Prefeitura Municipal de Campinas

Transcription

Prefeitura Municipal de Campinas
Campinas
Investment Guide
Indicators of Excellence
2010 edition
Campinas
to invest,
produce and live.
Brazil, a global investment target
Reasons to invest in Campinas
■A
privileged location
■ Logistics
■ Viracopos
■ Infrastructure
■ First-world
water and sanitation
■ State of the art health services
■ Business synergies
■ Human capital
■ Consumer market
■ Academic and technological center
■ A benchmark for public safety
■ Availability of real estate
■ Cosmopolitan vocation
■ Foreign presence
Campinas, a city where you live well
■ Tradition
in culture and sport
green city
■ Respect for the environment
■ A center for leisure and entertainment
■A
How to get started in Campinas
■ First
steps
incentives
■ Maps of Campinas
■ Contacts
■ Tax
Now is the best moment to invest
in Campinas
C
ampinas occupies a strategic location close to
São Paulo, the capital of Brazil’s most developed
state. It is now enjoying its best moment in
decades, in both economic and social terms. The city has
never been better prepared to receive new investments and
new businesses: here in Campinas, companies, investors
and entrepreneurs will find a city with enviable logistics:
1) The best and most modern highways;
2) The largest cargo airport in Latin America;
3) A rail network that connects with the port of Santos,
the most important in South America, and one of Brazil’s
most beautiful highways, with 100% of accessibility;
4) Within two years, Campinas will be linked to São Paulo by a High Speed Train. And come 2015, the same rail
line will run all the way to Rio de Janeiro, a journey of just
an hour and 40 minutes.
Other factors are helping make Campinas such a special
place. It is a technological center that the United Nations
has described as the second most important in the Southern Hemisphere - the first being São Paulo itself. More
than 400 of the 500 largest companies in the world are
present in Brazil, and 50 have offices in the Campinas metropolitan region.
The universities in Campinas are among the best in Brazil and it reflects directly in the supply of highly qualified
labor. Moreover, the city’s elementary and middle-level
schools enjoy national recognition for their teaching excellence.
A large number of technical and professional people living in the city speak English and Spanish and even other
languages such as Japanese and Mandarin. It reflects the
active presence of the best language schools, many of them
internationally recognized.
To complete the description of the city, Campinas offers
you a great standard of living. With over one million inhabitants, the city boasts varied commerce, large green areas
and innumerable facilities for leisure, sports and culture.
Sanitation levels are comparable to developed countries,
with close to 100% of homes and properties served by
sewage collection and treatment systems. The health network is among the best in Brazil. Surveillance cameras
and an electronic monitoring system cover the main areas, and the city has built a public security system that was
adopted as a benchmark by the federal government.
It is no coincidence that Campinas is today one of the 10
cities that most create jobs in Brazil. According to a study
by the Getúlio Vargas Foundation, a business school, excluding state capitals Campinas is the best place to work
in Brazil. Here, everything is conducive to good business,
both for the reasons I have already mentioned and for the
existence of a series of tax incentives offered by city authorities. On the following pages, readers of this guide will
find several other good reasons to invest in the city.
Welcome to Campinas, a city to invest, produce and live in.
Brazil, a target for global investment
B
razil represents an attractive investment option
in a world economy that is going through major
changes after the 2008 international financial
crisis. The country was less affected than most by the
impacts of crisis, thanks to its solid financial system, the
stable regulatory framework, the growing per capita income and the firmly established democracy and rule of
law. Imports and exports are very diversified, both in
terms of products and trading partners.
The country has the world’s eighth biggest GDP, and
the largest in Latin America. Brazil stands out among
the BRIC countries - the group of large emerging
nations that also includes Russia, India and China - as
an important supplier of raw materials and food, and
is on the way to becoming a major oil producer as it
develops the offshore sub-salt petroleum fields.
Other noteworthy factors now driving growth are access
to credit and the expansion of the labor market. These
have increased the purchasing power of the Brazilian
population. GDP is now projected to grow 7.3% in 2010.
More than 20 million people have emerged from
poverty to join the middle class in recent years, creating
a strong and vigorous domestic market. Management of
the national economy has followed orthodox policies for
a decade, and the country received Investment Grade
status from major international rating agencies in 2008.
Campinas has the Center for Bioethanol Technology
and Research, an outstanding resource in the global
search for cleaner and more efficient energy sources.
As part of its strategy to maintain its quality of life
and protect the environment, the city seeks to attract
companies that generate alternative energy. Some are
now in the process of moving to the city.
Brazil is one of the great players in the global economy,
and Campinas is the best destination for domestic and
foreign investments.
Growth and crisis
■
GDP - Ranking of the world’s largest
economies (in US$ billion)
In the last decade, growth of world GDP prior to
the crisis was explained by:
□ Globalization
□ Information
□ Technology
■ The crisis:
□ Reduced
financial wealth
□ Restricted
the supply of external credit
□ Diminished
■
the flow of foreign investment
In this scenario, Brazil’s prospects will be
influenced by:
□ The
sophistication and independence of its
financial system
■
2007
2008
2009
US$ billion
US$ billion
US$ billion
USA
14.077,65
14.441,43
14.258,25
Japan
4.376,19
4.885,99
5.073,45
China
3.458,31
4.415,99
4.908,98
Germany
3.323,36
3.668,83
3.353,23
France
2.593,94
2.863,49
2.676,30
UK
2.800,17
2.682,69
2.185,75
Italy
2.114,26
2.310,92
2.117,80
Brazil
1.366,29
1.637,92
1.531,51
Spain
1.440,82
1.600,10
1.464,25
Canada
1.427,20
1.499,55
1.343,16*
India
1.187,33
1.260,04
1.284,82*
Russia
1.294,05
1.660,01
1.229,15
Country
□ The
low degree of openness to trade
□ The
indicators of external and fiscal solvency
*Estimates
Source: Economist Intelligence Unit; Folha de S. Paulo newspaper
“Money” section, March 28, 2010
Campinas enjoys autonomous drivers for growth
based on:
□ Logistics
□ Technology
□ Generation
BRAZIL: second economy in the Americas in 2009
world ranking
of knowledge
□ Health
□
10th place ranking in 2007
Standard of living and a demanding, high-income
consumer market that ranks ninth in Brazil,
according to research by IPC Marketing.
9th place ranking in 2008
8th place ranking in 2009
GDP - US$ billion (2009) - Major world economies
14.000
14,3
12.000
10.000
8.000
6.000
4.000
5
4,9
3,4
2,7
2,2
2.000
0
USA
Japan China Germany France
*Estimates
Source: Economist Intelligence Unit
6
UK
2,1
Italy
1,5
1,4
Brazil
Spain
1,3
1,28
Canada* India*
1,2
Russia
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) - Countries in South America at 2008
current values - in US$ billion
1.613
1.600
1.200
1.000
800
600
400
314
242
200
0
16
17
32
53
Paraguay
Bolivia
Uruguay
Ecuador
127
Peru
Colombia
328
169
Chile
Venezuela Argentina
Brazil
Source: IMF
What’s driving Brazilian growth
Brazil occupies a leading position in Latin America
thanks to:
Its continental dimensions - Brazil is the fifth largest
country in the world, measuring 8.5 million square
kilometers and occupying 42% of Latin America and
50% of South America.
■
■ Its
location - counting the Guyanas, Brazil borders 10
countries.
Its economic strength - Brazil has the world’s 8th
largest GDP and the largest in the region (36% of all
Latin America and 55.31% of South America).
■
The business environment and the prevalence of the
democratic rule of law.
■
■ Population
- approximately 200 million inhabitants.
The strength of the economy can also be measured
by Brazil’s investments in other countries. Brazilian
companies like Vale, Petrobras, Embraer, Itautec,
Odebrecht and Ambev are already investing abroad, and
make Brazil the second largest outward investor among
developing nations.
Mergers and acquisitions involving Brazilian companies
continue to grow. It has become increasingly common for
Brazilian firms to acquire companies abroad. Expanding
consumption is the key driver - local industries are
setting successive production records - together with the
increasing availability of credit, the reduction of interest
rates throughout the year, the falling country risk and
the rising international reserves.
The continued development of capital markets has
stimulated investment by domestic companies. This
underscores the reliability of the Brazilian economy,
and the moment is propitious for investment and market
entry by multinational companies.
7
Business Competitiveness Ranking
2008 / Quality of the Business
Environment (South America)
Chile
Brazil is the best option for investment
in Latin America
■ Size
■ Inflation
1
Brazil
of the internal market
■ The
2
Colombia
growing purchasing power of the population
■ More
than 20 million Brazilians joined the middle
class in recent years
3
Uruguay
is under control
4
Peru
■ Legislation
for foreign capital dating from 1964
provides total security for the repatriation of profits
5
Argentina
6
Venezuela
■ The
country has been awarded Investment Grade
status by ratings agencies Fitch, Standard & Poor’s and
Moody’s. This makes Brazil an even more attractive
and reliable alternative for global investments
7
Ecuador
8
Bolivia
9
Paraguay
10
Source: Economist Intelligence Unit
Growth of GDP per capita (US$)
Brazil
São Paulo
20
Campinas
15
10
5
0
2003
2004
2005
Source: IBGE - calculated from quarterly national accounts / ACIC 8
2006
*Estimates
2007
2008*
Exchange rate R$ / US$=1,8
2009*
Campinas: a cosmopolitan city
Reasons to invest in
Campinas
■
Excluding state capitals’ metropolitan regions, it is
Brazil’s largest city
■ For anybody wanting to invest or expand their business
in Brazil, Campinas is one of the most attractive
options
■ Brazil’s greatest concentration of R&D centers outside
of São Paulo city
■
A strategic location, connecting with major domestic
and foreign consumer markets. Spending in the cities
that comprise the Campinas Metropolitan Region is
forecast to reach no less than US$26.24 billion in 2010
■A
highly-qualified workforce
■ Impressive
■ Excellent
■
■
economic and social development
quality of life
In 2009, the number of students in higher education
in Campinas reached 67,196, while the number of
postgraduate students was 7,643
50 of the 500 largest companies in the world have
offices in the Campinas metropolitan region
■ At
US$15.09 billion, the GDP of Campinas is greater
than that of several countries in Latin America and
the Caribbean, for example Jamaica, Paraguay and
Nicaragua
Information about Campinas
►
Foundation: July 14, 1774
►
Population: 1,064,669
►
Area: 796 km²
►
Altitude: 654 m
►
Average annual temperature: 21.6 °C
►
Hospitals: 32
►
Doctors/1,000 inhabitants: 4.8
►
Bank branches: 229
►
Companies: 52,509
A privileged location
With over one million inhabitants, Campinas is the
largest city in Brazil, excluding state capitals’ metropolitan
regions. It is located in the heart of São Paulo, the most
populous, wealthy and industrialized state.
