnovaModa” fashion show Oct. 14. Locally-based designers will include Louis Verdad, who has designed for Madonna and other entertainers, and Ximena Valero, who once designed for Victoria’s Secret. Chefs from Tijuana and San Diego, including Food Network star and San Diego resident Marcela Valladolid, will whip up their best dishes during a culinary battle Oct. 13 at the Tijuana Grand Hotel. Leave Your Comment Name: E-mail: Comment: 1000 char. max.
http://www.sddt.com/news/article.cfm?SourceCode=20120816czd&_t=Tijuana+plans+conf... 9/4/2012
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WEB AND SOCIAL NETWORKS • Access to 71,818 distinct users
• 123,524 visits lasting 5:15 minutes on average
• 605,454 screen impressions
COUNTRIES
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Currently has 47,004 Likes
Cities
Insta
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TIJUANA INNOVADORA
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COLLECTIVE
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ART IN INDUSTRY
I am greatly pleased and honored that this is happening in my factory; it brings us closer to art, to culture, even if just a little... thank you...and more so due to the magnitude of the artist, who reflects feelings of love and glory for Mexico - Adriana Lujan, worker. Coordinator. Eduardo GurrĂa 142
TIJUANIZANDO (TIJUANIZING) MEXICO
As we launched our use of the word #Tijuanizando,
we
were
looking
to
orchestrate an imaginary intervention of sorts to neutralize and even counter the use it had been given in the media, seeking to give it a nuance relating to culture, space, habits, and forms of interacting, creating and innovating.
Production. Claudia Basurto
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CASA DE LAS IDEAS (THE HOUSE OF IDEAS)
To act is to add something of our own to the world. - Simone de Beauvoir.
We believe in the power of art and culture as a instrument to promote creative and innovative thinking, and as part of the prevention process. We seek to strengthen peaceful coexistence through activities, workshops and laboratories relating to innovative vocations, all for the children, youth and adults of Camino Verde and its surrounding neighborhoods that allow us this privilege.
Architects. Adriana Cuellar y Marcel Sรกnchez Director. Francisco Orozco 144
DONATION OF PUBLIC ART
El Histri贸n (The Histrion), CECUT. Artist: Jack Winer
For the love of Tijuana - Jos茅 Galicot.
Sitio de Seguridad 2 (Safe Space 2), El Trompo. Artist: Daniel Ruanova
145
RECYCLING It is a question of discipline,” the Little Prince said to me later on. “When you’ve finished cleaning up in the morning, then it is time to attend to your planet, just so, with the greatest care - Antoine de Sain Exupery (paraphrased).
146
TIME CAPSULE
2034
We can’t change the world as much as we want, but we can give it a few touches. - Emmeline Pankhurst.
Coordinator: Jack Winer 147
PROJECT MANAGERS
Laura Araujo. Pablo Barragán. Claudia Basurto. Antonieta Beguerisse. Alma Bejarano. Rodrigo Caballero. Esteban Camacho. Emmanuel Campillo. Raúl Cárdenas. Carlos Carrillo. Liliana Castellanos. René Castillo. Esperanza Collins. Eunice Contreras. Olga Margarita Dávila. Joe daRosa. Carlos de la Parra. Margara de León. Hernán del Riego. Hernando Durán. Adriana Eguia. Javier Espinoza. Jorge Figueroa. Andrea Flores. Jaye Galicot. Luis Garzón. Miguel Gracia. Eduardo Guízar. Ana Gurría. Eduardo Gurría. 148
W
e’ve talked about how Tijuana Innova-
The project managers are specialists in the
A small number of them are part of the
dora’s most significant efforts, greatest
areas of responsibility that they assumed
staff, but the vast majority of them are
examples and sources of pride have been
and in which the presented proposals.
professionals with ongoing responsibilities
evidenced through the volunteer work of many
They provided suggestions pertaining to
in other organizations, who find the time to
individuals that took on the responsibilities of
speakers, workshops and projects to for
support and promote their city. Many thanks
planning and implementing the Tijuana In-
design and execution and evaluated the
to all of them!
novadora 2012 program.
Tijuana
Innovadora
Activities
Program.
