Governor Marina del Pilar Ávila Olmeda is doubling down on her commitment to safer roadways. Her “Safe Streets, Safe Families” program continues to deploy infrastructure brigades throughout Mexicali and soon, the initiative will be rolling out to other Baja Californian municipalities.
The program uses a high-tech micro-asphalt overlay, engineered to last that also allows for stronger, higher-quality surfaces that can stand up to heavy daily use.

Currently, work crews are actively resurfacing streets in key areas of Mexicali, including Conjunto Urbano Universitario, as well as the Solidaridad Infonavit, Palaco, El Cóndor, and Villa Verde neighborhoods.
Thanks to these advanced materials, major roads are being restored, traffic flow is improving, and entire communities are getting a facelift. For the families, students, and workers who use these streets every day, that means safer, more dignified surroundings.
“Little by little, we are getting closer to completing rehabilitation work in Mexicali! These restored roads allows everyone who goes out every day to work, study, or take their children to school to travel more safely,” the governor said during a tour of Conjunto Urbano Universitario.
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This urban intervention model is now being rolled out to other municipalities across Baja California, to bring more functional, safer, and longer-lasting streets to as many communities as possible.
Ensenada is next in line, with planned projects that will follow the same blueprint of modernization, efficiency, and public-space revitalization directly, responding to one of the community’s most urgent needs.
The state administration will continue deploying technical and operational actions so that more families in Baja California have modern, durable roadways suited to the development the state is experiencing.