Postcard from Spain: Gijon
Gijon comes to terms with an ever changing
world
For
years Gijon has been the battle-ground of radical change. Its traditional
heavy-industry, in the middle of the town, reached a point where it
could grow no more, and began to decline. So the town had to re-invent
itself, targetting tourism, education and services, to avert crisis."
Story from EURONEWS
There is a spot on the Atlantic coast of Spain which marks a crossroads
between the past and the future. Founded by the Celts in the fifth
century BC and conquered for the Senate in Rome by Sexto Apuleio,
the Asturian city of Gijon flourished thanks to its talent for commerce
and industry.
But the coal mines of Mieres and Langreo, the coastal shipyards, and
the huge steel plants have all, one by one, made way for a new ventures,
bringing with them a new social and economic structure.
For years Gijon has been the battle-ground of radical change. Its
traditional heavy-industry, in the middle of the town, reached a point
where it could grow no more, and began to decline. So the town had
to re-invent itself, targetting tourism, education and services, to
avert crisis.
Eduardo Garcia is a journalist for La Nueva Espana, "One talks
about industrial change that has taken 25-years. At the beginning
of the 70's the Asturies relied on heavy industry and that led to
a crisis and the crisis is not yet over, these changes were difficult
they were hard to accept, its hard for people to accept changes of
that magnitude.
For much of the population, the 80s and 90s were hard times. In just
a few years, 26-thousand jobs disappeared, and the social tensions
that came with the economic downturn led to an eruption of violence.
(This history inspired the movie by Fernando Leon, Los lunes al sol,
with Javier Bardem, Oscar candidate).
Eduardo
Garcia, "How was it resolved, by early retirements, which were
necessary for social peace but a waste of talent and energy.That is
one radical solution: a massive programme of early retirement, implemented
by the area's main employers - the shipyards, mines and steelworks.
The Arcelor plant here in Gijon and its sister-works in Avilès have
lost 12-thousand jobs over just a few years. (from 19.000 to 7.000).
But in that time, production has gone up by 25 per cent (from 4 millions
of tons per year, to more than 5 per year).
The deputy Mayor for economic promotion José Maria Perez Lopez, says
economic depression is a powerful force for change. "The town
was needed change, and the crisis had been building that produced
the environment to bring about the change.
If this crisis hadn't happened, the process would have been slowed
down . For example, you cannot revamp a city centre if the area is
full of functioning industry. When the old industry disappears as
happened here, you get social problems as a result, then you have
to create new jobs, you also have to make good use of the space and
improve individuals quality of life." The transformation of the
land in and around Gijon is typified in the town's historic port.
The Musèl, as it is known, is Spain's fourth most important port overall,
but the country's number one in terms of special goods, like coke
and ore for the steel industry. Gijon port hosts a coke plant for
power production and is undergoing a huge changes it is expected to
double its capacity once a new dock has been constructed.
Its an ambitious project a structure made of huge concrete blocks,
52 meters high and 32 meters wide. Technically its a first and made
possible with the help of the EU, which invested 800,000 million euros
in the project. This is the largest investment in the commercial history
of the Asturias. The EU has also backed educational improvements in
the area by linking the existing Laboral University complex with a
science and technolgy park that surrounds the campus.
The new site has been up and running for four years..as it stands
36 companies have set up home there employing one thousand people.
Within the park we find Pablo Priesca a director of Ctic, a consortium
that wants the new technologies brought closer to the people, "The
90's were defined by a number of strategies to bring about economic
change and open up the local economy to new innovations. With that
in mind the regional government carried out a research programme to
target which activities to prioritise one of them was information
technology."
Hundreds of young people are being trained by Ctic to use the new
technologies as software devoloper Francisco Florez explains.
"What we see here is Fantas-Technik, a project for school children,
using these tools makes it easier to train young children and we can
take it into schools." The presence of the Gijon scientific park
brings in young devolopers from all over Spain, most of them just
out of university, they bring with them new ways of solving problems."
The creativity of these individuals moves in different areas...here
a machine has been devoloped to dispence cider. To get the best from
cider it must be poured from a height, which helps oxigenate the drink,
its a tradition that could die out if new technology was not devoloped
to preserve the tradition.
It is this healthy mix of tradition and modernity that shows a way
out of a crisis and plots a path for the future of Gijon.
(Published: 10.04.2008.)
Send your comments