Illya Haro. Patricia Hernández. Jorge Izquierdo. Enrique Jiménez “Ejival”. Rafael Liceaga. Javier López. Gastón Luken. Gilberto Macías. Miguel Marshall. Tatiana Martínez. Ana Martínez. Maribel Moreno. Claudia Muñoz. Virgilio Muñoz. Rodrigo Pacheco. Jefte Padilla. Alfredo Pérez. César Pérez. Magnolia Pineda. Gaby Posada. Cynthya Rodriguez. Antonio Rodríguez. Gabriela Roldán. Guillermo Romero. Patricia Saharagui Ruiz. Eduardo Salcedo. Paty San Román. Alejandra Santos. Kathy Silva. Henry Torres. Hector Uraga. Jack Winer. 149
150
STAFF AND VOLUNTEERS
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152
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AGRADECIMIENTOS / ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Asesores / Advisers: Jacobo Ackerman. / Volunteer Organizer. Laura Araujo Patro- Axis. Cuatro Comunicación. Morzan. Red Corp
Eckaterine Hernández. Edgar Gómez. Edgar
Antonieta Beguerisse. Jeffrey Davidow. Her- cinios / Sponsorships: Liliana Castellanos. Alliances. TDM. Tips Marketing. Producciones Rentería. Edlin Zaragoza. Eduardo Reyes. nando Durán. Mario García. Eduardo Gurría.
Talleres / Workshops: Patricia Hernández. Vanguardia. Zimat Consultores.
José Ángel Gurría. Kurt Honold. Humberto Casa de las Ideas: Francisco Orozco.
Eduardo Cecilio. Elba Hernández. Elba Rivera. Elizabeth García. Elsa Ayala. Emmy Ma-
Jaramillo. Jorge Kuri. José M. Larroque. Luis
Jóvenes Voluntarios / Youth Volun- rrón. Erandi García. Erica Ávila. Erick Aguayo.
López Moctezuma. Gastón Luken. Gastón Staff y Voluntarios staff / Staff and
teers: Aarón DelaCruz. Abigail Meza. Ada Erick Fraile. Erik Zepeda. Erik Cuevas. Erika
Luken Garza. Adrián Michel. Virgilio Muñoz. staff volunteers: Alma Ruiz. Beatriz Váz- Melina. Adán Negrete. Adrián Estrada. Adrián Oliva. Ernesto Preciado. Ernesto Zepeda. Liébano Sáenz. Manuel Sandoval.
quez. Carlos Martínez. Carlos Mercado. Clau- Murray. Adrián Vázquez. Adriana García. Ernesto Gus. Esmeralda Ahumada. Eva dia Morales. Debbie Vieyra. Dennise Apodaca. Adriana Rivera. Agustín Guerra. Alan del Saavedra. Evelyn Sánchez. Evelyn Jazmín.
Organismos / Advisory Organizations
Elda Rodríguez. Frank Sauz. Gabriela Flores. Callejo. Alejandra Jocelyn Rodríguez. Ale- Uscanga Hernández. Evymareth Gutiérrez.
and Cabinet: AIM. AIMO. ARHITAC. CANACIN- Ismael Benítez. Juan Zamudio. Laurence jandra Valeria Pulido. Alejandro Figueroa. Ezequiel Medina. Felipe Borbón. Fernanda TRA. CANACO. CANIRAC. CANIETI. CCE. CDT. CE- García. Luisa Alvarez. Lyzeth Jiménez. Ma- Alejandro Carvajal. Alejandro Figueroa. Ayala. Fernando Santiago. Francisco MalaCUT. CIRT. CMIC. COLEF. COTUCO. COPARMEX. riana Bernal. Marla Guzmán. Marlon Vázquez Alejandro Martínez. Alejandro Montenegro. gón. Francisco Altamirano. Francisco SanDEITAC. OCDE. SCT. SECTURE. SEGOB. SRE. Nayeli Castañeda. Osvaldo Guzmán. Paola
Alexandra Moreno. Alexandra Lara. Alexia doval. Francisco Casique. Franzia Armenta.
SE. PEMEX. ProMéxico. SEDESOL. SENER. SEP.
