CAMPINAS


'Campinas' is a city and county (''município'') located in the state of São Paulo, Brazil.
The county area is 797,6 km². Population is approximately 1,059,420 (2004 est.), with over 98% in the urban region. Its metropolitan area, defined in 2000, has some 19 cities and a population of 3,2 million people. Campinas is also the administrative center of the meso-region of the same name, with 3,641,766 inhabitants (2005 est.) and 49 cities. It is the third largest city in the state, after São Paulo (10,927,985 inhab. - 2006 est.) and Guarulhos (1,283,253 inhab. - 2006 est.).

Contents
History
Title and symbols
City twinning
Metropolitan Region of Campinas
Economy
Socio-economic conditions
Transportation
Communications
Media
Ecology
Climate
Education and health
Universities and colleges
Technical schools
Culture
Sports
Tourism and travel
Administration
Notable mayors
Notable people from Campinas
Footnotes
External links

History


The city was founded on July 14, 1774, by Barreto Leme. It was initially a simple outpost on the way to Minas Gerais and Goiás serving the "Bandeirantes" who were in search of precious minerals and Indian slaves. In the first half of the 19th century, Campinas became a growing population center, with many coffee and sugarcane farms. The construction of a railway linking it to the city of São Paulo and Santos' seaport, in 1817, was very important for its growth. In the second half of the 19th century, with the abolition of slavery, farming and industrialization attracted many foreign immigrants to replace the lost manpower, mainly from Italy. Coffee became an important export and the city became wealthy. In consequence, a large service sector was established to serve the growing population, and in the first decades of the 20th century, Campinas could already boast as having an opera house, theaters, banks, movie theaters, radio stations, a philarmonic band, two newspapers (Correio Popular and Diário do Povo), a good public education system (with the Escola Normal de Campinas and the Colégio Culto à Ciência), and hospitals, such as the Santa Casa de Misericórdia (a charity for poor people) and the Casa de Saúde de Campinas (for the Italian community), and the most important Brazilian research center in agricultural sciences, the Instituto Agronômico de Campinas, which was founded by Emperor Pedro II. Finally, the construction of the first Brazilian highway in 1938, between Campinas and São Paulo, the Anhanguera Highway, was a turning point in the integration of Campinas into the rest of the state.
Campinas was the birthplace of opera composer Carlos Gomes (1836—1896) and of the President of the Republic Campos Salles (1841—1913). It was home for 49 years for Hércules Florence, reputed as one of the early inventors of photography, photocopying and the mimeograph.

Title and symbols


Campinas means ''grass fields'' in Portuguese and refers to its characteristic landscape, which originally comprised large stretches of dense subtropical forests (''mato grosso'' or thick woods in Portuguese), mainly along the many rivers, interspersed with gently rolling hills covered by low-lying vegetation.
Campinas is also known as "Cidade das Andorinhas" (City of Swallows), because it was a favorite spot for these migratory birds, which flocked annually in enormous numbers to downtown Campinas. However, they almost disappeared around the 1950s, probably because the church and plaza where they used to roost were torn down. Campinas' official crest and flag has a picture of the mythical bird, the phoenix, because it was practically reborn after a devastating epidemic of yellow fever in the 1800s, which killed more than 25% of the city's inhabitants.
An inhabitant of Campinas is called a ''campineiro'' or ''campinense''.

City twinning


Campinas is officially twinned (sister city) with 16 cities[1]:

Fuzhou

Jingan

Fushun

Gifu

Córdoba

Concepción

Asunción

Santa Cruz de la Sierra

Blumenau

Belém

Novi Sad

San Diego

Daloa

Turin

Malito

Jericho

Metropolitan Region of Campinas


Administrative micro-region of Campinas. The outlying municipality names in red are also part of the Metropolitan Region of Campinas

As of 2000, Campinas became an official metropolitan region (RMC — Região Metropolitana de Campinas), with 19 municipalities, with a total of 2.3 million inhabitants and a total land area of 3,348 km² (data of 2000), adjacent to the São Paulo metropolitan region (RMSP).

