Leadership stems from three core areas: Landscape Architecture, Architecture & Ecology - Urban Design, brought together by architects, engineers, horticulturists & biologists who have collaborated on highly significant projects.
Architect (2011-2016) and associate professor at UNAM (2018-Present), graduating with honors from Mexico's "Nobel maker," renowned for cultivating excellence. Awarded the 2016 Gabino Barreda Medal for the greatest generational academic distinction.
Specialized in landscape and environmental projects, he pursued studies in cultural heritage sustainability at the National University of Malaysia (2015) and the University of A Coruña (2025), and became a LEED Green Associate in 2017.
He worked for over six years with Mario Schjetnan, a recipient of the “Sir Geoffrey Jellicoe” award, the highest honor of the International Federation of Landscape Architects (IFLA). During this time, he developed and specialized in large-scale projects such as Parque La Mexicana, the Chapultepec Forest Master Plan, and the NAICM in collaboration with Foster+Partners and FR-EE.
In 2020, he was awarded a merit-based fellowship by UC Berkeley, and since 2024, he has continued his independent landscape architecture practice founding Verde Manifiesto.
Architect and urban planner, graduated from Universidad Iberoamericana, Mexico City (2016-2021), with an honorable mention in the Cátedra Blanca Cemex for the project Parián Palmitas.
He has collaborated with architectural firms such as TANAT (2018-2022), contributing to conceptual design, sculpture, and pavilions, winning first place in the 2020 Museo del Eco competition for Cronoboros.
Since 2022, he has been part of Taller de Arquitectura X, led by Alberto Kalach, working as a studio lead on projects of various scales, from conception to construction supervision. He also contributed to the Cinturón Volcánico exhibition at the San Ildefonso Museum.
His architectural approach seeks to transcend mere functionality, creating spaces that engage with their context and enhance the relationship between architecture and the human experience.
She has created an extensive 25-year experience in urban and environmental planning for both public and private sectors. She has acted as a social witness for national and international public tenders in key industries, including healthcare, energy, and telecommunications.
An associate professor at several prestigious Mexican universities, she has also held roles in public institutions such as FONATUR and the Mexican Ministry of Tourism.
Currently, she serves as a consultant specializing in sustainable architecture (EcoUrba), urban planning, urban design, and landscape architecture. Last year she assisted as an honorable guest and exhibitor of the World Urban Forum at Berlin, Germany (2024).