Distance between Campinas
and major cities in Mercosul
►
São Paulo: 96 km
It is situated close to both the financial hub of Brazil the São Paulo state capital, 96 km away - and the port of
Santos (172 km), the largest in Latin America.
►
Rio de Janeiro: 511 km
►
Belo Horizonte: 601 km
►
Brasília: 921 km
►
Porto Alegre: 1,177 km
►
Asuncion: 1,400 km
►
La Paz: 1,600 km
►
Montevideo: 1,800 km
►
Buenos Aires: 2,300 km
►
Santiago: 3,000 km
Campinas is the core city of a metropolitan region
comprising 19 municipalities and numbering more than
2.6 million inhabitants.
It is home to some of the largest companies established in
Brazil. And the Campinas Metropolitan Region (RMC)
generates approximately 3% of Brazilian GDP.
More than 30 million people, equivalent to the population
of Canada or twice that of Chile, live within a 200 km
radius.
Campinas Multimodal Transport System
CAM
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Viracopos
International
Airport
High Speed Train
Highways
Port of
Paranaguá
Curitiba
12
São Paulo
Port of Santos
Florianópolis
Porto Alegre
WA
Y
Rio de Janeiro
Vitória
Logistics
Campinas has the most complete logistics infrastructure
in Brazil. It comprises the following modes:
■
The highway network: five of Brazil’s most important
highways intersect at Campinas, connecting the city with
the country’s leading producer and consumer markets. The
Anhanguera and Bandeirantes highways, voted the best
in Brazil by the Quatro Rodas motoring magazine, link
Campinas with the state capital and several upstate cities,
while the Dom Pedro I highway provides a link between
Campinas and the Presidente Dutra highway that runs
through the Paraíba Valley and on to Rio de Janeiro. It
also connects with the Fernão Dias highway that goes to
Belo Horizonte. The Adhemar de Barros highway (SP
340) goes from Campinas to the south of Minas Gerais
state, while the Santos Dumont highway provides access
to the Castelo Branco highway and the Sorocaba region,
passing through the Campinas Industrial District.
The city’s fleet of about 700,000 registered motor
vehicles (in December 2009) placed third in a ranking of
Brazil’s 14 largest cities. Traffic flows easily thanks to the
Rebouças Beltway.
Local residents who use public transport can take
advantage of the Single Ticket. This facilitates integration
between routes and decreases travel time, permitting
three or more integrated stages in the space of an hour.
The system reduces the cost of transportation vouchers
for companies in the municipality.
Intercity passenger transportation is well served with
routes between Campinas and the main capitals of
Brazil, including São Paulo, Belo Horizonte, Curitiba,
Florianopolis and Porto Alegre. Bus arrivals and
departures are handled efficiently at the city bus station,
one of the most beautiful and modern in the country, with
extremely easy accessibility.
Passenger Transfer Stations (known as “Citizens’
Stations”) are spread throughout the city, contributing to
urban mobility and benefiting thousands of commuters
with safe and practical transportation.
■
Viracopos Airport: this is Brazil’s main domestic
cargo airport and the largest airfreight facility in Latin
America, exporting to more than 180 countries. Its main
routes are to Miami, Memphis, Caracas and Frankfurt as
distribution centers; to Dakar and Sal island as technical
stops for Asian and European destinations; and to
Luxembourg, Buenos Aires, Santiago, Mexico, San Juan,
Quito, Bogota, Lima, Montevideo and New York as final
destinations.
■
Railway system: the existing network in Campinas
comprises two railroads and provides cargo transportation
to the state capital (96 km), the Port of Santos (172 km)
and various upstate cities.
Rail freight cargo movement to the Port of Santos has
increased by 56% since 2006. Investments of US$22.22
million are scheduled for 2010 to improve railway
infrastructure at Santos, remodeling the main line and
increasing capacity in the terminals. Freight capacity will
increase by 120 cars per day, and the volume of cargo
transported is forecast to more than double.
Viracopos International Airport
13
■
High Speed Train (TAV in Portuguese): this project
is scheduled to be operating by 2014, linking Campinas
to São Paulo, and 2 years later, to Rio de Janeiro via São
Paulo. The next step will be the construction of a TAV
networking linking Belo Horizonte, Campinas and
Curitiba.
■
The Tietê-Paraná Waterway: the proximity of this
waterway (approximately 100 km distant) allows for
commercial navigation linking five Brazilian states (São
Paulo, Goiás, Minas Gerais, Mato Grosso do Sul and
Paraná) and four countries in or associated with the
Mercosul free trade pact (Argentina, Bolivia, Paraguay
and Uruguay).
The Tietê-Paraná system totals 2,400 km of navigable
channels, and is known as the Mercosul Waterway.
Within São Paulo, the waterway includes 800 kilometers
of navigable channels with 10 reservoirs, 10 dams, 23
bridges, 19 shipyards and 31 intermodal terminals for
loading/unloading in 22 municipalities.
Rapid Transit (BRT) system. The terminal is designed
to operate with high standards of quality, accessibility
and security.
■
Public Transport System: urban bus services
are managed by InterCamp, the Campinas Public
Transportation System, and operated by public transport
concessionaires using buses and minibuses, together
with alternative service minibuses. The city taxi fleet
has around 800 vehicles operating out of 56 ranks.
Planning for further growth, Campinas has several
ongoing projects that include extension of the
Anhanguera-Bandeirantes-D. Pedro logistics corridor;
expansion of the Techno Park; and creation of the
Anhanguera Center, with exhibition and convention
facilities and a sports arena. Railroads will also be
extended. One of the most important steps in these
development plans will be the construction of the High
Speed Train (TAV), offering job creation and reduced
travel time.
State government plans already include expansion of the
waterway along the 200-km Anhembi-Salto stretch,
with the construction of five dams with locks.
■
The Ramos de Azevedo Multimodal Terminal: this
new passenger terminus has brought benefits to the
population that uses municipal, metropolitan, intercity
and interstate transportation. Airports and other
infrastructure resources will be connected to rail systems
and to planned mass transportation lines such as the Bus
The Ramos de Azevedo Multimodal Terminal
EXPORT RANKINGS IN THE 1ST QUARTER OF 2010 (in US$)
Region Total trade flow
(exports plus imports)
minus imports)
1) São Paulo
4.604.225.317 1.277.394.614 3.326.830.703 (2.049.436.089)
2) São José dos Campos
2.891.942.263 1.338.790.330 1.553.151.933 (214.361.601)
3) Campinas
2.601.205.506 805.393.868 1.795.811.638 (990.417.770)
4) São Bernardo do Campo
1.498.018.992 838.907.623 659.111.369 179.796.254
5) Taubaté
1.220.476.525 458.128.749 762.347.776 (304.219.027)
6) Santos
1.115.247.462 860.591.084 254.656.378 605.934.706
7) Guarulhos
1.108.041.564 515.189.847 592.851.717 (77.661.870)
8) Sorocaba
890.677.765 349.952.892 540.724.873 (190.771.981)
9) Araraquara
496.256.149 372.475.339 123.780.810 248.694.529
10) Jaú
367.163.249 363.195.352 3.967.897 359.227.455
Source: CIESP, the São Paulo Center for Industry
14
Exports
Imports
Balance (exports
Viracopos, the largest cargo airport in
Latin America
■
The ideal place of entry for products with high added
value
■ Operations:
□ Importation
□ National
■
□ 27%
■
by value
by weight
In 2007, 8.4% of all Brazilian imports came through
Viracopos
Today’s area of 8.3 km² will increase to over 20.7 km²,
thanks to airport expansion planned for the coming
years. The second runway will be inaugurated in 2010
and the modern control tower is the largest in Brazil.
Viracopos will be Brazil’s main gateway for the 2014
World Cup.
Annual passenger capacity (projections and data from
Infraero):
□ 2006:
826,246 passengers
□ 2007:
955,774 passengers
□ 2009:
3,364,300 passengers
□ 2008:
□ 2010:
1,084,059 passengers
4,17
5.000
freight
Total foreign trade grew by 67.4% in exports and 65% in
imports, compared to March 2009.
■
20,36
20.000
10.000
Of all Brazilian air-cargo imports and exports,
Viracopos handles:
□ 39%
25.000
15.000
□ Exportation
□ Courier
Average FOB value of cargo exported US$/kg (January/February 2010)
0
Viracopos
Source: Infraero
Guarulhos
0,98
Santos
With an area of over 8.3 million square meters,
Viracopos International Airport is one of the principal
interconnection points in Latin America.
Passenger movement at Viracopos airport increased by
over 220% in January/February 2010, compared to the
same period of 2009, according to Infraero. Data for
cargo imports and exports from January 2008 through
February 2010 shows that the airport recovered from the
global crisis in just five months.
Planned upgrading and expansion:
■ Industrial
and commercial area
■ International
■ 2011
■ 2012
area
- expansion of the passenger terminal
- second runway
Route of the High Speed Train (TAV)
5,000,000 passengers (estimate)
□ 2014: more than nine million passengers (projection)
□ 2025:
60 million passengers (projection) with
addition of the third runway
■ Airport
dimensions:
□ Main
runway: 3,240 m x 45 m
□ Total
area: 8,348,943 m²
□ Second
runway: 3,600 m x 60 m
□ Importation
□ Exportation
□ Refrigerated
□ Area
area: 60,035 m²
area: 15,560 m²
area: 13,650 m²
of live cargo terminal: 2,438 m²
□ Restrooms:
□ Baggage
□ Shops
28
carts: 800
and services: 64
□ Boarding
□ X-rays:
7
buses: 6
■ 100
■
■
km of tunnels
Estimated time from Campinas to São Paulo: 25
minutes
Estimated travel time from Campinas to Rio de
Janeiro: 1 hour 40 minutes
■ Maximum
■ Number
■
speed: 350 km/hour
of seats: 468-600
Campinas will have two stations: Viracopos Airport
and downtown
15
Infrastructure
Expansion of sanitation in Campinas
According to the Simonsen consultancy and Exame
business magazine, Campinas is ranked the fifth best
city in Brazil, with the best urban infrastructure. Its
coverage ratings for water and sewage, street paving
(93.69% of urban roads) and electricity, among others,
match the levels of other large metropolitan regions
around the world.
100%
The city’s public and private healthcare and education
systems are also among the most complete in Brazil.
10%
What’s more, the Campinas public security system,
based on electronic monitoring, was adopted by the
Ministry of Justice as a national benchmark. It has been
copied in several cities.
90%
80%
70%
60%
50%
40%
30%
20%
0%
2001
Source: Sanasa
2004
2005
2007
2009
2010 Target 2011
First-world sanitation
Water treatment stations 3 and 4
Access to infrastructure in Campinas
91%
100%
100%
97%
100%
82%
90%
80%
70%
Mains drinking water now reaches 96% of the Campinas
population, and the percentage with sewage collection
and treatment services has increased dramatically from
just 14% in 2004 to 65% in late 2007 and to 80% in
2009, thanks to the completion of a series of public
works. This has made Campinas one of Brazil’s bestserved cities (counting those with populations exceeding
half a million inhabitants) in terms of sewage collection
and treatment.
