(on line) CAF Conference: Iberoamerica 500+. Cities with a legacy for the future
Event date:
July 24, 2025 - July 24, 2025
Online

CAF –development bank of Latin America and the Caribbean and the Mayor’s Office of Santa Marta invite you to register and join the livestream of the CAF Conference: Ibero-America 500+. Cities with a Legacy for the Future, taking place on July 24 and 25 in Santa Marta, one of the first cities founded in the Americas.
This event will be the stage for an essential conversation: how can cities with five centuries of history project themselves into the next hundred years? Over two days, local authorities, Indigenous leaders, international experts, artists, representatives of multilateral organizations, and social actors will reflect on the role these cities can play in the sustainable development of Latin America and the Caribbean.
Topics such as heritage, cultural tourism, inclusion, financing, and urban innovation will be explored, aiming to connect the value of our past with the challenges of the present. The conference will also mark the launch of the CAF–SEGIB Ibero-American Cities 500+ Alliance, a regional platform to foster development and urban transformation in cities with a historical legacy.
This space is part of CAF’s broader commitment to support fifth-centenary cities in building shared visions that recognize their identity, strengthen local capacities, reinforce Ibero-American ties, and drive meaningful transformation.
Dates: Thursday, July 24 and Friday, July 25.
Hours:
8:30 a.m. / 🇯🇲 Jamaica
9:30 a.m. / 🇦🇬 Antigua and Barbuda, 🇧🇸 Bahamas, 🇧🇧 Barbados, and 🇹🇹 Trinidad and Tobago
Agenda
Day 1
July 24, 2025
Day 2
July 25, 2025
- Mamo Camilo Izquierdo Villafañe – Arhuaco Council
- Carlos Pinedo Cuello – Mayor of Santa Marta
- Francisco Flórez – Director, National Archives of Colombia
- Sergio Díaz-Granados – Executive President, CAF
- Andrés Allamand – Secretary-General, SEGIB
- Sergio Díaz-Granados – Executive President, CAF
- Susana Sumelzo – Secretary for Ibero-America, Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Spain
- Andrea Bernal – Journalist, RCN (Moderator)
- Esther Cruces – Director, General Archive of the Indies
- Francisco Flórez – Director, National Archives of Colombia
- Joaquín Viloria – Manager, Banco de la República Cultural Center in Santa Marta (Moderator)
- Julio Cuesta – Commissioner of the Commemoration of the 100 Years of the Seville Expo 1929
- Inkarri Kowii – University Professor and Columnist, Ecuador
- Pablo Vera Salazar – Rector, University of Magdalena
- Daniela Díaz – Journalist, El País (Moderator)
- Vagner José Rocha – Manager of Cultural Heritage, Salvador de Bahia
- Santiago Trujillo – Secretary of Culture, Bogotá
- Renzo Reggiardo – Deputy Mayor of Lima
- Pabel Muñoz – Mayor of Quito
- Óscar Rueda – Director of Sustainable Tourism, CAF (Moderator)
- Amora Carbajal – Researcher
- Gonzalo Figari – Founder and Creative Director, Candy Store
- Manuel Martínez – Colombian Chef and Researcher
- Natalia Bayona – Executive Director, UN Tourism (Moderator)
- Juan Bueno – First Deputy Mayor of Seville
- Carlos Pinedo – Mayor of Santa Marta
- José Ulises Rodríguez – Mayor of Santiago de los Caballeros
- Francisco Mugaburu – Deputy Director of International Relations and Cooperation, UCCI
- Rodrigo Peñailillo – CAF Representative in Colombia (Moderator)
- Lina Mondragón – Vice President of Strategy and Sustainability, Corficolombiana
- Lamine Sow – Director for Colombia, French Development Agency (AFD)
- Silvia Medina – President, Chamber of Commerce of Santa Marta
- Elsa Noguera – Former Mayor of Barranquilla
- Abelardo Daza – Senior Executive, Vice Presidency of Finance, CAF (Moderator)
- Carlos Vives – Musician
- Faustino Núñez – Musicologist
Opening Remarks
Participants:
Panel 1. Ibero-American Cities 500+
Participants:
Signing of the Ibero-America 500+ Cities Alliance
Panel 2. Documentary Memory to Reinterpret the Past
This panel invites us to reflect on how archives are not merely data repositories, but living tools to reinterpret the past and shape a more inclusive future. Well‑managed documentary memory helps us put single narratives into perspective and build a more complex, diverse, and enriching vision of our cities and territories.
Participants:
Coffee & Networking
Talk 1. Commemorations and Urban Transformation
This Talk invites us to reflect on how 500+ cities can, through their anniversaries, spark transformative projects that honor the past while meeting the needs of the present and the future.
Speaker:
Panel 3. Active Indigenous Peoples
This session will explore how the historic centers of centenary cities serve as both reminders of the past and spaces of opportunity for conservation, local economic revitalization, and cultural tourism.
Participants:
Panel 4. Historic Centers: Traces of the Past with Great Opportunities
This panel will explore the historic centers of century‑old cities, which stand as traces of the past while offering great opportunities for conservation, revitalizing the local economy, and boosting tourism.
Participants:
Panel 5. Ibero-America: 500 Years of Flavors
A journey through the region’s culinary evolution—ingredients and flavors that remain alive and are reinterpreted, positioning some countries as world‑class gastronomic destinations.
Participants:
Lunch Break
Panel 6. Alliances to Rethink the Future of 500+ Cities
This panel invites us to reflect on how city twinnings and inter‑urban alliances can become real tools to rethink and transform the future of our cities.
Participants:
Panel 7. Innovative Strategies for Financing Territorial Development in 500+ Cities
This panel will discuss innovative financing strategies for 500‑year cities, bringing in the private sector, national development banks, and multilateral organizations as key players to complement governments’ investment capacities—helping them bring their territorial visions to life and unlock the value of their heritage.
Participants:
Panel 8. From Guapa to Güepa
Participants: