item1a thisisvalencia.com main banner sky thisisvalencia.com makes booking your car
news - what's new in Valencia
Culture - theatre, music and art
eat/drink - restaurants and bars
item2 item2a
Nightlife - valencia after dark
Gay and Lesbian Valencia

CONSTRUCTING A VISION

RAFAEL DE LA CUADRA
TALKS TO BOB YAREHAM

 

Everybody’s talking about the construction industry at present, and whether it has hit its ceiling, reached its peak or shot its wad; so it’s nice once in a while to talk to somebody who actually knows what he’s talking about, somebody who knows and works in the industry and is in fact at present the General Secretary of FEVEC, the Valencian federation of construction companies.

Rafael de la Cuadra was born in 1965, the third of four brothers. His father was an engineer with an electricity company and the family has a wide experience of entrepreneurial activity in various sectors.

After studying economics at Valencia University and an MA in marketing and Business Management, ‘Rafa’, a man who cannot relax if he hasn’t worked a full 12 hour day, has always combined a varied working life with a voracious desire to learn new things, and has always set self-improvement as one of his main aims.

Comfortably fluent in English after various summer courses in Ireland from the age of 12 and two stays in the USA to study at Yale and West Virginia University, it was his period as Marketing Manager for a Valencian furniture company that saw him travelling the world from the USA to South America and Europe, improving his English and increasing his awareness of the importance of a global perspective, one of the topics he speaks about with passion if you can tie him down to a chair long enough.

Before the furniture company he had directed a car maintenance and parking complex, a real estate company and a construction company,

But it was while working as Credit Manager, and then Finance Manager for a paper company that he got his first multinational experience when the company was involved in a merger of French, American and British owners. However, when they wanted to send him to run a branch outside Valencia, he had to leave, and made the move to the furniture company.

Apart from his ‘jobs’, Rafa has been constantly involved in collaborating with family businesses, such as Valencia’s first ever Health and Safety company, or the biggest brick company in the Valencian Community, producing 600 tons a day, or the oldest textile company in Europe, ‘Garin 1820’, dating back to 1820 as the name implies. He also has a 50% share in a consultancy company.

And yet it is his passion for giving Valencia a world-wide perspective and a higher profile that has always occupied his thoughts, and when he was offered the General Secretaryship of FEVEC, he realised, and his President agreed, that this was the opportunity to really do something useful and practical to help the Valencian business community to adapt to changing times through modernisation, international links and training programmes.

Since taking over at FEVEC in September 2006 he has created a team of young, experienced professionals with international perspectives, and collaborated closely with the Valencia Exportation Agency (IVEX) to ensure that no opportunity is missed, travelling extensively to Morocco, USA and Rumania, to name a few recent examples, and signing trade agreements with many countries.

He has also initiated important collaborations between Valencian Universities and emerging countries to help design and bring about educational programmes (the first kicks off in January 2008) that will see aspiring construction sector professionals coming to Valencia to perfect their training and ensure that they know Valencia’s potential well when they move on into positions of power and influence in the not too distant future.

The impressive expansion of the Valencian construction industry has created a euphoria that supposes certain dangers, and Rafa knows that now is not the time to rest upon laurels or to live off past glories, but to search for new opportunities on a global scale, which will mean relocation of part of many companies’ operations abroad; consequently, a knowledge of modern languages is essential, which is why Rafa, like so many forward-looking entrepreneurs of today, sends his children to bi-lingual schools and ensures that adequate language training programmes are operational wherever he works.

Another key advance has been his visits to and contacts with the United Nations and the World Bank, to ensure that Valencian companies are fully aware of the possibilities of obtaining procurement contracts, and know how to successfully apply for them. A weekly newsletter informs members of all these possibilities.

Changing mentalities is not an easy job, but Valencia is changing dramatically, a new generation with a broader perspective is maturing, and the high profile obtained through successes such as Valencia Football Club, the America’s Cup, Formula One and the City of Arts and Sciences must, in Rafa’s opinion, be harnessed so that Valencia can become a successful and globally well-known location for medium-sized events, as well as a European version of Florida, an attractive retirement area for both Europeans and others.