Using innovative technologies, the Municipality of
Campinas and Sanasa, the municipal water and sewage
company, are working together to achieve 100% sewage
treatment by the end of 2011.
The construction and deployment of five new treatment
units, and in particular two stations for producing
reusable industrial-grade water (Capivari II and Boa
Vista), will bring environmental, economic and public
health benefits.
60%
50%
40%
30%
20%
10%
0%
Treated
sewage
Paved streets
Piped water
Public
lighting
Electricity
Source: Municipal Department of Commerce, Industry, Services and Tourism
Anhumas sewage treatment station
16
The Ouro Verde Hospital Complex, one of the largest and most modern public hospitals in the country, has 219 beds, ICUs for adults and children, and medical, pediatric and surgical clinics
State-of-the-art healthcare
Campinas has one of the best private healthcare networks
in Brazil. Among the facilities of recognized excellence
are the Penido Burnier Institute (ophthalmology and
otolaryngology), the Corsini Centers (HIV-AIDS
treatment) and the Boldrini Center (treatment of
children with cancer).
The public network is one of the best structured in
the country. It provides primary care in health centers
close to where people live, with specialized care
available in polyclinics, specialist centers and services
from universities and private facilities operating
under provision agreements. These provide hospital
care, complex procedures, emergency treatment and
rehabilitation.
Health services have been expanding steadily in recent
years, both in terms of quantity and quality. The best
example of this was the inauguration of the Ouro Verde
Hospital Complex. This is one of the largest and most
modern public hospitals in the country, equipped with
219 beds, ICUs for adults and children, and general
medical, surgical and pediatric clinics. In addition, the
Ouro Verde houses a modern physical rehabilitation
center and a center for organ procurement, designed to
train professionals from across the country.
Health infrastructure
Municipal network
■ Ouro
■ The
Verde Hospital Complex
UNICAMP Clinical Hospital
■ Mário
■ The
Gatti Municipal Hospital
Mário Gatti Hospital Children’s Emergency
Room
■ The
Central Public Emergency Room at the Santa
Casa de Misericórdia Hospital
■ Emergency
Room, Campo Grande Hospital
■ Emergency
Room, Metropolitan Hospital
■ Emergency
■ Women’s
Room, Southern Region Hospital
Health Care Center
■ Reference
Center for Health of the Elderly
■ Reference
Center for Occupational Health
■ Reference
Center for STD and HIV-AIDS
Health infrastructure includes:
■ 63
health centers, organized in five health districts
community centers
■ A municipal laboratory
■ Three 24-hour first-aid stations and four hospital
emergency rooms
■ Six
17
■
SAMU - Mobile Emergency Care Service with 26
ambulances
■ Health surveillance centers, including epidemiological,
■
sanitary and environmental health, organized in five
health districts.
Lactation Center - Human Milk Bank
■ Specialized
centers for psychosocial care, specialized
polyclinics, centers for dentistry and control of
zoonosis.
Private health network
■
■
■
■
■
■
■
■
■
■
■
■
■
■
■
■
■
Celso Pierro University Hospital
Campinas Maternity
Albert Sabin Hospital
Raskin Clinic
APAE - Association of Parents and Friends of
Children with Special Needs
Down Syndrome Foundation
Boldrini Center
Corsini Center
Beneficência Portuguesa Hospital
Penido Burnier Institute
Campinas Medical Center
Samaritan Hospital
Madre Teodora Hospital and Maternity
Álvaro Ribeiro Hospital
Irmãos Penteado Hospital
Campinas Health Center
Future Sírio-Libanês Hospital Complex
Indicator
2008
Results
Description
Ranking among the 14
largest cities in Brazil
Ranking among the 50
largest cities in Brazil
Proportion of municipality’s own revenue
applied in public health
26,41%
% of budget
1st
5th
Infant mortality rate
8,40
Deaths per 1,000
live births
1st
1st
Neonatal mortality rate
5,97
Deaths per 1,000
live births
1st
1st
Post-neonatal mortality rate
2,43
Deaths per 1,000
live births
1st
1st
Deaths from cervical cancer
2,75
Deaths per
100,000 women
1st
6th
Homicide rate
14,39
Deaths per
100,000
inhabitants
1st
8th
13,18%
% of all
hospitalizations
3rd
15th
Hospitalization rate for primary care in
the SUS public health system
18
Companies located in Campinas and the metropolitan region
Business synergies
Campinas GDP exceeds US$15 billion, and is the
equivalent of various South American countries such as
Bolivia and Paraguay. It is the 11th richest city in Brazil,
home to more than 50,000 companies and Brazil’s third
largest manufacturing region. What’s more, 50 of the
world’s 500 largest companies are present in Campinas
and its metropolitan region. Thanks to these and other
factors Campinas is now one of the 10 Brazilian cities
that most create jobs, according to a survey by the
Ministry of Labor. And according to the Getúlio Vargas
Foundation, a leading business school and study center,
it is Brazil’s best city to work in, excluding state capitals.
Finally, it is the country’s fourth largest financial
center with more than two bank branches per 10,000
inhabitants.
Number of companies in Campinas, by
sector (2008)
29.247
30.000
28.530
25.000
20.000
15.000
10.000
5.000
0
3.783
Industry
Commerce
Services
Source: ACIC/Rais (Ministry of Labor and Employment)
19
Human Capital
Campinas is internationally renowned for the quality
of its educational institutions. UNICAMP - the State
University of Campinas - registers more patents than
any other educational establishment in Brazil and is one
of the world’s 200 best universities, according to The
Times Higher Education Supplement.
This makes Campinas one of the most sought-after
cities for students from all over Brazil. Many stay in the
city after graduation, building their professional careers
in local companies. The structure of employment in
Campinas reflects the value added by its human capital:
70.5% of the formally employed workforce is in the
services sector.
Campinas also ranks second among Brazil’s major cities
(those with over one million inhabitants) in terms of
the number of children aged six or under enrolled in
kindergarten and preschool. Over the past five years the
city has built 18 new infant schools with 6,500 spaces.
Of these, 4,500 are in 10 major centers called “Mother
Ships”.
The municipal government also invests in training and
education for city youth. CEPROCAMP is the first
public school in Campinas to offer vocational training
for the poorest section of the population. Courses include
information technology, occupational safety, sanitation
and hospitality, among others. The CEPROCAMP
program operates via 23 decentralized vocational
training facilities in the city’s low-rent neighborhoods.
Another municipal program is called Jovem.Com
- literally “Youth.Com”. This offers free courses in
computer science and is supported by several institutions,
including Microsoft. The program operates via 42 units
distributed among schools, community centers and
other public facilities, serving 520 young people between
14 and 24 years from low-income families. Outstanding
students who complete the course then receive a
monthly grant of between US$83.50 and US$222to act
as monitors for subsequent classes.
This concept of Mother Ship day-care centers developed
in Campinas received a Millennium Development
Goals Brazil Award. The MDG award is conferred
by UNESCO with support from the UNDP, and is
coordinated in Brazil by IPEA, an economic research
institute, and ENAP, the national public administration
college. The Mother Ship program was described as
“unique and innovative”. A total of 1,560 Brazilian cities
competed for the award.
Ten Mother Ships are currently operating and five more
will be delivered by the end of 2010. Each unit has 1,754
square meters of constructed area and offers full-time
education and teaching using the innovative “Education
of the Senses” method.
The “Minister Gustavo Capanema” Mother Ship
20
Up to 500 children aged between four months and
six years learn full-time in each Mother Ship. They
are from families in outlying, normally low-income,
neighborhoods. The 15 Mother Ships already operating
or under construction have made Campinas the first
Brazilian city with more than 500,000 inhabitants to
zero the deficit for places in early childhood education,
and this has been done with internationally recognized
quality. As of 2010, pre-school education has become
universal in Campinas.
Education in Campinas
► 291 preschools
► 270 elementary schools
► 126 high schools
► 13 higher education institutions
►
Brazil’s
3rd highest rate of newspaper
readership
►
Brazil’s
largest concentration of R&D
institutions outside of a state capital
► 19% of the population have higher education
► UNICAMP is the largest educational patent-
holder in Brazil
►Campinas
is Brazilian leader for patents
registered abroad
►
67,196 undergraduate students
►
7,643 post-graduate students in 2009
Students at a municipal school
Campinas State University - Unicamp
21
Consumer market
Campinas has a dynamic retail sector:
■
■
■
121 supermarkets
20,000 shops
■
Seven shopping malls containing a total of 1,200 stores.
The purchasing power of Campinas
Class A1 consumers is nearly twice the
Brazilian average, according to Target
Marketing, a consulting firm.
Class A and B consumption became more robust in recent years, while
Class C purchasing power increased by
51.2%.
The Iguatemi Shopping Mall
13 de Maio Street
The Dom Pedro Shopping Mall
GDP of Campinas and the metropolitan
region, US$ billions (2007)
80
70,73
70
60
50
44,49
40
30
27,16
20
12,22
26,27
23,14
13,12
10
0
Paraguay Campinas Bolivia Uruguay
Sources: ACIC, IMF, IBGE and FIPE
22
RMC
C.Rica Ecuador
The Galleria Shopping Mall
An academic and technological center
The presence of higher education institutes such as
Unicamp, PUC-Campinas, Mackenzie, Facamp and
Unip make Campinas one of the best-known and
most renowned academic centers in Brazil and indeed
throughout Latin America. The city is also one of the
world’s largest technology centers, often referred to as
the Silicon Valley of Latin America. Wired magazine
named it one of the two centers for cutting-edge
technology in the southern hemisphere. Now, Campinas
will also become a national leader in the promising
biofuels business, as the federal government develops
research into biofuels technology at the Bioethanol
Science and Technology Center (CTBE).
Campinas owes much of its technological dynamism to
the Campinas High-Technology Development Company
(CIATEC). This is a mixed-economy company, owned
jointly by the municipality and the private sector.
CIATEC responsibilities include:
■ Participating
in planning and implementing the city’s
science and technology policy.
■ Coordinating
the process of inducting companies and
organizations engaged in scientific and technological
research into the two high-technology centers that
exist in Campinas.
■ Developing
the Incubator Program for TechnologyBased Companies, which offers enrolled companies
all necessary support including legal, financial and
business consulting, working space, an auditorium,
secretarial services, internet access and help for
participating in congresses.
CIATEC maintains partnerships with Sebrae (the
Brazilian Micro and Small Business Support Service)
and several research centers and universities in order
to carry out these tasks. Additionally, Sebrae acts as a
bridge between entrepreneurs and funding agencies
such as the São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP),
the Brazilian Innovation Agency - Research and Project
Financing (FINEP) and the National Council for
Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq).