Americana

Artur Nogueira

Cosmópolis

Engenheiro Coelho

Holambra

Hortolândia

Indaiatuba

Itatiba

Jaguariúna

Monte Mor

Nova Odessa

Paulínia

Pedreira

Santa Bárbara d'Oeste

Santo Antônio de Posse

Sumaré

Valinhos

Vinhedo
The Campinas municipality is also the administrative center of the micro- and meso-regions of the same name. The micro-region includes the RMC (Metropolitan Region of Campinas) and the municipality of Elias Fausto; the meso-region also includes the following municipalities: Aguaí, Amparo, Águas da Prata, Águas de Lindóia, Caconde, Casa Branca, Divinolândia, Espírito Santo do Pinhal, Estiva Gerbi, Itapira, Itobi, Lindóia, Mococa, Mogi Guaçu, Moji-Mirim, Monte Alegre do Sul, Pedra Bela, Pinhalzinho, Pirassununga, Porto Ferreira, Santa Cruz das Palmeiras, Santo Antônio do Jardim, São João da Boa Vista, São José do Rio Pardo, São Sebastião da Grama, Serra Negra, Socorro, Tambaú, Tapiratiba, Vargem Grande do Sul and Vinhedo.
Other cities which are geographically, historically or economically tied to the meso-region of Campinas could be mentioned: Araras, Atibaia, Bragança Paulista, Capivari, Conchal, Iracemápolis, Itu, Itupeva, Jarinu, Jundiai, Limeira, Louveira, Mombuca, Morungaba, Piracicaba, Rafard, Rio das Pedras, Salto and Tuiuti.

Economy


''See a list of companies in Campinas''
Historical building of the Jockey Club of Campinas, illuminated for the Christmas season of 2005

Modern office building at the North-South Avenue. Photo by Renato M.E. Sabbatini

Campinas' main economic activities are agriculture (mainly coffee, sugarcane, and cotton), industry (textiles, motorcycles, cars, machinery, agricultural equipment, food and beverages, chemical and petrochemical, pharmaceuticals, paper and cellulose, telecommunications, computers and electronics, etc.), commerce and services.
The region is responsible for 9% of Brazil's Gross Domestic Product (GDP), with just over 3% of the country's population. Per capita income is one of the highest in Latin America (over US$ 9,000/year Purchase Parity Power). Absolute GDP has experienced a growth of more than 50%¨between 2000 and 2003. Five cities in Campinas' region are among the 100 largest in GDPs in Brazil (Campinas, Paulínia, Americana, Sumaré and Indaiatuba), with Campinas occupying the 14th position (total GDP of US$ 60 billion). About 70 companies listed in the directory of the 500 largest private and public companies are headquartered in the Campinas region, with a total gross sales volume of more than 25 billion dollars in 2005 and more than 100,000 workers.
Campinas has been dubbed the Brazilian Silicon Valley, since it is home to many national and international high-tech industries (IBM, Motorola, Freescale, Lucent, Nortel, Compaq, Celestica, Samsung, Alcatel, Bosch, 3M, Texas Instruments and so on.
The automotive industry is also heavily represented, such as General Motors, Mercedes-Benz, Honda, Magneti Marelli, Eaton Corporation, Tenneco and many others. It also has a sizable pharmaceutical industry sector, with companies like Medley Farma, EMS Farma, Altana, Merck Sharp and Dohme, Cristália, Valeo, etc.
In addition the region is home to many research centers and universities (such as LNLS, CPqD, CenPRA, EMBRAPA, UNICAMP, and PUCCAMP).
The region also boasts being the Brazilian city with the largest number of high-tech business incubators and industrial parks (in a total of eight), such as the CIATEC I and II, Softex, TechnoPark, InCamp, Polis, TechTown, Industrial Park of Campinas and others.
According to Wired Magazine, Campinas is one of the highest-growth high-tech areas in Latin America, second only to the city of São Paulo itself. Since 1995, the city has received over US$ 7 billion in investments in telecommunications, information technology and electronics. Of the 500 largest companies listed by Fortune magazine, 50 are already established in the Campinas region.
The presence of one of the largest oil refineries in Latin America (350,824 barrels of crude per day), operated by Petrobras in the neighboring county of Paulínia, has attracted many petrochemical industries to the Campinas area, including DuPont, Rhone-Poulenc, and Royal Dutch Shell.
The Brazilian Pró-Álcool Program was developed in Campinas (development of a whole industry around the use of ethanol as a combustible for motor vehicles, going from a new sucrose-rich sugarcane, to alcohol refineries, a huge distribution system, as well as a new engine), etc.; and, more recently, an internal combustion engine capable of using either gasoline or ethanol.
Other examples of Campinas-bred technologies were fiber optics, lasers for telecommunications and medicine applications, integrated circuits design and fabrication, satellite environmental monitoring of natural resources, software for agriculture, digital telephone switches, deep-water oil exploration platforms and technologies, biomedical equipment, medical software, genetic engineering and recombinant DNA technologies for food production and pharmaceutics, food engineering, and many others.
Socio-economic conditions