Fuentes. Perla Montes. Salvador Valera. Ser- Kerim. Alexis Recoba. Alfonso González . Fredy Medina. Frida Ruiz. Gabriel Decena.
SALUD. SECTUR. /
gio Ramírez. Sofía Márquez. Ulises Sandoval. Alicia Sánchez. Alma Gabriela Aréchiga. Gabriela Mejía. Gabriela Páramo. GabrieAna Trejo Félix. Ana Jazmín Terán. Ana Karen la Rodríguez. Gabriela Salcedo. Gabriela
Yesica Morfin. Zahira Alcántar. Asesores Binacional / Binational Advi-
De la Cruz. Ana Karen Esparza. Ana Karen
sors: James Clark. US-México Business Cen- Equipo Binacional / Binational Team:
Palomino. Ana Karina Sánchez. Ana María Georgina Castro. Geovanni Silva. Gerardo
ter. Remedios Gómez-Arnau. Consulado de Laura Araujo. Alan Bautista. Mayra Carbajal.
Ortiz. Ana Paulina Díaz. Ana Yessica Pérez. Guajardo. Gerardo Gutiérrez. Gerardo Jara-
México en San Diego. Pely Guevara. Red Corp
Toscano. Galilea Zaillo. Gemma Guereña.
Aída García. Pely Guevara. Viviana Ibáñez. Analí Yuriria Garibaldi. Anallily Arce Galván. millo. Gerardo Simental. Gerardo Hurtado.
Alliances. Viviana Ibánez. Otay Mesa Chamber Mario López. Tatiana Martínez. Flavio Olivieri. Andrea Rosas. Andrea Guadalupe Farías. Giovanni Marin. Gladis López. Gladys Martíof Commerce. Yolanda Ingle. USD. Mary Lydon. Genaro Valladolid.
Andrés Padilla. Anette Ornelas. Ángel Velas- nez. Grecia Ruiz. Greta Paz. Guendolín Ga-
Urban Land Institute. Nancy Nicholson. WTC.
co. Ángel J. Acereto. Ángela M. Cortés. Annel mino. Guillermo Díaz. Guillermo Zulbarán.
Johanna Saretzki. Mingei Museum. Charles
Conductores / Presenters: Alejandra
L. González. Ansony J. Vázquez. Antonio Guillermo Ledesma. Gustavo Aguayo. Héc-
Shapiro. Instituto de las Américas. David Shrik. Gaxiola. Ana Velia Guzmán. Christian Oroz- Martínez. Antonio Tapia. Antonio Rodríguez. tor Gallegos. Héctor Lizárraga. Héctor Yánez. ICF. Rob Sidner. Mingei Museum. Héctor Vane- co. Claudia Chavero. Fernanda López Trevi- Areli N. Fuentes. Ariel Acosta. Arturo Mijan- Héctor López. Héctor Rafael. Hikosuke León. gas. SANDAG. Roxana Velázquez. San Diego ño. Gerardo Marín “Jerryboy”. Javier Rentería. Museum of Art. Mary Walshok. UCSD
gos. Aszhamel Chávez. Aurelia Ruiz. Ayrebi Hilda Martínez. Iliana Carapia. Iram Vargas.
José Ibarra Amador. Karina Muñoz. Manuel Cuanalo. Azucena Flores. Beatriz Torres. Irene Jiménez. Irlanda Gil. Isabel Frausto. Chavarín. Martha Antillón. Nelly Sanoja. Pablo Beatriz López. Beatriz Urquidez. Bernardo Isabel López. Isael Machado. Isai Castillo.
Consejo Directivo / Board of Direc- Barragán. Patricia Valay. Tatiana Martínez.
Ramírez. Bibiana Barrutia. Blanca Suárez. Isaura Lara. Isis Jazmín Castillo. Israel Gar-
tors: Presidente / President: José Galicot.
Brenda Hernández. Brenda Valdés. Brenda cía. Israel López. Israel López. Itzel Zamu-
Coordinador Ejecutivo / Executive Coordi- Fotografías: Claudia Basurto. Claudian
Rodríguez. Brenda Coral Vargas. Brenda
nator: Jaime González Luna. Miembros del Contreras.