Technology centers in Campinas
►CIATEC - Campinas High-Technology Development Company
►CATI - Coordination of Integral Technical Assistance
► CENPRA - The Renato Archer Research Center
►The Wernher Von Braun Center for Advanced Research
►The Cesar Lattes Center for Nanoscience and Nanotechnology
►CPqD - Center for Telecommunications Research and Development
►Codetec - The Technological Development Company
►EMBRAPA - The Brazilian Agricultural Research Corporation
►The Eldorado Research Institute
►IAC - The Campinas Agronomy Institute
►IB - The Biology Institute
►ITAL - The Institute of Food Technology
►IZ - The Animal Sciences Institute
►LNLS - The Brazilian Synchrotron Light Laboratory
►Softex - The National Software Export Program
►Trade Point - The Foreign Trade Service Center
►UNIEMP - The Permanent Forum of University-Company Relations
►CTBE - The Bioethanol Science and Technology Center
23
A model for public safety
Campinas has more than 360 surveillance cameras
distributed throughout its main streets, avenues, squares,
parks and bus and rail stations. All 39 public schools
and most health facilities are also monitored 24 hours
a day. No other city in Brazil with more than a million
inhabitants has such a system.
Surveillance camera
Camera surveying a street
Murder rate - Ranking for cities with over one million inhabitants
36
Recife
Salvador
34
32
30
28
26
Goiânia
24
Rio de Janeiro
Curitiba
Belo Horizonte
Brasília
22
20
Porto Alegre
18
16
14
12
Guarulhos
10
Campinas
8
6
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
São Paulo
Source: Municipal Secretariat for Cooperation in Public Security Affairs
Public safety in Campinas
Cameras are linked to the Campinas Integrated
Surveillance Center (CIMCamp), a system
that brings together five municipal bodies: the
Municipal Guard; the Campinas Municipal
Development Company (EMDEC); the Mobile
Emergency Care Service (SAMU); the General
Technical Services unit (SETEC); and the Civil
Defense.
24
Goals of the surveillance system are:
► Prevent and combat crime
► Ensure quick response to any occurrence
► Improve traffic flow and safety
► Warn about and preventing natural disasters.
Patrols by municipal security agents are integrated
with the work of the uniformed and plain-clothes
state police.
The Campinas Integrated Surveillance Center (CIMCamp)
Public safety in Campinas
► Municipal Guard with force of 724
► State uniformed police with force of 3,000
► State plain-clothes police with force of 745
► The Campinas Integrated Surveillance Center (CIMCamp) system has been adopted by the Ministry of
Justice as a model for Brazil
Campinas also has a system of Neighborhood Security Councils (CONSEGs), which help by supplying
information and articulating local needs
25
Availability of real estate
Civil construction is booming in Campinas. The sector
is also stimulated by the relatively low level of taxation on
land. This means that there are excellent opportunities
for real estate business in all areas - industry, commerce
and residential.
B) Anhanguera region: Focus is on development of a
complex that includes exhibition and convention centers,
an educational sports facility, commerce, services,
a multipurpose arena and distribution and logistics
centers.
Snapshot of the real estate sector
C) Ciatec II: A technology park.
■ Ample supply of commercial, industrial and residential
D) Campo Grande region: Focus on commerce,
industry and reforestation.
■ Civil
E) Viracopos region: A logistics center with housing
and services, and expansion of the International Airport.
real estate for sale and lease, with good cost-benefit ratio
construction is booming
■ Relatively
low levels of land taxation
A study by Jones Lang LaSalle highlights that
Campinas is increasingly attracting business investment
because of its location and the improved economic
outlook
■
Key development areas
Campinas has adopted a policy for attracting companies,
industries and investment that is based on six main
development areas. The following brief descriptions
will help investors understand how opportunities are
distributed among the different city regions:
A) Central areas: The Patio Central and Guanabara
railway stations, old tanneries, the Capivari area and
central urban brownfield. Strategy is for complementary
urban intervention focusing on housing, services,
commerce and education, with creation of a boulevard.
F) Dom Pedro I Highway corridor: Business centers
with hotels, residential area and logistics hub.
Campinas is investing in structured, sustainable planning
to ensure that city development will be beneficial for
everyone. Before any new work or project is approved,
a complete and thorough study is conducted to calculate
any possible environmental impact. When this research
is complete, an area up to three times greater than the
area that will be affected is designated for compensatory
reforestation. The municipal government imposes this
condition even for its own projects. Measures such as this
have made Campinas an example of sustainability for
other cities in Brazil and around the world. They show
that planned growth is a cost-effective and intelligent
solution.
Land available in key development areas
Land use
(construction potential in m²)
Total (m²)
► Commercial, services and institutional13.080.000
► Industrial8.350.000
► Technology5.500.000
► Housing24.720.000
► Logistics21.900.000
► Total73.550.000
26
Advantages
The Campinas investment areas were created
with the following aims:
► Encourage orderly occupation of space
► Preserve and upgrade the traditional cen-
tral areas
► Promote business synergies
► Avoid urban sprawl
► Plan the city for the future
Campinas - Paulínia Highway
Adhemar de Barros Highway
Anhanguera
Highway
Campinas
Viracopos
International
Airport
Dom Pedro I Highway
Anhanguera Highway
Bandeirantes Highway
Santos Dumont Highway
27
Cosmopolitan vocation
Located in one of the richest regions of Brazil, Campinas
is a medium-sized city with 1.1 million inhabitants and
is the seat of a metropolitan area that has 2.6 million
people. The excellent location, 90 km from the state
capital of São Paulo in the Southeast of Brazil, makes
it one of the 10 most prosperous cities in Brazil, with a
GDP of US$15.09 billion.
Campinas stands out among Brazilian cities for the
simultaneous creation of jobs and attraction of business
- in particular in the fields of high technology, services
and logistics. It has thousands of small, medium and
large companies and demonstrates a strong technological
and academic vocation, accounting for more than 10% of
the country’s scientific production.
Campinas is a leading national center for congresses
in areas such as business, health, sports, media and
education. It hosts some 6,000 events per year with an
average of two million participants. In 2007, Campinas
ranked seventh among Brazilian cities in terms of events,
according to the International Congress and Convention
Association.
The city is home to Project Sustain (Projeto Sustentar),
which seeks to promote the interchange between
Latin American cities of scientific and technological
information in the areas of economic, ecological, social,
cultural and ethical sustainability.
The municipal calendar of annual events also includes
cultural and craft fairs, music and theater festivals, and
28
events promoted by the Italian, Portuguese, American,
French, Spanish and Japanese communities.
Despite enjoying the profile of a major metropolis,
Campinas offers a peaceful and friendly social and
community life. There are sports clubs for all income
levels, parks and recreation areas, excellent restaurants
for the most varied tastes and appetites, shopping malls,
cinemas and international-class theaters, halls and
auditoriums. The city also offers historical and other
tours that provide a pleasant surprise for Brazilian and
foreign tourists.
Events
►About 6,000 events per year, with two
million participants. Campinas ranks 244th
worldwide and seventh among Brazilian
cities in terms of the number of international
events hosted, according to the International
Congress and Convention Association
► Ongoing cultural and craft fairs
► Biennial book fair
► International theater festival
► Crafts and antiques fairs
► Regional and national sporting events
Campinas is also a sought-after venue for
corporate events, thanks to its infrastructure
and location just an hour from São Paulo
Foreign representations
Although it lies just 96 km from São Paulo, Brazil’s
principal economic center, Campinas is a city with its
own strengths. Proof of this can be seen in the ample
foreign governmental and institutional presence - eight
consulates, four representative offices and two bilateral
chambers of commerce. Campinas is also a member of
the Mercocidades network that unites cities throughout
the Mercosul free trade bloc and has sister cities all over
the world.
Consulates
Chile
France
Spain
Ecuador
Haiti
Portugal
San Diego,
USA
Concepción,
Chile
Italy
Guinea-Bissau
Malito,
Italy
Cordoba,
Argentina
Sister cities
Auroville,
India
Jericho,
Palestine
Gifu,
Japan
Fuzhou,
China
Novi Sad,
Serbia
Diplomatic representative offices
China
Japan
Israel
Asuncion,
Paraguay
Daloa,
Ivory Coast
Cabinda,
Angola
Belém,
Blumenau,
Peruíbe,
Ubatuba and
others
Paraguay
Bilateral chambers of commerce
Brazil-USA
Brazil-Italy
29
A city government committed to
development
At the same time that it adopted a series of measures
to make public administration more efficient, Campinas
also created various laws offering incentives for
companies to expand their business or move to the city.
The result is that Campinas has successfully created a
very favorable environment for domestic and foreign
investors. This has been reflected in the attraction of
several companies and the growth of the jobs market.
Public administration with a difference
■ Efficient
■ Tax
■ An
■
Promotion of investment in technology, knowledge
and logistics
the quality of public spending
sustainable business
ambitious infrastructure plan
■ Revitalization
Viracopos to São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro;
and in the future, to Belo Horizonte and
Curitiba
► Expansion of CIATEC, the city’s technology hub
► Expansion of the logistics corridor along the
Anhanguera, Bandeirantes and Dom Pedro I
highways
with convention and exhibition centers and a
sports arena
► Ambitious infrastructure plan to regularize
urban land ownership
Expansion of environmental preservation areas and
consolidation of green areas
■ An
► Construction of a high-speed rail link from
► Construction of the Anhanguera complex,
Open Door for Business
■ Promoting
Airport
services
incentives
■ Eco-responsibility
■
► Expansion plans for Viracopos International
► Expansion of the Techno Park, with shared
and rapid decision making
■ Improving
Future horizons
► Expansion of the rail network
► Revitalization of the city’s historic and cultural
heritage
Jobs in public administration, as a
percentage of total formal employment
of cultural and historic heritage
40
2007
35
2008
2009
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
Brasília
Source: Ministry of Labor
30
São Luís
Manaus
Curitiba
Rio de Janeiro
Juiz de Fora Belo Horizonte Porto Alegre
Campinas
Campinas City Hall
Taquaral Lagoon
Metropolitan Cathedral
13 de Maio Street
Campinas Highlights
►Best Brazilian city to work in, excluding state capitals
(FGV and Você S/A magazine)
►Brazilian leader in patent registrations abroad (INPI)
►Greatest number of R&D centers in Brazil, second
only to São Paulo
►Second city in number of bank branches per 10,000
inhabitants (IBGE)
► The purchasing power of Class A1 Campinas residents is nearly twice the national average (research by
Target Marketing)
►Local commerce bills about US$11.11 billion annually; Campinas is Brazil’s 9th largest commercial center among cities with more than a million inhabitants
(and the first excluding state capitals - source: ACIC/
Atlas of the Brazilian Market)
►Fifth best urban infrastructure in the country (Simonsen/Exame)
Downtown Campinas
32
►City with third fastest Internet access speed (broadband) in Brazil; fastest outside of state capitals (Folha
de São Paulo)
►One of the 10 Brazilian cities that most create jobs
(Caged-MTE)
►Largest Brazilian city excluding state capitals (IBGE)
►10th largest GDP (IPEA)
►Largest cargo airport in Latin America (Infraero)
►Second largest urban forest in Brazil: Santa Genebra
Forest Ecological Reserve (251 hectares)
►Unicamp - one of the three best universities in Latin
America (The Times Higher Educational Supplement)
►One of the two largest technology centers in the Southern Hemisphere (Wired)
The Ouro Verde Hospital Complex
Arautos da Paz Plaza
Antônio Pompeo Plaza
Campinas, a
wonderful place to live
M
ore than just an excellent investment
option, Campinas is also a great city
to live in. With wide boulevards and
ample parks, plus several spaces for culture and
leisure, the city combines beauty, tradition, modernity and respect for the environment in a way
that very few others have managed. A city that
uses technology to promote quality of life.
