Alberto Kritzler is at the Forefront of Regenerative Design in Mexico. The Harvard Loeb Fellow is rethinking water scarcity and abundance through his Reserva el Peñón project in in Valle de Bravo, Mexico. Alberto Kritzler is a Mexican developer focused on adaptive reuse, urban density, and living systems. He co-founded REURBANO, a platform in Mexico City that revitalizes buildings, reactivates street life, and reimagines urban living. In the countryside, he founded Reserva el Peñón, a regenerative community protecting a rainforest through collective action and rainwater autonomy. His latest venture, La Laguna, transformed a 90-year-old textile factory into a design-driven co-production hub. A Loeb Fellow at Harvard and MBA graduate from Stanford, Kritzler also serves on the boards of a historic ceramics manufacturer and a B-Corp coffee producer. METROPOLIS spoke with Kritzler about his fellowship and Mexico’s water crisis 📝: Jaxson Stone 📷: Courtesy Alberto Kritzler https://lnkd.in/epQrSpsk