Those who feel that Valencia is too small a city to face a global challenge might believe that to try and change this perspective is like trying to paddle (Rafa’s favourite sport) upstream, although he prefers the metaphor of pushing a snowball off a mountain and watching it gather more snow, as a way of expressing his hope that his initiatives and enthusiasm will help overcome existing problems in Valencia’s traditional industries, and bring about a prosperous ‘mañana’.

©2007/2008 Bob Yareham.

rafadelacuadra2
bb1
Days out, fiestas and more in Valencia
the towns and villages of Valencia
Shop till you drop in Valencia
On being a woman in Valencia
Raunchy and rude Valencia
Archived articles on Valencia
Anita Darling and Lolita Devine in Valencia
AddThis Social Bookmark Button

All content
©2007/2008
thisisvalencia.com
unless otherwise stated

OUR OTHER VIPS

JESÚS BARRACHINA
TALKS TO BOB YAREHAM

'Jesus Barrachina is a man for whom the word “affable” might have been invented; and it is probably this affability that has maintained him on the board of Valencia Football Club for so long while other more aggressive directors have fallen by the wayside during internecine in-fighting.' MORE

ARTURO VIROSQUE
TALKS TO BOB YAREHAM

Few people in the Valencian world of business have had as distinguished a career as Arturo Virosque, or are as active in as many area of Valencia’s social and cultural life.
It was no surprise therefore when in April of this year he was re-elected President of Valencia’s Chamber of Commerce, a post he has held now since May 1995.
His beginnings however were fairly humble and his profile is that of the archetypal self-made man whose working life began in the difficult years of post-war Spain, the war in question being what he refers to as the “Spanish Uncivil War”.
MORE

EDUARDO BEUT
TALKS TO BOB YAREHAM

There are not many important people in Valencia who don’t know Eduardo Beut, and not many that he doesn’t know. If you want to know what will be in tomorrow’s newspaper, ask him yesterday.
But, for the man who has been the boss of the Inland Revenue in the Valencian Community, a Vice President of the CAM and Bancaja Savings Banks and is currently Secretary General of FECOVAL, the Valencian Federation of Construction Companies, the great passion in his life, family aside, is basketball.
MORE

CARLOS BERTOMEU
TALKS TO BOB YAREHAM

Like Bruce Springsteen, Carlos Bertomeu is the boss, and was born to run, although in his case, born to run a highly successful airline rather than a rock band.
t’s doubtful whether Bruce Springsteen could have started an airline with six employees ten years ago and increased that number to the present one of almost 1,700, although I don’t suppose Carlos Bertomeu could keep a stadium full of rock fans enthralled for three hours either.
MORE

JAIME ALMENAR
TALKS TO BOB YAREHAM

Law is a passion in Jaime Almenar’s life, and it’s not surprising when you consider that his mother was a midwife. His father however is a lawyer and his elder brother and sister are judges. This is a family whose members haven’t spent much time behind bars!

AND A HISTORICAL VIP
BLASCO IBÁÑEZ
DAVID "ARROZ RHEAD & JOSE "TARTANA" MARIN

Blasco Ibañez is, after Cervantes, the most translated Spanish writer of all time and 17 of his books have been made into films. He wrote more than twenty novels but, internationally, his best known works are “Blood and Sand” from 1908, which was later brought to the cinema in a Hollywood blockbuster starring Rudolf Valentino. Even more famous was “The Four Horseman of the Apocalypse” from 1916, for which he was awarded membership of the French Légion d’honneur. These two novels in particular brought him great riches. “Horsemen” spent twelve months at the top of the US best-sellers list in 1916 and 1917. To Blasco Ibanez’s great personal delight, it outsold even the Bible in the middle of the Great War. The novel has had four separate screen adaptations; the most famous was directed by Orson Welles.MORE

Anita Darling and Lolita Devine  RanchyValencia