Tradition in culture and sport
Campinas was the home town of Carlos Gomes, Brazil’s
greatest classical composer and conductor, who left the
world a legacy of masterpieces such as the opera The
Guarany.
The city is also the home or birthplace of famous
sportsmen like Careca and Maurício (respectively
football and volleyball stars), and nationally-known
performers such as actress Claudia Raia, TV presenter
Fausto Silva and singers Sandy and Junior.
With 2.56 theaters, 4.73 cinemas and 3.79 libraries
per 100,000 inhabitants, Campinas continues to offer
cultural opportunities for new and upcoming talent.
Municipal Symphony Orchestra
The city’s annual festivals are famous for their vibrant
atmosphere and excellent organization, for example
the pre-Lenten Carnival and the traditional June
Celebrations. Christmas in Campinas is one of the
best and most beautiful in the country, both for the
decorations and the popular participation.
Cultural and sports facilities and institutions
include:
■ 10
theaters and auditoriums
■ 13
museums
■ 10
art galleries
■ 8
cinemas (totaling more than 40 auditoriums)
■ 90
“Virada” sports competition
libraries
■ The
■
Campinas Symphony Orchestra, recognized
as one of the top three in Brazil (alongside the São
Paulo State Symphony Orchestra and the Brazilian
Symphony Orchestra)
2 football stadiums: the Brinco de Ouro da Princesa
Stadium (Guarani Football Club) and the Moisés
Lucarelli Stadium (Ponte Preta Football Club)
■ Training
Center for Olympic athletes includes
diving, taekwondo, tennis, athletics and BMX (under
construction)
■ 24
sports parks
Campinas Equestrian Society, Campinas
Rowing and Swimming Club, Campinas Tennis Club,
Weekly Artistic Culture Club, Fonte São Paulo Club,
Campinas Military Club and others.
Carlos Gomes Plaza at Christmas
Arautos da Paz Plaza - June Celebrations
Street carnival
■ Clubs:
35
Botanical Gardens
A green city
Campinas boasts a large number of plazas, woods and
parks. These green spaces for leisure and relaxation
contribute greatly to the excellent quality of life enjoyed
by the local population. Among the many options the
city offers, the most traditional and popular is Taquaral
Lake. Located in one of the city’s prime regions, this
offers not only a vast green area but also space for cultural
and sporting activities. Thousands of local residents
flock to Taquaral Lake, especially at weekends. The city
recently opened the Botanical Gardens, the Forest Park,
the Capivari Park and the Water Park, in addition to
creating the project known as Strategic Environmental
Corridors. Spread throughout various parts of the
city, these Environmental Corridors will contribute to
sustainability while promoting development and helping
the city prepare for growth in coming years without
harming the environment and quality of life. The aim is
to exceed United Nations guidelines that recommend 12
square meters of green area per inhabitant.
Respect for the environment
►26 parks and woods
►More than 1,800 parks and green spaces scattered
throughout the city
►Several environmental education programs
►Delightful climate: average temperature of 21.6º C
►2nd largest urban forest in Brazil: Mata de Santa
Genebra Ecological Reserve
►APA - Environmental Protection Area of 223 km²
►Areas of Permanent Protection
►“Linear Parks”
►Strategic Environmental Corridors
Water Park
Taquaral Lake (Portugal Park)
36
Taquaral Lake (Portugal Park)
APA - Environmental Protection Area
With an area of 223 km² (28% of the total municipality),
the Campinas APA includes most of the natural woods
inside the city. The APA is home to diversified flora and
fauna: 250 species of birds, 68 mammals, 45 amphibians
and 40 reptiles. The woods contain monkeys, armadillos,
toucans, parrots, capybaras and thrushes, together with
endangered species such as ocelots, pumas, marmosets
and tamarins, otters and pacas. Rare vegetation, typical
of rocky areas, is also found in the region.
Santa Elisa Farm
This is a forest reserve that houses the Campinas
Agronomy Institute research center. It contains a small
area of rare beauty that supplies essential information
for the restoration of areas devastated by monoculture
farming and other destructive elements of modern
agriculture. The area was listed for preservation by
the Campinas Cultural Heritage Defense Council
(Condepacc) in 1991.
Mata de Santa Genebra Ecological Reserve
A 251 hectare remnant of the Atlantic Rainforest that
was donated to the city of Campinas, this is now a forest
reserve with 660 plant species and 885 animal species.
This abundance demonstrates the biodiversity in the
reserve. The nursery currently has more than 3,000
seedlings of native species for a reforestation project that
is restoring degraded areas, while the butterfly nursery
has catalogued over 700 species found in the reserve.
Taquaral Lake (Portugal Park)
A recreation area of some 80 hectares with a lagoon,
three lakes and woods with areas constructed for picnics.
Visitors can ride on the lake in pedalos, while on weekends
and public holidays a traditional tram car offers circular
tours. The park also houses the Beethoven Auditorium,
with a capacity for 2,000 people; the Acoustic Shell; the
Afrânio Pereira kart track; a bowling rink; a jogging
track; a model airplane circle; a spa; public swimming
pools; and the Dr. Alberto Ribeiro Jordano sports
gymnasium. Fishing is allowed on weekends and public
holidays.
Jequitibás Wood
An area of some 10 hectares with preserved areas of
inland Atlantic Rainforest, with springs (some offering
drinking water) and a zoo recognized by IBAMA (the
federal environmental protection agency) with 300
species of birds, reptiles and mammals (such as tapir,
deer, lions, monkeys, baboons, hippos, tiger, jaguar and
capybara). Has an aquarium, theater for children’s plays,
playground, jogging track, coffee shops and a small train
that runs through the wood, kiosks, snack bar and five
museums, including a Natural History Museum listed
by Condephaat.
Monsignor Emílio José Salim
Ecological Park
Located in 2.85 million square meters of the old
Mato Dentro Farm, at the 3.2 km point on the Heitor
Penteado Highway. Architectural heritage items covered
37
Carlos Gomes Plaza
by a preservation order comprise the Farm Mansion, the
Chapel and Granary. Includes playgrounds, picnic areas,
snack bars, multisport courts, and trails for jogging,
walking and hiking.
Ulysses Guimarães Plaza - Chapadão Quarry
Located on Marechal Rondon Street in the Jardim
Chapadão district, the Chapadão Quarry has some
130,000 m² of space. In addition to a central plaza for
shows, there is a reflecting pool with waterfall, gardens
and plants, and a jogging and cycling track.
Carlos Gomes Plaza
Located in the city center, the square named in honor
of the Campinas-born conductor and opera composer
Carlos Gomes is a popular meeting point. Renovated in
keeping with its original 19th century design, the square
has a landscaped garden with a traditional bandstand in
the center. There are 80 benches, special lighting and a
surround sound system.
Yitzhak Rabin Peace Park
The Peace Park has an area of 63,754 m², with 25,000
m² of native woodland. It offers the local population
a jogging track, sports courts, picnic and games areas,
natural lakes and a playground. The Peace Park was
Brazil’s first official tribute to the memory of the Israeli
leader and president.
Yasser Arafat Park
The park is located on the right bank of the Anhumas
Stream and stretches a distance of 2 km from Avenida
Carlos Grimaldi almost to the Anhumas Steam
Locomotive Station, covering about 170,000 m². The
park will include an extension of the steam engine track
to its new station near the Arautos da Paz Plaza. Plans
also include planting some 9,000 native tree seedlings
to restore riparian vegetation. The park has cycling and
sports and leisure equipment for children and families.
So far about 3,000 seedlings have been planted, with
installation of fences, sidewalks and storm drains.
German Wood - João Lech Jr Square
An area of 20,900 m² for walking, leisure and a children’s
playground. Woodland flora consists of native trees such
as anadenthera (mimosa), peroba, ironwood, jequitibá,
cabreúva, and others.
Italian Grove
An area of 14,411.80 m², with equipment for leisure and
recreation.
Cultural Harmony Center
38
Cambarás Wood
This 58,300 m² wooded area was put together around
a fragment of native forest remaining in sandy terrain.
The natural vegetation was complemented with the
planting of 10,000 seedlings of native and exotic trees,
many of them typical of Brazil’s savannah-type cerrado
region. The park takes its name from one such tree, the
Cambará. It includes an infant playground, multisport
courts, football fields and a jogging track.
Chico Mendes Grove
Metropolitan Cathedral
Guarantãs Park and Bernard Kaplan Sports
Center
Guarantãs Park is the third largest green space in
the municipality. Located in the Jardim Europa
neighborhood, it directly benefits the entire southern
region of the city. It has about 100,000 m² of useable
area in addition to extensive vegetation. Facilities include
a complete sports center, lake, playground, football
fields, multisport courts, various types of gymnastics
equipment and a picnic area with barbecue grills.
Valença Wood Ferdinando Tilli Leisure
Centre
A recreational park that offers pleasant contact with
nature, comprising vegetation, lakes and sports options.
The area is fenced and has a playground, walking track,
gymnastics equipment, two basketball courts, two fivea-side football fields and a regular football field with
bleachers and restrooms.
São José Wood
Chico Mendes Grove honors the late Amazon rubber
tappers leader. The 34,000 m² area has a multisport
court, a five-a-side football field, gymnastic equipment,
a playground, a paved walkway throughout the area
and public benches. In addition to protecting the
native vegetation, the landscape design project included
planting grass, flower beds and ornamental plants, plus
planting 3,000 tree seedlings of various species such as
jequitibás, caviúnas and jatoba.
Hermogenes de Freitas Leitão Woods Ecological Park
Opened in December 1996, these woods occupy an area
of 135,000 m² with a pond, jogging and walking trails,
benches for resting, kiosks with barbecue grills, tables,
chairs, a playground and gymnastics equipment. The
park combines native and exotic vegetation with varied
fauna, offering pleasant moments, especially at dusk.
The Ribeirão das Cabras Linear Park
This park is part of the studies for the master plan of
the Municipal Environmental Protection Area for the
restoration of riparian vegetation along the Ribeirão das
Cabras stream, which extends into the landscape context
of the park.
This wood, also called the Francisco Vivaldi Plaza, has
native trees and a recreation area for adults and children,
plus all necessary infrastructure.
Augusto Ruschi Wood
A multi-level forested area totaling 26,000 m². Provides
leisure for the local population, giving people contact
with nature. Native trees include ipê roxo, jequitibá,
acacia and sibipiruna. The park has a playground,
natural waterfall, duck pond, walking track, restrooms,
a mini-zoo, gymnastics equipment and a picnic area.
Artists Grove
An area of 7,773 m² in the Swift neighborhood that
artists coming to the city were invited to visit, to plant a
tree and leave a hand-print in the cement.
Carlos Gomes Plaza
39
Botanical Gardens
With an area of over 500,000 m²
around 10 lakes, the Botanical
Gardens are a place organized
for entertainment with ample
space for culture and leisure.
The whole park was designed to
integrate with the environment,
with minimal earth-moving
and intervention on the site. It
constitutes a new tourism option
in Campinas.
Water Park
Visitors to the 300,000 m² site
enjoy an environment with plenty
of green, where the focus is on
leisure and physical activities.
There is also a children’s space with a traditional
playground and toys that encourage creativity.
Observation decks have been built into the Park’s lakes
to promote contact and interaction with nature, so that
people can better relate to how the fauna and flora
integrate with the environment. In addition, the park
houses the Center for Understanding Water, designed to
be an area of learning and research. The goal is to raise
awareness of the importance of water conservation and
the environment.
Capivari Linear Park
The Capivari Linear Park is a leisure, sports and culture
facility with jogging track, five-a-side football and two
beach volleyball courts. The park stretches along three
km of the River Capivari between the Santos Dumont
and Bandeirantes highways, covering approximately
1.2 million m².
Jean Nicolini Municipal Observatory
Opened in 1977, the Capricorn Observatory, as it is
known, offers astronomy courses at various levels, from
infant through university. It has educational publications
on topics related to astronomy. Visitors can observe
innumerable celestial objects through the telescope.
Cultural Harmony Center
This is one of the venues for popular presentations by the
Municipal Symphony Orchestra (OSM). It is located
in the Tom Jobim Plaza in the Cambuí neighborhood,
which has one of the city’s greatest concentrations of
nightclubs. The Harmony Center is an architectural
complex comprising a large acoustic shell, two theaters,
an indoor gallery for art exhibitions, the headquarters of
the OSM and a bar.
40
Taquaral Lake (Portugal Park)
Nossa Senhora da Conceição Metropolitan
Cathedral
Construction started on October 6, 1807 and was
completed on December 8, 1883. The facade was
designed by architect Cristovan Binini and finishing
was carried out by engineer Francisco de Paula Ramos
de Azevedo. The facade comprises three superimposed
bodies in the form of an Assyrian tower, decorated in
the classical style. The first body is of the Ionic order,
with the protruding central part crowned by a triangular
pediment. There are three entrances, above which are
placed a series of relief frames recording the cathedral’s
main historical dates. The second body is of the
composite-Corinthian order, with a large clock flanked
by two arcaded windows.
The third body rests on a square base. A single central
window is flanked by wide walkways, and the crowning
pyramid rises above this body to a sphere and cross of iron.
The cathedral underwent major restoration in 1923, in
particular with the addition of the great concrete dome
topped by the image of the Virgin Mary. This replaced
the previous smaller dome of stained glass. The interior
is decorated throughout in Brazilian baroque style using
red cedar. The principal artist was Vitoriano dos Anjos,
from Bahia.
Railway station
Built in 1872 to connect Campinas with Jundiaí, the
railway station was rebuilt in 1984 when it belonged
to Cia. de Estrada de Ferro. The building follows
English 20th century architectural standards in the
Victorian Gothic style and was listed for preservation by
Condephaat in 1982.
Culture Station (Railway)
Palácio dos Azulejos
Literally “The Palace of Tiles”, this was constructed
when Campinas was famous as a center of Brazil’s coffee
plantations. It was painstaking built of material imported
from Europe, for example Spanish marble, English
wrought iron and tiles made of the finest Portuguese
porcelain, as was customary at that time. Rich coffee
planters ordered homes built in the central region of the
city. Given the grandeur and location of the building,
it was acquired by the municipality at the start of the
century. The Palácio dos Azulejos, former residence of
Baron Itapura (Joaquim Ferreira Penteado), is located on
the corner of Regent Feijó and Ferreira Penteado streets.
It was listed for preservation by Condephaat in 1967.
Campinas Planetarium
The planetarium is equipped with the small-model
ZKP 2 made by Zeisa Jane of the former East Germany.
Consisting of high-precision mechanical and electronic
optical systems, it is the only one of its type in Brazil.
It is housed in a building with the form of a truncated
pyramid containing a semi-spherical dome, onto which
the sky is projected. The planetarium is essentially
educational, aimed at children.
History Museum
The collection of over 800 pieces includes objects for
slave torture, sedan chairs, weapons used in the war with
Paraguay and objects belonging to the Marquis of Três
Rios.
Nove de Julho Museum
Collection includes arms and ammunition from the
Constitutionalist Revolution of 1932 and the oil painting
from the stage curtain of the old Municipal Theater.
Natural History Museum
The collection includes stuffed animals, insects,
mineralogy and plant samples, a panel on the life-cycle
of the silkworm, shells, marine animals, eggs etc.
Folklore Museum
A collection of over 300 items, with the highlight being
statues from the Paraíba Valley.
Indian Museum
Collection includes pottery, straw utensils, indigenous
instruments, stones and middens.
Campinas Archdiocese Museum
Historical museum focusing mainly on sacred art.
Carlos Gomes Museum
Collection includes personal effects, piano, harp and
other objects belonging to Carlos Gomes.
Campinas Museum of Contemporary Art
Collection consists of paintings, sculptures, publications
and slides.
Coffee Museum
The Coffee Museum seeks to preserve and disseminate
the memory of coffee growing in Campinas.
41
Carlos Gomes Plaza
Dynamic Science Museum
Created under an agreement between the city of
Campinas, Unicamp, Funcamp and Aciesp, the museum
offers various activities for schools. There are school
sessions in the planetarium and courses, lectures and
exhibitions for the general public, plus courses and
workshops for teachers.
City Museum
This was created in 1992 to bring together the collections
of three museums in the city: the Indian Museum,
founded in 1967; the Historical Museum (1969); and
the Folklore Museum (1977). The new museum was
installed in an 1886 building that originally housed the
workshops of the Lidgerwood Manufacturing Co. Ltd.
Since its foundation, the City Museum has developed
a range of activities to encourage reflection and debate
about the city’s historical trajectory. It also organizes
traveling exhibitions, courses, workshops, theatrical
performances, seminars, lectures, video cycles and book
launches.
The Museum of Image and Sound (MIS)
and the Documentation Centre (Palácio dos
Azulejos)
The Campinas Museum of Image and Sound (MIS)
was founded in 1975 and since then has been collecting,
organizing, preserving and disseminating pictorial
records that document the social and cultural memory
of Campinas. The MIS also organizes video, film and
photography exhibitions.
Animals are exposed in 49 aquariums and nine
terrariums. The aquarium has about live 200 species,
including anemones, cypraea, spider crab, stenopus
hispidus, scorpion, spider-crab, starfish, star fish, sea
horse, sand shark, moray eel, lionfish, puffer fish, oscar,
neon, axolotl, red-eared slider turtle, coral snakes,
rattlesnakes and boa constrictors.
Water Knowledge Center
This is located within the Water Park as area of learning
and research, designed to raise awareness about the
importance of water conservation and the environment.
It serves children, young people and adults. The park
integrates the south of the city with other regions,
promoting a better quality of life for all residents.
The Campinas Afro-Brazilian Memory Center
Located in the Mogiana Palace, this tells the story of the
black community through photos, videos and documents.
One highlight is the “Coachman’s Letter”, issued in the
name of the former owner of the house. The museum is
a place to preserve the memory of the historical, cultural
and social development of Brazilians of African descent,
with exhibitions throughout the year.
CAMPINAS
MORUNGABA
VALINHOS
ITATIBA
VINHEDO
LOUVEIRA
Campinas Municipal Aquarium
This is the only aquarium in Brazil to present the
evolution of the animal kingdom didactically, showing
the major phyla from marine invertebrates to vertebrates.
INDAIATUBA
ITUPEVA
JARINU
JUNDIAÍ
Leisure and Entertainment Center
Campinas houses or is close to some of the biggest
leisure and entertainment centers in São Paulo State,
and indeed Brazil. Among the leading destinations for
those seeking entertainment, are:
42
Hopi Hari
■Hopi Hari: the largest cultural, amusement and theme
park in the country, just 20 minutes from downtown
Campinas.
■Wet’n Wild: a water park with capacity for 7,000 people
at Itupeva, 20 minutes from downtown Campinas.
■Serra
do Japi: an important environmental and
forest reserve, offering various options for ecotourism,
including forest trails, waterfalls and bird watching.
About 30 minutes from Campinas.
□ Ostrich
□ Fishing
farms
and stud farms
□ Agricultural
□ Traditional
□ Restaurants
school
rum distilleries
with typical regional food
□ Option for “pay and pick your own” at harvest time
□ Spaces
for events, get-togethers, day camping,
courses and training
■Holambra:
the Holambra Tourist Resort, known
as “the city of flowers”, is one of the most important
producers and exporters of flowers in Brazil. The friendly
little town is also notable for the quality of its Dutchorigin cuisine. About 30 minutes from Campinas.
■The
Fruit Circuit: this is a region comprising nine
municipalities that surround Campinas: Indaiatuba,
Itatiba, Itupeva, Jarinu, Jundiaí, Louveira, Morungaba,
Valinhos and Vinhedo. All of these are important
farming communities, with a strong emphasis on fruit
growing. Besides producing Brazil’s best fruit, this
region offers several other attractions, such as:
□ Wine
cellars and artisanal liquors
□ Production
□ Historic
□ Farms
of jams and jellies from seasonal fruit
coffee farm
within the Serra do Japi Environmental
Protection Area (APA), with options such as trails,
waterfalls and places to rest
□ Beekeeping
□ Farmhouse
and orchids
bed and breakfast
Cultural Harmony Center - Brazil Arena
43
Steam engine
■Water
Circuit: this is located in the Serra da
Mantiqueira mountains, and includes the spa resorts of
Amparo, Serra Negra, Socorro, Monte Alegre do Sul,
Lindóia, Águas de Lindóia, Jaguariúna and Pedreira.
These spas are today lively entertainment centers with
advanced hotel infrastructure and services, similar to the
best and most modern European centers. The quality
of the water is recognized internationally for its healing
powers, and constitutes one of the special attractions
of the spas. They also offer vistas of great natural
beauty, including luxuriant green valleys, waterfalls and
springs, with some of the best water and climate in the
world. The circuit has also become a major center for
conventions and events, and an option favored by those
seeking sports and ecotourism.