Despite Campinas' position of wealth and social and economic opportunity vis-a-vis the rest of the country, the average per capita income of little more than US$ 2,700 per year clearly indicates that there are problems. If re-evaluated in terms of PPP (Purchasing Power Parity), Campinas' average income looks better (roughly 9,000 USD per year). In fact, Campinas is emblematic of the wealth distribution inequality that is so common in the country (Brazil is the 14th largest economy in the world, but ranks only 32nd in wealth generation per capita, and 117th in average Gini coefficient). Campinas has a Gini coefficient of 58%, which is almost the same as that of Brazil (59.3), a level similar to countries such as Zimbabwe and Paraguay. Such a level means that the top 10% richest make almost 70 times more than the 10% poorest.
This level of poverty contrasts with the high Human Development Index of Campinas, which is about the same level as Chile, Hungary, Poland, Lithuania and Slovakia. The explanation for this apparent contradiction is that side by side, even in the same city section, one can find walled condominiums with a yearly average per capita income of US$ 60,000 to US$ 100,000 and spreading "favelas" (slum cities) with incomes of less than US$ 800 p.a. The classes A and B help move the local economy, and provide a strong tax base for the municipality.
Until the late 1970s, Campinas was proud to have no favelas, but the increasing industrialization and wealth attracted hordes of destitute agrarian workers and urban dwellers with few job qualifications from all parts of the country. Land invasions were frequent and the municipal powers were unable or unwilling to suppress them, allowing illegal occupation of land in key sectors of the city (in Brazil, state and counties are forbidden by the Federal Constitution to restrict or even measure the free movement of citizens).
Due to all this, Campinas has relatively high crime rates for its size. Most of the violent crimes (armed robbery and homicides) are related to drug trafficking and occur in the poorer sections of the city.

Transportation


Campinas Beltway

Dom Pedro I Highway, part of Campinas Beltway. Photo by Renato M.E. Sabbatini

Campinas is a major transportation and telecommunications hub for the State of São Paulo, as it is located on the major highways that connect the capital to the Northwest and Northern parts of the State. The city is served by the a Campinas Beltway (''Anel Viário'') and the following main highways:

Rodovia Anhangüera

Rodovia dos Bandeirantes

Rodovia Santos Dumont

Rodovia Dom Pedro I

Rodovia Adhemar de Barros

Rodovia General Milton Tavares de Souza

Rodovia Jornalista Francisco Aguirre Proença
All these highways are built according to the highest international standards (see highway system of São Paulo). The Anel Viário José Magalhães Teixeira (SP-038) around the city currently interconnects the Anhangüera and Dom Pedro I highways.
Campinas has long been a major railway hub, too, although passenger train lines no longer operate there.
Its international airport, Viracopos Airport, has long been the State's main air cargo terminal, and its passenger traffic is rapidly expanding.

Communications


Campinas is a major telecommunications hub in the state and in the country. It has the largest ''per capita'' number of fixed and mobile telephone lines in the São Paulo state and one of the largest in the country. The city is also a major hub for cable, fiber optic, microwave and satellite communication networks. COMSAT operates near Campinas one of the largest satellite ground stations in Latin America, and the National Research and Education Network (Rede Nacional de Pesquisa e Educação) has a high-capacity point of presence (POP) in the city.

