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LosAngelesBeauty
Dec 30, 2006, 1:44 PM
http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-palmas30dec30,0,3783805.story?track=tothtml

GLOBAL CAPITAL

A major new city rises in Brazil

From pastureland the government has built Palmas into a shiny state capital with soaring buildings. Now, it just needs people to move in.

By Marla Dickerson
Times Staff Writer

December 30, 2006

PALMAS, BRAZIL — This planned city boasts stately boulevards, universities, a gleaming airport and beaches — no small feat for a place deep in Brazil's interior.

Never mind that only 208,000 people currently reside in a space designed to accommodate 3 million residents, giving Palmas the feel of an empty movie set.

Seventeen years ago, Palmas was little more than a blueprint and scrubby pastureland. It has sprung from the red dust to become this nation's fastest-growing state capital. And it's a testament to the aspirations of Brazil's sprawling rural center and north, whose development has long lagged behind that of the bustling southeast.

"Palmas is the new frontier," said Mayor Raul Filho, whose city was founded in 1989 as the capital of Brazil's newest state, Tocantins. This region "is the future of Brazil."

Although most of Brazil's 188 million residents still live within a few hundred miles of the Atlantic Ocean, the nation's vast interior is experiencing a surge of growth and investment.

The opening of Brazil's so-called cerrado, an immense expanse of tropical savanna in the center of the country, began in earnest in the 1950s with the construction of Brasilia, about 400 miles south of Palmas. The meticulously planned federal district was an effort to spur development in the interior and shift population growth away from the southeastern megalopolises of Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo.

Advances in soil and plant science are driving new development. Nearly 100 million acres of poor-quality cerrado soil have been converted into arable farm ground, most of that in the last 25 years. Cheap, abundant land has turned central Brazil into a hothouse of soybean, cotton and sugar cane production, boosting demand for infrastructure and services to support a crucial export industry.

For Jarbas Meurer, who arrived in 1991 at age 14, Palmas was the chance to live the Brazilian dream. His father was running a struggling drugstore in the neighboring state of Mato Grosso when the family saw a report about Palmas on a television news program. What better place to start a new life than in a city that was literally being built from the ground up.

Early settlers like Meurer lived like pioneers without electricity, running water or other basic services. He remembers camping in a makeshift shelter and bathing in a nearby river, a rare respite from the choking dust kicked up by earthmovers scraping roads and home sites from the virgin savanna.

Today he runs a building supply company, selling construction materials to fortune seekers who arrive almost daily. Although Palmas isn't expanding at the breakneck pace of the early days, its population swelled 50% between 2000 and 2005. The 29-year-old Meurer said that business was good and that he had put down roots.

"It is a chance to grow with the city," Meurer said. "There is opportunity here."

Political tension sowed the seeds for the creation of Tocantins, which encompasses what was previously the northern half of the state of Goaias. Brazil is roughly the size of the continental United States, but it has only 26 states. Some of them are so large that they dwarf neighboring countries. The vast distances have created intrastate rivalries among far-flung residents about where public resources should be spent.

"Politicians used to come up this way only in election years," said Palmas businessman Emilson Vierira Santos, whose company manufactures iron sheets and bars for the construction trade. "The rest of the time we were forgotten."

The northern separatist movement led to the creation of Tocantins in 1988. Helped by billions of dollars in federal aid and inspired by the legacy of Brazil's best-known master-planned city, legislators approved a new capital smack in the center of the new state. The gold-domed capitol looks like the palace of a Middle Eastern potentate.

"We are like a small Brasilia," Mayor Filho said.

Indeed, with its grandiose scale and soaring modernist buildings, Palmas evokes the same sense of audacity, ambition and will to power. The Palacio Araguaia, Palmas' main government building, anchors one of the largest public squares in Latin America but is virtually devoid of people. Residents on bicycles pedal unmolested down six-lane thoroughfares suitable for Los Angeles traffic.

Whether Palmas grows as large as its founders' vision for it remains to be seen. Maintaining a big-city infrastructure is proving costly. Unregulated squatter settlements have emerged on the outskirts of the city, thwarting plans for orderly expansion. Perhaps the biggest challenge is creating jobs in a poor, rural and still largely isolated region.

Officials are betting heavily on agriculture. Long home to gigantic cattle herds and pineapple plantations, Tocantins is attracting cotton and soybean farmers lured by cheap land and a sunny climate that enables them to plant two or three crops a year. Officials are promoting the production of biodiesel, a renewable fuel made from a variety of crops, including soybeans, castor beans and palm oil.

To help get those farm products to market quickly and at lower cost, the Brazilian government is planning a railway to run the length of Tocantins as well as projects to open its rivers to more freight traffic. A series of hydroelectric plants has already made the state a net exporter of electricity.

And it has given Palmas a new tourist attraction. A dam on the Tocantins River created a massive reservoir in 2001 that has turned the sweltering city into an inland resort with miles of beaches — albeit one where swimmers need to be wary of piranhas.