Raymundo
Jaime.
dio. Ivonne Apolo. Jacqueline Rocha. Jared
Eduardo González. Brenda García. Brenda Zavala. Pardo. Javier Prado. Javier Soto. Javier Pérez.
Consejo / Board Members: Claudia Basurto. Jaramillo. Antonio Leyva. Omar Martínez. Brian Alatriste. Brianda Herrera. Bryan Cas- Jenifer Ramírez. Jessica Martínez. Jessica Jaye Galicot. Alejandra Santos. Jack Winer. Gabriela Valay. Reporteros: Juan Carlos
tillo. Carla Peña. Carlos Arguello. Carlos Ca- Ramírez. Jessica Villanueva. Jessica San-
Programación / Programming: Claudia Ba- Domínguez. Manuel Rosales.
bada. Carlos Guevara. Carlos Gómez. Carlos doval. Jessica Iribe. Jesús López. Jesús
surto. Jaye Galicot. Gestores. Ejecutivo de
Jiménez. Carlos Martínez. Carlos Espinoza.
Escobar. Jesús Alba. Jonathan Gutiérrez.
Programa / Programme Manager: Antonio Comunicación / Communication: Ro- Carlos Madrigal. Carlos Acosta. Carmen
Joaquín Sapiens. Joaquín Cordero. Jocelyn
Rodríguez. Director de Proyecto / Project Di- drigo Bustamante. Roberto Clemente. Oscar Quiroz. Carolina Bojórquez. Carolina Carva- Sepin. Jocelyne Avilés. Joel Valenzuela. Joel rector: Jorge Izquierdo. Tesorería / Treasurer: Ciares. Oscar Hernández. René Sánchez jal. Carolina Padilla. Carolina Díaz. Celeste Ramos. Joel Velázquez. Joel Sicairos. JorFIC: Antonieta Beguerisse. Ana Reyes. Jurí- Hernández. Jennifer Rocha Galván. Aída Gar- Díaz. César García. Christian Ramírez. Chris- dy Lugo. Jorge Espejel. Jorge Flores. Jorge dico / Legal Affairs: Mariona López. Karina
cía. Alejandra Santos. Edwin Sosa. Roberto tian Avila. Christofer Regalado. Christopher Mendoza. Jorge Flores. Jorge Luis Arámbu-
Morales. Directora de Proyectos Especiales Salazar. Publicidad e Imagen / Advertising Vara. Cindy Palma. Claudia Pierce. Claudia ro. Jorge Sandoval. José Alejandro Martínez. / Special Projects Director: Claudia Basurto.
and Image: Tomás Perrín (Director). Verónica Velázquez. Claudia Soto. Clementina Flo- José Andrés Gutiérrez. José Antonio Albino.
Prensa / Press: Alejandra Santos (México)
Cabrera. Alma González. Michel A. Mendo- res. Cotty. Fernández. Cristian Pérez. Cris- José Antonio Cristina. José Carlos Valencia.
Aída García (EU). Enlace y Relaciones Pú- za. Mariel Mora. Rogelio Treviño. Iván Vega. tina Ruiz. Cynthia Ballesteros. Daniel Vieyra. José Carlos Gómez. José Elías Muñoz. José blicas / Public Relations and Liaison: Su- Redacción y Guiones / Writing and Scripts: Daniel Soltero. Daniela Páramo. Daniela sana Orozco. Coordinador de Conducción
Guadalupe Rivemar. Diseño / Design: Erwin
F. Solís. José Iván Sandoval. José Luis Ana-
Rangel. Daniela Sánchez. Danilo Fernán- ya. José Luis Carreto. José Manuel Chavolla.
/ Presenters Organizer: Pablo Barragán. Carrillo. Ana Muradás. Mario Rubio.
dez. Danna Hernández. Darius Torres. Da- José Manuel Gil. José Miguel Martínez. José
Operaciones y Logística: Jorge Garza. Je-
vid García. David García Pérez. David Arre- Raymundo Ayala. Jocelyn Medina. Joshua
sús Dávalos. Binacional / Binational Affairs
Proveedores y Empresas de Apo- dondo. David Amarillas. David Hernández. Aranda. Josué Cuevas. Juan Alberto Solís.
