The idea of the project is to generate a region where resilience is the structural basis of function and adaptation of the place. Urban resilience is defined as, the capacity of a city exposed to threats to resist, absorb, adapt and recover from its effects in a timely and efficient manner, which includes the preservation and restoration of its basic structures and functions. It means that the department of La Guajira would have the capacity to reduce dependence on mining and the smuggling of gasoline as the main sources of income in La Guajira and especially in the district of Albania. The project is located in the district of Albania, about 5 kilometers from the mining company El Cerrejon. This project seeks to benefit the indigenous communities, the population of the urban center, the farmers of the area and the Venezuelan immigrants. As a social objective of the Awarala (light in the language of wayuunaki) Project it will seek to improve the living conditions of the population through a system of eco-rancherias made up of facilities, public space and agricultural areas such as community gardens. As an economic objective, spaces will be provided for de development of the activities related to tourism and alternative forms of energy production. The tourism, would enhance the activities of the indigenous people, around the provision of shelters of exchange and cultural coexistence in the rancherias, as well as favor the handicraft work of the natives. In the part of energy production, Awarala will have alternative mechanisms of local economies: solar, wind, biofuels; and agriculture. The first factor will be constituted by 15 hectares of solar panels in strategically distributed throughout the territory, so that they will be intrigued with the new landscape. The idea is that each hectare has around 2,900 Tracker solar panels, each of which will produce 315wts where the total is 15,000 kilowatts of energy sufficient to supply 50,000 families. The second deals with the generation of a wind field, forming axes throughout the territory: in total there will be 30 wind turbines of 13 megawatts each, based on the experience of the Jepirachi park located in the district of Uribia in the upper Guajira. The last element of energy production is constituted by biodigesters placed in supply posts, where the organic waste from the rancherias, tourists and other parts of the region converge, which will give a capacity to produce biofuel. All these systems would allow a resilient chain that will gradually replace the production of coal by other forms of energy, as an alternative to the dependence on Venezuelan gasoline smuggling. The agricultural part of the project will have around 200 hectares for the production of melons, yuca and bananas, which will be disposed around the rancherias and the solar fields of the territory