Some environmentalists are appalled at government efforts to push large-scale development along the southern fringes of the Amazon.

Brazil has a long track record of projects intended to foment growth in its interior that have damaged the environment with little benefit for residents.

Development could further marginalize the region's indigenous tribes, who have already lost much of their traditional lands.

But for entrepreneurs such as Cleide Honorato, who owns a car rental agency and a four-bedroom house with a swimming pool, growth and prosperity have converged in Palmas.

"Newcomers are good for my business," she said. "I wish there were more of them."


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marla.dickerson@latimes.com

bobdreamz
Dec 30, 2006, 1:54 PM
interesting article and would like to see pics of this place.

Buck
Dec 30, 2006, 2:00 PM
Interesting... but I really would like to see pictures as well.

the94112
Dec 31, 2006, 5:34 AM
ditto.

Trantor
Jan 2, 2007, 1:44 PM
all your wishes shall be realized in 2007 :D

pictures of HUNDREDS of brazilian cities (links to their threads, organized by state and city)
http://www.skyscrapercity.com/showthread.php?t=232015


Palmas, Tocantins:

in the map, its the capital of the orange state
http://img102.imageshack.us/img102/5585/mapbrasil24vd.gif

the way the article puts it (soaring buildings!) it sounds like a Dubai. Its NOTHING even near it. Nor its near Brasilia in architecture level...

http://i84.photobucket.com/albums/k19/cerrado_2006/Imagem008.jpg

http://i84.photobucket.com/albums/k19/cerrado_2006/Imagem001.jpg

http://i84.photobucket.com/albums/k19/cerrado_2006/Imagem002.jpg

http://i84.photobucket.com/albums/k19/cerrado_2006/Imagem009.jpg

http://i84.photobucket.com/albums/k19/cerrado_2006/Imagem010.jpg

http://i84.photobucket.com/albums/k19/cerrado_2006/Imagem014.jpg

http://i84.photobucket.com/albums/k19/cerrado_2006/Imagem015.jpg

http://i84.photobucket.com/albums/k19/cerrado_2006/Imagem017.jpg

http://i84.photobucket.com/albums/k19/cerrado_2006/Imagem020.jpg

http://i84.photobucket.com/albums/k19/cerrado_2006/Imagem022.jpg

http://i84.photobucket.com/albums/k19/cerrado_2006/Imagem025-1.jpg

http://i84.photobucket.com/albums/k19/cerrado_2006/Imagem026.jpg

http://i84.photobucket.com/albums/k19/cerrado_2006/Imagem027.jpg

http://i84.photobucket.com/albums/k19/cerrado_2006/Imagem029.jpg

http://i84.photobucket.com/albums/k19/cerrado_2006/Imagem030.jpg

http://i84.photobucket.com/albums/k19/cerrado_2006/Imagem001-2.jpg

http://i84.photobucket.com/albums/k19/cerrado_2006/Imagem003.jpg

http://i84.photobucket.com/albums/k19/cerrado_2006/Imagem004-2.jpg

http://i84.photobucket.com/albums/k19/cerrado_2006/Imagem005.jpg

http://i84.photobucket.com/albums/k19/cerrado_2006/Imagem006.jpg

http://i84.photobucket.com/albums/k19/cerrado_2006/Imagem007.jpg

http://i84.photobucket.com/albums/k19/cerrado_2006/Imagem008-2.jpg

http://i84.photobucket.com/albums/k19/cerrado_2006/Imagem016-2.jpg

http://i84.photobucket.com/albums/k19/cerrado_2006/Imagem017-2.jpg

http://i84.photobucket.com/albums/k19/cerrado_2006/Imagem018-2.jpg

http://i84.photobucket.com/albums/k19/cerrado_2006/Imagem019-2.jpg



this looks like the busiest pic of the city...
http://i84.photobucket.com/albums/k19/cerrado_2006/Imagem026-2.jpg

http://i84.photobucket.com/albums/k19/cerrado_2006/Imagem027-1.jpg

http://i84.photobucket.com/albums/k19/cerrado_2006/Imagem028.jpg

Trantor
Jan 2, 2007, 1:47 PM
for comparassion, this southern brazilian city (which is NOT a state capital) has the SAME population as Palmas...

http://i26.photobucket.com/albums/c128/eduhaus/074c6867.jpg

and this one has only 40 thousand more people than Palmas
http://i5.photobucket.com/albums/y166/rogeriopenna/NH2/129_2904.jpg
http://img95.echo.cx/img95/1484/12828467ro.jpg

Urbanguy
Jan 2, 2007, 5:51 PM
Intersting article and pics but I don't like the fact that its design is more for the car than people.

InlandEmpire
Jan 2, 2007, 6:00 PM
Doesn't look like anything too special- that second city pictures looks much better. By the way, I'll plead ignorance here, but does Brazil have a large english speaking population? I noticed that most of the signage on the Palmas mall was in english... not what I would have expected.