Media


Three daily newspapers are published in Campinas, all owned by media company Rede Anhangüera de Comunicação: Correio Popular, Diário do Povo and Notícia Já (a tabloid). Several other local newspapers with weekly or monthly circulation are also published. Several magazines are also published in Campinas, the largest one being ''Metrópole'', which circulates on Sundays as a supplement to ''Correio Popular''.
The city has also a large number of radio stations as well as several local TV stations, including ''TV Universidades'' and ''Fenix TV'' (both not-for-profit, distributed by Net Campinas, the local cable distributor)

Ecology


Typical residential area in downtown Campinas. The many trees include an ipê tree with violet flowers

Campinas has a relevant ecological interest area (''Portuguese: Área de Relevante Interesse Ecológico'') — Santa Genebra forest, with 2.51 km², created in 1985 and regulated by IBAMA, Campinas City Hall and José Pedro de Oliveira Foundation.
Among the public parks, there are the "Bosque Municipal", the "Lagoa do Taquaral Park", the "Ecological Park of Campinas" and the "Lagoa da UNICAMP" Park. These parks feature jogging and bicycle paths.

Climate


Campinas is located on the São Paulo plateau, in the transition area to the Serra da Mantiqueira mountain range. It has an excellent climate throughout the year, characterized by mostly sunny and hot days (more than 200 days in the year), a mild temperature range (average yearly temperature of 22.4 degrees Celsius, ranging from an average minimum of 7.2 degrees to a maximum of 35.9 degrees) and a constant regime of cool winds. Due to this, Campinas has little air pollution and smog and the local airports almost never close due to bad weather. Thanks to a regular rain regimen, the region's vegetation is evergreen, and some crops, such as sugarcane have three harvests per year.
The wet season is from mid-October to mid-June, with heavier rains particularly in January and February, and the dry season is from mid-May to mid-September. Average rainfall is 24.3 mm in August and 267.8 mm in January. Average humidity ranges from 37% (August) to 56% (January).
In the region around Campinas near the state of Minas Gerais there are a number of cities enjoying an even milder mountain climate, such as Atibaia, Águas de Lindóia, Itapira, Itatiba, Joanópolis, Serra Negra, Socorro, where several water spas are located.

Education and health


Campinas has strong educational and health care institutions which attract students and patients from all over Latin America. Besides a state university, UNICAMP, Campinas boasts a student population of over 60,000, with many private universities having campuses in the city. Several of its hospitals and specialized clinics are among the best in Brazil, such as the huge State University of Campinas Clinics Hospital, Instituto Penido Burnier, Centro Infantil Domingos Boldrini and many others.
Universities and colleges

Partial view of the State University of Campinas campus


★ UNICAMP (Universidade Estadual de Campinas)

★ PUCC (Pontifícia Universidade Católica de Campinas)

★ UNIP (Universidade Paulista)

★ FACAMP (Faculdades de Campinas)

★ METROCAMP (Faculdade Integrada Metropolitana de Campinas)

★ IPEP (Faculdades Integradas IPEP)

★ UNISAL (Centro Universitário Salesiano)

★ USF (Universidade São Francisco)

★ ESAMC (Escola Superior de Administração, Marketing e Comunicação)

Universidade Mackenzie

★ FAC (Faculdades Comunitárias de Campinas) = Anhangüera Educacional S.A.

Faculdades Fleming

★ Faculdade de Odontologia São Leopoldo Mandic
Technical schools


★ ETE Bento Quirino (Escola Técnica Estadual Bento Quirino)

★ ETECAP (Escola Técnica Estadual Conselheiro Antonio Prado)

COTUCA (Colégio Técnico da Universidade de Campinas)

Culture



The Cathedral of Campinas, the Church of Our Lady. It was built in the 19th century; its interior is entirely made of jacaranda wood sculptures and works.

Historical Railway Society of Campinas

The city has always been a cultural center in the State of São Paulo. This has increased greatly with the proliferation of universities. Campinas has three theater houses, a symphony orchestra,(considered one of the three best of the country),now under Principal Conductor Karl Martin, classical music ensembles, choral groups, 43 movie theaters, dozens of libraries (including a municipal library), art galleries, museums, etc.

Sports


Campinas is the home town for two of the oldest and most significant soccer teams of Brazil, the Associação Atlética Ponte Preta (one of the oldest football teams in Brazil, having been founded in 1900) and Guarani Futebol Clube (the only Brazilian interior team to have won the national championship, in 1978). They own two stadiums, the Estádio Brinco de Ouro and the Estádio Moisés Lucarelli, other team is the Campinas Futebol Clube.