Organizer: Tatiana Martínez. Atención al yo de Tiempo Completo / Full Time
Denise Calette. Denisse Camarena. Diana
Juan Antonio López. Juan Arturo Fuentes.
Visitante / Guest Services: Emma Cruz. suppliers and supporting Companies: Avilés. Diana Chaídez. Diana A. Briseño. Dia- Juan Carlos Pino. Juan Luis Mora. Juan Pabellones / Pavilions: Jack Winer. Javier Álvaro Ávila. José Avelar. Roberto Karlo. Rodri- na Vásquez. Diana Vázquez. Diego Solorio. M. Benítez. Juan Miguel Hernández. Juan Espinoza. Patricia Hernández. Voluntariado go Caballero. Román Sosa. Rubén González. Diego Mercado. Dora Iduarte. Dulce Cuevas.
154
P. Matías. Juan Ramón Guzmán. Judith
Duarte. Julio Cesar Anguiano. Julie Villalo- Rubén Palacios. Sajid Ochoa. Samantha Patrocinios Innovamoda / Innova- Bici. Playas NBC. Freitas. Rayos. Biker Soler. bos. Karen Hermosillo. Karen Macías. Karen Rodríguez. Samuel Macedo. Sandra Vargas. moda Sponsors: Antología. Blooming- Ladies Ride. Bici Boys. Baja Lobos Team. Peña. Karen Torres. Karina Basto. Karla Cor- Sandra Cerón. Sara Rubio. Sara Ortega. Sara dales. Cervecería Cuauhtemoc. Chef Diego
DJO Global Team. TKT MTB
zo. Karla Dávila. Karla López. Karla García. Infante. Sarah Aguilar. Saraí Solís. Saraí Za- González. Co Columbia. Eccole Accesorios. Karla Carranza. Kasandra Calderón. Kathe- vala. Saudy Alcántar. Saúl Green. Selene Elle Magazine. Gama Photography. Hotel rine Ibarra. Katia Patiño. Kenia Caracoza.
A. Manilla. Sergio Espinoza. Sergio Erick.
Cápsula del Tiempo / Time Capsule:
Palacio Azteca. L.A. Cetto. Miluke Colección. 1. Introducción. Breve Semblanza. 2.Memo-
Kenny Gómez. Kevin Lugo. Laura García. Shirley Blanco. Soraya Castrejón. Stepha- Nordstrom. Obesity Control Center. Oriflame ria Tijuana Innovadora 2010. 3.Plan EstratéLaura Jiménez. Laura García. Laura Barra- nia Rodríguez. Stephanie Estrada. Susana
Cosmetics. Pancake House. Pía Joyería. gico Metropolitano. 4.IMPLAN. Centro Históri-
gán. Laura Virgen. Leira Valencia. Leslie J. Espinoza. Susana García. Susana Cosío.
Landinis. T.G.I. Fridays. Tarango Boutique. co. 5.CIT. Paseo de la Fama. 6.CIT. Mosaico
Estrella. Lidia Chacón. Lidia González. Lidia
Tania Lizárraga. Tania Bravo. Thania Herrera. Tequila Cachanilla. Vitamine Water. Peina- de Tijuana. 7.Colección Tijuana Innovadora
Martínez. Ligia Luján. Lilia Covarrubias. Lilia
Teresa Martínez. Valeria Acosta. Valeria Mo- dos / Hairdo: Basilio Muñoz. Luis Almanza. 2010/2012. 8.CIT. El Alma de Tijuana. 9. El
Montijo. Lizeth González. Lizmaelyn Altuzar. rales. Vianey Bueno. Vicente Ramírez. Víc- Richard Cabral. Maquillaje / Make-up: Adria- Colef. Actualidad-Perspectivas 2042. 10.El Lourdes Alicia. Lucerito Zagal. Lucero Fave- tor Bernal. Víctor Americano. Víctor Castro. na Pichardo. Basilio Muñoz. Elvia Félix. GOC Colef en el tiempo. 11.Universidad Xochila. Lucía Hernández. Lucio Arredondo. Luis
Víctor Tolentino. Víctor Ramírez. Victoria Del
Vázquez. Luis Ángel Téllez. Luis A. Gutiérrez.