■Adventure
tourism: the districts of Sousas
and Joaquim Egídio lie within an Environmental
Preservation Area and offer a vast green area for a
variety of sports, including swimming in waterfalls
and trails for hiking, horse-riding, biking and
motorcycling. The tours are carried out in a sustainable
44
and environmentally responsible way, passing through
hills and native forests that are drained by the Jaguari
and Atibaia rivers. Another attraction in the area is
the Municipal Observatory, located in the Serra das
Cabras. The region is also famous for its gastronomy,
with a wide variety of bars and restaurants. Some cities
near Campinas, such as Socorro and Brotas, also offer
various options and are important components of the
National Adventure Sports Circuit. These places lie in
a mountainous region with many rapids and activities
such as tree climbing, aqua ride, buoy cross, canyoning,
caving, cascading, ducking, climbing, mountain biking,
off-roading, rafting, rappelling, tyrolese high ropes,
trekking, gliding and paragliding.
■Anhumas
Railway Station and Steam Engine: this
130-year-old railway station dates from the time of
coffee and retains its original installations, together
with the old train and steam engine which offers tours of
Campinas and Jaguariúna. The station and locomotive
feature frequently in films and historical novels.
José de Souza Campos Avenue (North-South)
Downtown area
Getting started in
Campinas
H
ow can you discover what incentives the city
offers investors? Are there schools teaching
in foreign languages in Campinas, and if so
which? Does the city have any foreign commercial representative offices? These and many other questions
are answered in the following chapter - a guide-book
for anybody wishing to invest, produce and live in
Campinas.
Where to start
New projects in Campinas must follow certain
procedures. To make implementation easier, Campinas
has created a facility called “Open Door for Business”,
a one-stop help-desk that brings together all the
information and services that entrepreneurs need. The
basic procedures required are:
Construction:
■Town
planning guidelines and registration of area
(for empty pieces of land)
■ Property
Information Form (for small building
plots)
■ Procedures for obtaining building permits, including
the Environmental Certificate
■ Certificate
of Completion of Construction (CCO)
■ Certification
that property is fit for habitation
Electronic Invoice
Tax modernization for the benefit of the
taxpayer
Campinas Municipality has introduced online invoicing to replace printed bills for service
companies. Taxpayers benefit because the system
provides greater security, reduces the expense of
printing traditional invoices, and eliminates the
need for storing printed documents. Introduction
of the Electronic Invoice complements other steps
to modernize City Hall, for example the creation
of “Open Door for Business”, decentralization
of services to taxpayers, and implementation of
Digital ISS. About 40,000 companies are now
issuing more than 500,000 electronic invoices
(NFSe) each month.
Opening a business:
■ Decentralized
■ Sanasa
agencies
(Procedures - Sociedade de Abastecimento
de Água e Saneamento S/A)
■ Health
Surveillance - Health Secretariat
■ EMDEC
- Campinas Municipal Development
■ CETESB
- Environmental Sanitation Technology
■ JUCESP
- Corporate Registry of the State of São
Company
Company
Paulo
■ Federal
■ INSS
■ State
- National Social Security Institute (welfare)
Finance Secretariat
■ Permit
■ Tax
tax authority
for use and operation
registration
Five agencies are available to clear up any remaining
doubts or provide additional information about moving
to Campinas:
■ Open
Door for Business
■ Commission
■ Municipal
■ Municipal
■ Municipal
for Reviewing Tax Incentives
Finance Secretariat
International Cooperation Secretariat
Commerce, Industry, Services and
Tourism Secretariat
48
Campinas City Hall
Open Door for Business: your helpdesk in Campinas
Open Door for Business is a new service from the
city of Campinas in the tax area. Its main aim is to
centralize services and information for companies,
both those that are already in the city, and others
that want to invest here. In addition to offering
services such as granting permits and operating
licenses, the office provides information about tax
incentive laws, or makes appointments with the
Incentives Commission. The Open Door for Business is a facilitator body designed to help the businessman by reducing bureaucracy and increasing
agility for getting a company started in the city.
The agency offers free courses for potential new
entrepreneurs, working in partnership with the
Brazilian Service of Support for Micro and Small
Enterprises (Sebrae).
Tax breaks
The city of Campinas today offers three tax incentive
laws:
■ I.
Buy Campinas
■ II.
Tax Incentives for Technology-Based Companies
High technology companies and distribution centers
receive additional points
■
Advantages:
An option for new or expanding businesses whose
main activity is the provision of services
■
Tax Incentives for Businesses in General. Benefits
range from a reduction in the rate of ISS (a tax on services
of any kind) through exemption from IPTU (an urban
property and land tax). In the case of ISS the reduction
in the rate applies from the date on which the application
was filed, while for property tax the benefit takes effect
only in the fiscal year following the request. There may
also be exemption from fees, charges and ITBI (a tax on
asset transmission between living persons).
■ No
1. Tax incentives for businesses in general
■
■ III.
These apply to:
restriction as to beneficiaries
2. Tax incentives for technology-based firms
Apply to companies whose activities focus on
technologically innovative, up-dated or renovated
products and services:
■ Information
■ Research
■ Biology,
and development
biotechnology and chemicals
Electronics, mechanics, telecommunications and
similar technologies
Companies already installed in Campinas that have
expansion projects
■ Duration:
■ Land
■ IPTU
■
■ New
businesses
divisions or industrial condominiums
Duration: six years, renewable for another six
Benefits:
reduction of between 0.5% to 3% in the ISS rate,
but never below the minimum rate of 2%, for the increase
in ISS generated by the new development or expansion
IPTU: reduction of 25% to 100% in the property tax
for the new constructed area
■
■ ITBI:
reduction of 50%
■ Waiver
Benefits:
■ ISS:
of fees and charges
Three year exemption from IPTU land and property
tax
■
■ Exemption
■ Exemption
from ITBI
from ISS liable on construction
For construction of subdivisions or condominiums:
Exemption from IPTU property tax on the land for
two years during construction
■
■ Exemption
■ Exemption
from ITBI
from ISS liable on construction
Criteria for qualification:
Presentation of a feasibility project for the installation
or expansion. This must explicitly address the following
factors:
■ Job
creation
■ Revenues
■ Positive
from services
net value added
property tax: reduction of 30% to 50%
50% reduction
Waiver of fees and charges
Criteria for qualification:
The company must present at least two of the following
characteristics:
Have within the general contingent of partners and
employees the following levels of education, completed
or in progress and directly linked to the objectives of the
company:
■
■ 40%
Benefits for industrial divisions and condos:
For constitution of subdivisions or condominiums:
six years, renewable for another six
reduced rate with a minimum level of 2%
■ ITBI:
■
■ ISS:
technology
■ 12%
with university degree
with post-graduate degree
Within not more than 36 months from the date of
application, have received or have accessed funding from
the CNPq, FINEP, FAPESP, federal or state promotion
agencies or international funding organizations
■
■ Have
received financial support in the form of venture
capital regulated by the CVM or recognized by FINEP
Within not more than 36 months from the date of
application, possess or have requested a patent, software
copyright registration or Certificate for Protection of
Vegetable Biotechnology
■
Within not more than 36 months from the date
of application, be a current or former resident in an
incubator for technology-based companies
■
Exception: Firms located in or to be installed in the
High-Technology Center (Parks I and II) and the
industrial area of Viracopos International Airport do not
need to comply with these requirements
49
Criteria for scoring:
includes one or more of the following items:
In addition to the qualifying criteria, the following items
will also receive points:
■Provides
■
■Makes
10% or more of the partners or employees educated to
technical level or higher
■ Revenue
from export
■ Increase
in ISS-taxable income
■ Gross
annual billing
■ Length
of time doing business in the city
Advantages:
The benefits apply to total billing and not just the
increase
■
An option for existing companies where service
provision is the main activity
■
3. Buy Campinas
Available for:
■ Industrial
enterprises
■ Distribution
■ Logistics
centers
units for goods and services
Duration: 10 years
Purpose:
Attract to Campinas investments in industry,
distribution centers and goods and services logistics
units, and thereby increase job creation and income in
the municipality.
Benefits:
■ Moratorium
of up to 36 months from project approval
for payment of ISS, IPTU property tax and ITBI
property transfer tax
Exemption, upon request, from payment of costs
relating to administrative procedures required to
regularize a project for construction, renovation or
expansion of an enterprise
■
Concession of tax credits in return for increased tax
generation
■
Benefit - credits for tax purposes:
Composition of tax credit:
60% of the portion of ICMS resulting from the
increase in value added
■
■ 20%
of the portion of ICMS resulting from the added
value of purchases made within the municipality. When
the supplier is a small or micro industry, the percentage
is 30%
■ 50%
■ 33%
of the company’s own increase in ISS
of the increase of ISS by tax substitution
Additional tax credit:
An extra 10% on total tax credits when the project
50
a project for environmental preservation
■Maintains
■Builds,
an educational program or crèche
donations to municipal funds
rebuilds or maintains public facilities or
infrastructure
Use of tax credits awarded:
Payment of taxes owed to the Municipality of Campinas:
■ IPTU
■ ISS
■ ITBI
■ Others:
transfer to other taxpayers
Condition for obtaining the benefits:
Presentation of investment project for plant installation
or expansion; or project for expansion of revenue from
sales of goods and services; and/or increased acquisition
of goods and services produced in the municipality.
Advantage:
This is the best option for corporate ICMS taxpayers
that have billings over US$5.55 million.