Trantor
Jan 2, 2007, 7:54 PM
no, Brasil doesnt have a large english speaking population. Its much easier to find people speaking german and italian dialects in southern Brazil than people who can speak english in Rio or São Paulo.

skylife
Jan 2, 2007, 8:07 PM
Eeeew. I think Brazil is awesome, but that new city looks awful. The traffic is going to be terrible when the remaining 2,792,000 people get there. It looks pretty car-centric.

Agent Orange
Jan 2, 2007, 8:28 PM
By the way, I'll plead ignorance here, but does Brazil have a large english speaking population? I noticed that most of the signage on the Palmas mall was in english... not what I would have expected.

In South America, the word for a shopping center or mall is simply shopping.

IdahoMountainBoy
Jan 2, 2007, 8:49 PM
Looks like suburban LA....what's the big deal here?...Except another push to eat up open space is an environmentally important area...

Lost Island
Jan 2, 2007, 10:11 PM
Intersting article and pics but I don't like the fact that its design is more for the car than people.

Well, then San Dubaiez it is!! :haha:

Or even better..Lost Palmas...;)

arbeiter
Jan 2, 2007, 11:15 PM
It looks anything but booming, but I still have a bit of fondness for it. why, i don't know. South Americans have a really cute way of suburbanizing. Palmas is still more interesting than a Kansas City suburb at least.

And it was literally carved out of nothing, look at the google satellite map of it:

http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&q=Santiago,+Chile&ie=UTF8&om=1&z=12&ll=-10.246682,-48.319588&spn=0.201019,0.400658

Trantor
Jan 3, 2007, 1:02 AM
Looks like suburban LA....what's the big deal here?...Except another push to eat up open space is an environmentally important area...

why is it environmentally important? Its in the middle of a great plain... more of a savannah than a jungle.

RAlossi
Jan 3, 2007, 1:22 AM
Looks like suburban LA....what's the big deal here?...Except another push to eat up open space is an environmentally important area...

It looks absolutely nothing like suburban LA ... unless by "LA" you're referring to Louisiana, in which case I have no idea what suburban Louisiana looks like.

WesTheAngelino
Jan 3, 2007, 1:45 AM
^ It looks like Baton Rouge and Panama City had a bastard child.

niwell
Jan 3, 2007, 1:47 AM
What I want to know is what's up with this:

http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&q=Santiago,+Chile&ie=UTF8&om=1&z=16&ll=-10.204511,-48.34465&spn=0.010158,0.021629&t=h&iwloc=addr

That's obviously a runway, but if you zoom in it's being used as an 8 lane roadway to nowhwere. Wierd!

WesTheAngelino
Jan 3, 2007, 1:52 AM
And I do mean Panama City, Florida of course heheh

Trantor
Jan 3, 2007, 5:24 AM
What I want to know is what's up with this:

http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&q=Santiago,+Chile&ie=UTF8&om=1&z=16&ll=-10.204511,-48.34465&spn=0.010158,0.021629&t=h&iwloc=addr

That's obviously a runway, but if you zoom in it's being used as an 8 lane roadway to nowhwere. Wierd!

wow!! Thats weird!!! I will ask a Palmas forumer on Skyscrapercity about it.

My guess its that before the city existed, it was a military base, and that was the military base runway. Since probably there were bad roads to it at the time (since NOTHING existed there), many stuff were brought to the city/city project area by airplane. As the city was built around it, the military base lost purpose to exist, and the nice asphalt of the runway was too good to simply dismantle it, so they found it better to use it as a road. My two cents. I will come with a real explanation soon...

dfane
Jan 3, 2007, 1:54 PM
what body of water is that?
Is that the Amazon river?

Trantor
Jan 3, 2007, 4:01 PM
what body of water is that?
Is that the Amazon river?

no, its more than 1000km southeast of the Amazon River...

Its an artificial lake created by the construction, in 2002, of the Lajeado Hydroelectric Power Plant. The river that powers the hydroeletric powerplant is the Tocantins River I think (which gives name to the state).

Btw, I am brazilian, but I only know about the artificial lake because of Wikipedia :)

Trantor
Jan 3, 2007, 4:07 PM
I GOT INFO ABOUT THE AIRPORT RUNWAY TRANSFORMED INTO A AVENUE


Yes, it was an old runway used during 10 years, for the construction of the city. It had a minor terminal. After the construction of the main airport, it was transformed in an avenue. This was ALREADY predicted by the urban planning the city.

This picture is old (some GoogleEarth pictures are several years old), and specially in Palmas, a city changing very fast, it gets old really fast.


This runway received a central garden to look more like an avenue of 2 distinct lanes/paths (whatever). The streets around the airport are already ALL paved with asphalt and urbanized (in the pic, it looks all dirt and provisory).

The runway was necessary because there were really no roads to the location where Palmas was built. So many things could only be brought by plane.

The old terminal was reformed and transformed in a firefighter hq.

niwell
Jan 3, 2007, 7:43 PM
^Cool, thanks for the info.