Castillo. Viridiana López. Wendy Canizález. Clay.Pro. Eccole Accesorios. Ziur Designs.
Luis Jiménez. Luis Macías. Luis Fajardo. Wendy Ortega. Yael Beltrán. Yessenia Flores. Luis Rivera. Luis Álvarez. Luis Jesús Vega.
Make up. Tec Italy. Accesorios / Accesories: calco. 12.Instituto Tecnológico de Tijuana. roamericana. 15.Cesun. 16.Diócesis de Ti-
Yiuliana Martínez. Zenón Cabrera.
Tony Barragán. Perfect Top Model.
juana. 17.Centro Israelita de Tijuana. 18.CIT.
Voluntarios / Professional volun-
Patrocinios Satélite / Satellite Spon-
Nuevo Cecut Remodelado. 20.USAID. Planes
sors: EATON. INFRA.
Maestros para la Prevención del Delito. 21.
Luis Julián Cruz. Luisa Fernanda López. Luisa M. López. Ma. Fernanda Guyot. Ma.
Película Imaginando Tijuana. 19.Cecut.
Fernanda Herrera. Magda Ruiz. Maira Gar- teers: Alejandra Luna. David Moreno. cía. Manuel Yuriar. Manuel Olivas. Marcela
13.CETYS Universidad. 14.Universidad Ibe-
Agencias de modelos / Modeling agency:
Nueva Puerta México. 22.Propuesta Ciuda-
Gabriel Ortiz Vega. Gerardo Mora. Jennifer
Huerta. Marcella Ruíz. Marco A. Martínez. Rocha. Leonardo Franco. Luisa Álvarez. Mar- Patrocinios Batalla Culinaria / Cu-
dana Diseño Urbano. 23.Situación Empre-
Marco A. Machuca. Marco A. Martínez. Mar- cela Mendoza. Mark Banks. Rosario Vázquez.
linary Battle Sponsors: Arballo vinos y sarial. 24.Tijuana Digital. 25.Tijuana Verde.
co A. Valderrábano. Marco A. Valencia. María
licores, Asombro Marketing, Cerveza fronte- 26.Sedesol. Camino Verde y Mi Comunidad.
Alejandra Gómez. María Betsabé Márquez. Apoyo en talleres / Workshops: Alber- ra, Club Gourmet, Cooking Choice, Culinary 27.XX Ayuntamiento. 28.Periódicos del 10 de María Concepción Rojas. María Félix Pérez. to Song Trujillo. Alma Bejarano. Ana Cecilia María Fernanda Nieves. María Guadalupe
Art School, El Sargazo, Grand Hotel Tijuana, diciembre del 2012.
de Anda. Azteca B.C. Bibiana Maciel. Carlos I Print - Chef Work, La canasta, Mision19,
Vega. María Isabel Molina. María José Ra- Carrillo. Carlos C. Apodaca. CESPT. Conalep
Mundo BRG, Secretaria de Turismo B C,
ygoza. Mariana Granados. Mariana Navarro.
B.C. Emmanuel Campillo. Ejival. FIC. Flavio Smart & Final, Studio Arsa, Telnor, ZECA
Mariana Sánchez. Maricela Parga. Marina
Olivieri. Gerardo Brizuela. Guillermo Rome-
Aguayo. Mario Delabra. Mario Rodríguez. ro. Héctor Uraga. Luis Castro. Marco A. Lepe.
DIFERENCIAS
Mosaico Tijuana: María Luz Bravo. Yo pro-
Mario Alberto Agüero. Mario Saúl Vargas. Ma- Márgara de León. Tony Robles. María Gonzá- pongo. Con el apoyo de Reacciona Tijuana. risol Romero. Marlene Rojo. Martha Valdez. lez. Maribel Moreno. Nina Pizá. Patricia Sa- Conapo. Sedesol. IMPLAN. Ayuntamiento de Martín Hernández. Martín Fernández. Marti- haragui. Ruiz René Castillo. Roxana Salcedo. Tijuana. Testimonios / Testimonies: Blanca na Zamoran. Martina Isabel Zamoran. Max
Televisa TJ. UCD. Wendy Montaño.