Maps of Campinas
Campinas Metropolitan Region
Highway network
Source: Emplasa
Campinas Metropolitan Region
Highway network
Municipal Boundaries
Highways
52
Macrozones
Macrozones
Macrozone 1 - Environmental Protection Area - APA
Macrozone 2 - Area of Environmental Control - ACAM
Macrozone 3 - Area of Controlled Urbanization - AUC
Macrozone 4 - Priority Urbanization Area - AUP
Macrozone 5 - Priority Area for Renewal - APR
Macrozone 6 - Area with Agriculture Vocation - AGRI
Macrozone 7 - Area within Influence of the Airport - EIA
Macrozone 8 - Specific Urbanization Area - AURBE
Macrozone 9 - Northwest Integration Area - AIN
Municipal Limit
Urban Perimeter Highways
Railroads
Implantation of Green Areas / Polygon for Environmental Multiplication
ESTABLISHMENT OF GREEN CORRIDORS
Strategic Environmental Corridors
Polygon for environmental multiplication (5x1)
Green Ways - Avenues
Linear Parks
A. Pium Stream
B. Capivari River
C. Ribeirão das Pedras stream
Theme Parks
1. Forest Park
2. Water Park
D. Ribeirão Anhumas stream
E. Cabras and Pires streams
F. Córrego V. União stream
3. Botanical Gardens
4. Coffee Park
Area of Associated Urban Operation
Complementary Law No. 12/04
Cerâmicas-Capivari Linear Park section
Source: Seplama/Semurb/PMC
Municipal Limit
Urban Perimeter
Highways
Urban area
53
Vacant Plots Within the Urban Perimeter
Density of Vacant Plots Within the Urban Perimeter
VACANT PLOTS WITHIN THE URBAN PERIMETER
Average density of empty plots by UTB
500 to 982
250 to 500
150 to 250
50 to 150
1 to 50
Municipal Limit
Highways
Source: Finance
54
Strategic Areas for Development and Upgrading
Agricultural Development Area
Strategic areas for development and upgrading
Area of CIATEC II
Area of revitalization of the center
Area of the Capivari/Cerâmicas urban operation - Complementary Law 12/04
Viracopos Airport
Area within influence of the airport
Strategic environmental corridors
Polygon for environmental multiplication (5x1)
Green Ways - Avenues
Linear parks
Anhanguera development area
Public theme parks
Highway development corridors
Municipal boundary
Highways
Multimodal passenger terminal
Macrozone 5 - Priority Area for Renewal - APR
Macrozone 6 - Area with Agriculture Vocation - AGRI
Macrozone 9 - Northwest Integration Area - AIN
Source: Seplama/Semurb/PMC
55
Average Built Density in UTBs (Basic Territorial Units)
56
CONTACTS
CITY HALL
Avenida Anchieta, 200 - Centro
CEP 13015-904
Tel: +55 19 2116-0275 / 2116-0281 / 2116-0163
www.campinas.sp.gov.br
Mayor’s Office
Avenida Anchieta, 200 - 4th floor
Tel: +55 19 2116-0552
www.campinas.sp.gov.br/gabinete
Coordination of Communication
Avenida Anchieta, 200 - 3rd floor
Tel: +55 19 2116-0762
Open Door for Business
Municipal International Cooperation
Secretariat
Avenida Anchieta, 200 - 5th floor
Tel: +55 19 2116-0754
[email protected]
www.campinas.sp.gov.br/cooperacao
Municipal Infrastructure Secretariat
Avenida Anchieta, 200 - 17th floor
Tel: +55 19 2116-0300
www.campinas.sp.gov.br/infraestrutura
Municipal Planning, Urban Development
and Environment Secretariat
Avenida Anchieta, 200 - 19th floor
Tel: +55 19 2116-0221
www.campinas.sp.gov.br/seplama
Avenida Anchieta, 200 - Ground Floor
Tel: +55 19 2116-0691
Fax: +55 19 2116-0686
[email protected]
Municipal Urban Planning Secretariat
Review Commission for Fiscal Incentives
RESEARCH INSTITUTES
Avenida Anchieta, 200
Tel: +55 19 2116-0814
[email protected]
Municipal Administration Secretariat
Avenida Anchieta, 200 - 6th floor
Tel: +55 19 2116-0339
[email protected]
www.campinas.sp.gov.br/administracao
Municipal Legal Affairs Secretariat
Avenida Anchieta, 200 - 13th floor
Tel: +55 19 2116-0271
www.campinas.sp.gov.br/assuntosjuridicos
Municipal Finance Secretariat
Avenida Anchieta, 200 - 8th floor
Tel: +55 19 2116-0315
[email protected]
www.campinas.sp.gov.br/financas
Municipal Commerce, Industry, Services
and Tourism Secretariat
Avenida Anchieta, 200 - 5th floor
Tel: +55 19 2116-0716
[email protected]
www.campinas.sp.gov.br/comercio
Avenida Anchieta, 200 - 2nd floor
Tel: +55 19 2116-0873
[email protected]
Campinas High Technology Center
Development Company - Ciatec
Rua Lauro Vannucci, 1.020 - Jardim Santa Cândida
CEP 13087-548
Tel / Fax: +55 19 3756-5433
[email protected]
www.ciatec.org.br
Embrapa Information Technology for
Farming
Av. André Tosello, 209 - Barão
Geraldo - Caixa Postal 6041
CEP 13083-886
Tel: +55 19 3789-5700
Fax: +55 19 3289-9594
www.cnptia.embrapa.br
Embrapa Satellite Monitoring
Av. Soldado Passarinho, 303 - Fazenda Chapadão
CEP 13070-115
Tel: +55 19 3211-6200
Fax: +55 19 3211-6222
www.cnpm.embrapa.br
Embrapa Environment
Rodovia SP 340 - km 127.5 - Caixa Postal 69
Jaguariúna/SP
CEP 13820-000
Tel: +55 19 3867-8700
Fax: +55 19 3867-8740
www.cnpma.embrapa.br
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Agronomic Institute of Campinas - IAC
Av. Barão de Itapura, 1481 - Caixa Postal 28
CEP 13020-902
Tel: +55 19 3231-5422 / 3234-8144
Fax: +55 19 3231-4943
www.iac.sp.gov.br
Biology Institute
Rodovia Heitor Penteado, km 3
CEP 13001-970
Tel: +55 19 3251-1491
Fax: +55 19 3251-8705
www.biologico.sp.gov.br
Institute of Animal Science - IZ
Rua Heitor Penteado, 56
Nova Odessa, SP
CEP 13460-000
Tel: +55 19 3466-9400
Fax: +55 19 3466-6415
[email protected]
www.iz.sp.gov.br
CATI - Coordination of Integral Technical
Assistance
Avenida Brasil, 2.340
Vila Itapura - CEP 13070-178
Tel: +55 19 3743-3700
www.cati.sp.gov.br
Renato Archer Research Center - CenPRA
Rodovia Dom Pedro I - km 143,6 - Amarais
CEP 13069-901
Tel: +55 19 3746-6000
Fax: +55 19 3746-6028
www.cenpra.gov.br
National Laboratory of Synchrotron Light
Rua Giuseppe Máximo Scolfaro, 10.000 - Guará
Caixa Postal 6.192
Campinas High Technology Center
CEP 13083-970
Tel: +55 19 3512-1010
Fax: +55 19 3512-1004
[email protected]
www.lnls.br
Food Technology Institute - ITAL
Avenida Brasil, 2.880 - Caixa Postal 139
CEP 13070-178
Tel: +55 19 3743-1700
www.ital.sp.gov.br
Center for Telecommunications Research
and Development - CPqD
Rodovia SP 340 (Campinas/Mogi Mirim) - km 118,5
CEP 13086-902
Tel: +55 19 3705-6773
www.cpqd.com.br
Eldorado Research Institute
Rodovia SP 340 (Campinas/Mogi Mirim) - km 118,5
CEP 13086-902
Tel: +55 19 3757-3000
Fax: +55 19 3757-3131
[email protected]
www.eldorado.org.br
UNIVERSITIES AND COLLEGES
Campinas State University - Unicamp
Cidade Universitária Zeferino Vaz (campus)
Distrito de Barão Geraldo
Tel: +55 19 3521-2121
www.unicamp.br
Catholic University of Campinas
PUC-Campinas
Rua Marechal Deodoro, 1099
Tel: +55 19 3735-5900
www.puc-campinas.edu.br
Paulista University - UNIP
Rua Pedro Domingues Vitale, 644
Tel: +55 19 3272-9444
www.unip.br
São Francisco University - USF
Rua Waldemar César da Silveira, 105
Tel: +55 19 3779-3323 / +55 19 3779-3326
www.saofrancisco.edu.br
Campinas Higher Institute of Education and
Schooling - IESCAMP
Av John Boyd Dunlop
Tel: +55 19 3227-6152
www.iescamp.com.br
IPEP - São Paulo Study and Research
Institute
Rua José de Alencar, 430
Tel: +55 19 3737-3270
www.ipep.edu.br
UNISAL - Salesian University Center of Sao
Paulo
Rua Baronesa Geraldo de Resende, 330
Tel: +55 19 3744-6910
58
Mackenzie Presbyterian University
Avenida Brazil, 1.200
Tel: +55 19 3212-1284
www.mackenzie.com.br
São Leopoldo Mandic University and PostGraduate Center
Av. José Rocha Junqueira, 13
Tel: +55 19 3211-3600
www.slmandic.edu.br
Brazil-Italy Chamber of Commerce and
Industry
Rua Barão de Paranapanema, 435
CEP 13026-010
Tel: +55 19 3253-1963
[email protected]
www.italcam.com.br
Campinas Convention & Visitors Bureau
Community College of Campinas - FAC
Rua Tiradentes, 289, cj. 12 - Jardim Guanabara
CEP 13023-190
Tel: +55 19 3232-5444
Fax: +55 19 3232-3595
www.campinas-regiao.com.br
FACAMP
Center of Industries of the State of São Paulo
CIESP
Policamp University
Campinas Forum Foundation
Rua José Rosolen. 171 - CEP 13061-020
Tel: +55 19 3229-0841
www.unianhanguera.edu.br
Estrada Municipal UNICAMP - Telebrás km 1, s/nº
Cidade Universitária
Tel: + 55 19 3754-8500
www.facamp.com.br
Rua Luiz Otávio, 1281
Tel: +55 19 3756-2300
www.policamp.edu.br
Metrocamp
Rua Dr. Sales de Oliveira, 1.661
Tel: +55 19 4501-2650
www.metrocamp.edu.br
BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS
Brazil - China Alliance
Rua Sacramento, 399 - Centro
Telefones: +55 19 3237-2125 / 8189-1288
CEP 13010-210
[email protected] / [email protected]
Commercial and Industrial Association of
Campinas - ACIC
Rua José Paulino, 1111 - Centro
Tel: +55 19 2104-9200
CEP 13013-001
www.acicnet.org.br
Okinawa Kenjin Association of Campinas
Av. Marechal Rondon, 3.360 - Jardim Eulina
Tel: +55 19 3242-9022
[email protected]
Brazil-US Chamber of Commerce
AMCHAM Campinas
Rua Padre Camargo Lacerda, 37
CEP 13070-277
Tel: +55 19 3743-2200
www.ciespcps.org.br
www.forumcampinas.org.br
Brazilian-Japanese Cultural Institute of
Campinas
Rua Camargo Paes 118 - Guanabara
Tel: +55 19 3241-1213
[email protected]
Corporate Registry f the State of Paulo
JUCESP
Avenida Campos Sales, 755 - Ground Floor
CEP 13013-001
Tel: +55 19 2104-9230
Fax: +55 19 2104-9228
[email protected]
Brazilian Service of Support for Micro and
Small Enterprises - SEBRAE
Av. Andrade Neves, 1811 - Jd. Chapadão
Tel: +55 19 3243-0277
Fax: +55 19 3242-6997
[email protected]
Trade Point Campinas
Rodovia Santos Dumont, km 66
Viracopos International Airport
CEP 13051-970
Tel: +55 19 3725-5751
www.tpcampinas.org.br
Avenida José de Souza Campos, 900 - 8th floor
CEP 13092-110
Tel: +55 19 2104-1251
[email protected]
www.amcham.com.br
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