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Beautiful Minds:
Carmen Rita Fortuño
Huáscar Robles

If you're one of the clients annoyed with the service and bellicose mood at the Puerto Rico Aqueduct and Sewer Authority (PRASA) customer service offices, you'd be glad to know someone is working to fix that. No, the government is not imploding the PRASA buildings. On the contrary; they are redesigning the offices' interiors. That responsibility has been bestowed upon Sierra Cardona y Ferrer architect Carmen Rita Fortuño, a visionary architect who has designed the interiors of some of Puerto Rico 's most valuable buildings.

“A good atmosphere modifies behavior and increases productivity and team work,” says Fortuño. At the PRASA offices, her design eliminated long costumer lines, the calm tones and efficient distribution of space have helped improve the workers' productivity and minimize the hostility from clients.

Fortuño graduated from Cornell University and upon returning to her native Puerto Rico , quickly snatched up an interior architecture position at the prestigious firm Sierra, Cardona y Ferrer. Her responsibilities included designs for corporate offices and retail spaces and studies for bank master plans. She became a partner in 2006– the first woman partner in a major architecture firm in Puerto Rico . She has designed interiors for landmarks such as the Seville Pavilion and the José Miguel Agrelot Coliseum, among others.

Sierra, Cardona y Ferrer also designed and oversaw the remodeling of La Fondita de Jesús in 2004. The non-profit organization feeds and rehabilitates around 2,500 homeless. Fortuño's redistribution and redesign of its interior architecture was crucial to the institution. The cafeteria, for example, was redone to accommodate 100 participants at a time and the kitchen enlarged. The previous cafeteria was much smaller, which forced the participants to come in waves 20 minutes apart. “Now everyone can sit at the same time and there is no time limit,” she says. “Since there is no limit, the social workers have more time with participants so they get more than a meal; they can participate in the institution's advice and spiritual programs.”

 

Celina Nogueras Cuevas

José Vargas Vidot

 

Maritere Matosantos

Ana María García Blanco

 

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Pensamiento Da Cor: La Nueva Exposición de Marcano
La nueva exposición del artista José Marcano  se titula PENSAMENTO DA COR, del portugués  que en español se traduce a “Pensamiento de Color”.  Consta de 17 piezas de impasto con rayado en veladura, con transparencia sobre tela en formato grande. 
 
Ashes to Ashes: Puerto Rico’s Coal Combustion Problem
“Toward the end of last February we started to see the trail of ashes,” Miriam Gallardo recalls. “The first thing they did was dig a wide ditch and everything was filled with ashes.”
 
Power Gallery
When people—be they constituents, journalists or dignitaries—visit the governor inside La Fortaleza, they often wait in El Salón de Los Gobernadores, a foir adorned with official paintings of Puerto Rico's governors.
 
Rebel or Revolutionary: The Story of Tito Kayak
Love him or hate him, De Jesús sits at the epicenter of Puerto Rico 's modern environmental justice movement.
 
Hell or Highwater
Now well into the second 100 days as Governor of Puerto Rico, the wee morning hours of Nov. 5, 2008, are just a memory to Luis Fortuño. He barely recalls his Brooks Brothers shirt still damp with sweat after a 20-hour day that culminated with his acceptance speech before a throng of New Progressive Party faithful drunk with victory.
 
The Everyman
If baseball is theater, perhaps an apt title is Everyman, the 15th century morality play about fleeting materialism. In the modern MLB version, Carlos Delgado personifies the protagonist because he is a man possessing a multitude of talents.
 
Off the Beaten Path
Whether your fantasy getaway calls for a secluded beach bungalow, a centuries-old plantation in the mountains, or a jungle-wrapped rainforest retreat, chances are you won't have to wander too far from home— Puerto Rico has just the ticket for turning your craving into a reality.
 

Not Saying Adiós
As Fox's talent showcase “American Idol” crowns its eighth winner this month, Puerto Rican participant Jorge Nuñez wonders what could have been and what might still be...

 
Legacy of a Legend
The Latin music community mourns the passing of prominent music impresario Ralph Mercado. Guarded by his family, Mercado, who managed and recorded artists including Marc Anthony and Tito Puente, lost his battle with cancer, leaving behind a legacy of award-winning songs and seminal music concerts that helped define the salsa and Latin music industry.
 
What’s in a Name?
Dressed in an impeccable suit, Donald Trump entered the Ritz Carlton ballroom and sat down flanked by his children Ivanka, Eric and Donald Jr.  The ballroom filled to capacity; television cameras and reporters festooned the front row. The brouhaha could have easily been confused with a J-Lo sighting, but it was in fact a reception for one of the world’s foremost businessmen.  
 
Gearing Up for Success
The production of her first music video should have exhausted Maxinne. But the electro pop star, whose career is just blossoming, soldiers on, practicing choreographies, doing yoga and meditation and gearing up for her Puerto Rican media tour that begins this month.
 
World Baseball Classic:Play Ball!
The World Baseball Classic, Major League Baseball’s answer—they hope— to the world craze over soccer, begins its second run on March 5. Sixteen nations are playing each other for the title of “world champ.”
 
Green Acres
When it comes to the Puerto Rico Open, scheduled for March 9-15, perhaps the saying goes: “the second time is the charm.” The Donald Trump-owned championship golf course that hosts the open has been improved to enhance the degree of difficulty on those championship links.
 
Beautiful Minds
Beauty of intellect, soul and character: Five of Puerto Rico's shining lights share with Metro San Juan the attitudes and philosophies that helped them overcome obstacles and build successful lives.
 
Comedy King
Once the hearse and its accompanying cars drive past him, Santiago continues his commute home, silently. That scene became more poignant on Jan. 15, when Muñiz passed away at age 86 after battling ill health for over a decade.
 

Oscar Picks
Special Feature

 
New Kid on the Block
Most Boricua audiences are just now hearing the name Jorge Alberti, but if you ask soap opera fans in Mexico and Chile, chances are they are very well acquainted with that name. The 31-year-old actor already has a well-established resume in Latin TV soaps with the fan base to go along with it.
 
Heaven & Hell at the San Juan Star
On a smoldering Saturday afternoon deep in August, I realized The San Juan Star was finished.
 
Beating The Holiday Blues
The ghost of the recession has prevented some diners from enjoying a good night out, but Metro has found a way to beat the recession blues. This article serves as a map to some of the hottest, most relaxed and – above all cost effective– hangouts of the season.
 
Just A Girl
Mayra Matos steps out of her navy-blue sedan, revealing long, elegant legs. They're covered in skin-tight jeans and her bell sleeve shirt reveals a hint of her smooth shoulders. She stands about 6 feet tall in high heels. She wears faux Dolce and Gabbana sunglasses and a frown.
 
METRO ARCHIVE
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