Dávalos. Ramón Aguirre. Roberto Blanco.
Izquierdo. Mayra Ortiz. Mayra Luna. Mayra
Mario Pavón. Nina Moreno. Paola Valencia.
Sánchez. Melina Gaxiola. Melina Leyva. Me- Agencias de modelos / Modeling
Juanita Ortiz. Max Mejía. Anita Hernández.
lissa Mora. Melissa Moreno. Melissa Flores. agencies: Class. Contempo Models. G.H. Rosa María Martínez. Rocío Gallardo. Ber- Memoria / Memoir: Idea Original y textos Melissa Carolina Sariñana. Melissa Esme- Management. Higher Model Management. ta Vivar. Alberto Licona. Teresa Riqué. Olga / Original Idea and writing: Claudia Basurto ralda Sariñana. Melissa García. Merari Soto.
Queta Rojas. Wanted Models. Modelos / Mo- Micaela de Sampedro. José Luis Ortiz. Jor- (claudiabasurto@me.com). Diseño / Design:
Miguel Ángel Ríos. Miguel Ángel Tolentino.
dels: Aileen García. Aliki Cosmidis. Andrea ge Bautista. Kevin y Ana Rosa Maldonado
Sergio Picos. Medicis Comunicación. Mayra
Mildred Cruz. Miriam Sánchez. Montserrat Hurtado. Blanca Iñiguez. Brisell Sánchez. Daniel Salinas. Nahum Hernández. Elías y Alejandra Luna. Ashelin Estrada. Voluntaria. Pérez. Nadia Ramírez. Nallely Mares. Nan- Candy Arballo. Dafne Anda. Dafne Fuer- Benjamín Sánchez. Said Rodríguez. Car- Traducción / Translation: Mark Banks. Mariona cy Grimaldi. Nancy N. Moreno. Nancy Pérez. te. Daniela Dominique. Daniela Gómez. men Padilla. Wendy Melisa Lugo. Raúl Cár- López. Gracias al apoyo de Susana Orozco y Natacha Yuriria. Natalia Inda. Nayeli Zepeda. Denisse Aldor. Elizabeth Alcántara. Ellen
denas. Gabriela Posada. Roberto Rosique. Alejandro González / Thanks Susana Orozco
Nayeli Torres. Nidia Arzola. Octavio Salcido. Drane. Eva Hernández. Fernanda Encinas. Mely González. Rómulo Sosa. Carlos Adolfo Omar Luna. Omar Velasco. Omar González. Grissel Osuna. Jimena de la Torre. Laura
Rosario. María Teresa Quijano. Adelaida del
Oscar Ceja. Osvaldo Loera. Pablo Naufal.
Real. Fotografía / Photography: Car-
Cárdenas. Lili Zamora. Madeline Martínez.
and Alejandro González for their help.
Paloma Luna. Paola Blanche. Jacobo Aviña. Marcela Gudiño. Mariana Castrillón. Maria- mela Castrejón. Roberto Córdoba-Leyva. Patricia Hernández. Perla Taboada. Perla na Muñoz. Marlis Grajeda. Myriam Valdez.
Angélica Escoto. Luis García. Jofras. Itzel
Juárez. Priscila Chávez. Priscila González.
Martínez. David Maung. Julio Orozco.
Nancy Moeller. Paulina Aseemat. Paulina
Rafael Fernández. Ramiro Ramos. Ramón Hernández. Paulina Kim. Rosela Ramírez. S. Borbón. Raúl Chavarría. Raúl Salas. Re- Shardell Lamas. Shennel Lamas. Sofía Pedaleando rumbo a la Grandeza / beca León. Ricardo Díaz. Ricardo González.
Aguay. Stephanie Escobar. Stephanie Ra- Pedaling toward greatness: Baja Bike
Ricardo Cuenca. Ricardo Omar. Rigoberto
mírez. Tania Cantú. Violeta Trujillo. Wendy Team. Enduro. Gct Team. Linces. Afferrados.
Domínguez. Rocío Sánchez. Rosario Vea.
Ruiz. Yolanda Guzmán.
MTB. Lobos Team, Bici Mart. OpBc. Otay en
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