Tourism and travel


The city hasn't many tourist spots, since it is not located at the beach or the mountains, and has no remarkable old monument or construction. However it has some nice places to visit such as:

★ the Bosque dos Jequitibás, an urban preserved wooded area reminiscent of the original rain forest that covered the region in the past: it has a small zoo with local fauna and a natural history museum

★ the Cathedral, which was built in the 19th century; its interior is entirely made of jacaranda wood sculptures and works

★ the Central Market, with typical stalls full of fresh product of the region

★ the old Central Railway Station, now converted to a cultural center

★ ''Convivência'', a cultural complex of theater, open arena for concerts and spectacles, and a plaza, where the Campinas Philarmonic Orchestra often plays to the public

★ the ''Castelo'' (Castle) Water Tower, which provides a beautiful view over the downtown

★ the Historical Railway Society of Campinas, which maintains the Anhumas station, a set of steam locomotives and full carriages and which promotes regular trips along a picturesque region dotted with old coffee farms

★ the Lagoa do Taquaral Park, a much-beloved urban lagoon and adjacent wooded park, with a planetarium, a science museum, an indoor sports stadium and swimming pool, kart racing and model airplane areas, an open concert auditorium, floating caravel replica, a small railway, pedal boats, facilities for several types of sports, including a long track for running and walking, etc.
Campinas readers of the Correio Popular newspaper and the Cosmo site have voted in July 2007 for the "Seven Wonders of Campinas [1].
The mountain region around Campinas has better travel and stay opportunities, such as in the spa cities of Serra Negra and Águas de Lindóia; and in Holambra, a rural region which was populated by immigrants from the Netherlands, with an annual flower festival and typical buildings and restaurants.

Administration


Palácio dos Jequitibás, the Mayoral Palace of Campinas

Campinas has an annual municipal budget of over US$ 500 million dollars, one of the highest in Brazil. The current mayor is Hélio de Oliveira Santos, a physician, former professor of pediatric surgery at the UNICAMP Medical School and federal congressman, who was elected by a coalition of several political parties, led by the Partido Democrático Trabalhista. His term runs from Jan. 1, 2005 to Dec. 31, 2008.
The municipality is subdivided into one main district and four subdistricts, Joaquim Egídio, Sousas, Barão Geraldo and Nova Aparecida. There are also 14 regional administrations.
Notable mayors


Orozimbo Maia - 1904, 1908-1910, 1926-1930

Ruy Hellmeister Novais - 1956-1959, 1964-1969

Orestes Quércia - 1969-1972

José Roberto Magalhães Teixeira - 1983-1988, 1993-1996 (died of cancer while in office)

Francisco Amaral - 1977-1982, 1997-2001

Antonio da Costa Santos (''Toninho'') - 2001 (murdered while in office)

Izalene Tiene - 2001-2005

Notable people from Campinas



Arnaldo Vieira de Carvalho - physician

Campos Sales - polítician, fourth president of Brazil

Carlos Gomes - musician and composer

Carlos Zara - actor and director

Celly Campello - singer

Cláudia Raia - actress

Durval de Lima Junior - musician and actor

Francisco Glicério - senator

Fausto Silva - journalist and TV show host

Guilherme de Almeida - poet and writer

Heitor Penteado - polítician, mayor of Campinas and state governor

José Carlos de Figueiredo Ferraz - polítician, mayor of São Paulo

José Pancetti - painter

Júlio de Mesquita - journalist, publisher and owner of newspaper O Estado de S. Paulo

Lidia Brondi - actress

Luciano do Valle - sports radio speaker and TV presenter

Maitê Proença - actress

Marília Gabriela - journalist, actress and TV show hostess

Nelsinho Baptista - soccer player

Olavo de Carvalho - philosopher and writer

Gabriela Duarte - actress

Sandy Leah Lima - singer and actress

Footnotes



1. Malito torna-se cidade-irmã de Campinas


External links



Official home page (in Portuguese).

Campinas Yellow Pages (in Portuguese).

Photo album.

The Seven Wonders of Campinas (in Portuguese)

Campinas at Wikimapia

Satellite photo of Campinas. Google Maps.

Campinas Business Directory (in Portuguese).

Campinas' Region (In Portuguese)

Trade Point Campinas (export/import info).

Campinas American Chamber of Commerce

Current local time.

Current weather.

Hotel information.

Correio Popular newspaper site.

Diário do Povo newspaper site.

Campinas Videoconference Center

Campinas Convention and Visitors Bureau

Campinas' Wired magazine story, July 2000.

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