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1996

How it started

In the mid-1990s, a small group of Chilean scientists set out to build a bridge between frontier research and the country’s development. Fundación Ciencia & Vida was born in that spirit: a private, nonprofit institution dedicated to advancing discoveries in the life sciences, training advanced human capital, and turning knowledge into innovation with social and economic impact. From the outset, the Foundation proposed a different environment: a place where scientists, entrepreneurs, students, and communicators interact to accelerate the flow of ideas and their application in health, biotechnology, and productive sectors. That institutional design—hybrid, collaborative, and public-spirited—was key to shaping its own “ecosystem” before the term became fashionable. Institutional documents date its creation to 1996, and state its mission was to link academia and industry. The initiative was spearheaded by Pablo Valenzuela, Bernardita Méndez, and Mario Rosemblatt, who were driven by the conviction that Chile needed a platform to integrate research, education, and scientific entrepreneurship. In practice, the foundation focused on three fronts: conducting competitive science, training talent, and transferring technology, while also implementing outreach programs to place science in the public conversation.

1999

MIFAB Institute

The founding momentum soon crystallized into a national undertaking: the Millennium Institute for Fundamental and Applied Biology (MIFAB). Conceived to raise the quality and impact of Chilean science to international standards, MIFAB was launched with the support of the Millennium Science Initiative. Its purpose was twofold: to produce original basic and applied knowledge and to build a critical mass of researchers, while building bridges with industry. Under the direction of Pablo Valenzuela, the Institute set out a plan on four fronts: highly collaborative intramural research; graduate training through courses, internships, and symposia; top-tier international networks; and creative programs to connect biology with health and productive sectors, along with outreach initiatives to improve public understanding of biotechnology. In its research lines, MIFAB prioritized the molecular bases of cellular function and regulation, and an applied stream in the genetics of pathogens relevant to Chile—from hantavirus to pathogens affecting salmon aquaculture—addressed by a consortium of researchers with recognized national and international leadership. The composition of the team—with multiple Presidential Chairs and strong anchoring in Chilean universities—gave the Institute academic reach that fostered the training of students and postdocs and consolidated exchanges with laboratories in Latin America and beyond. MIFAB proved that frontier science with local relevance was possible, and it left installed capacities that would be essential for the next institutional leap: securing long-term Basal funding.

2008

⁠First Basal Grant

The year 2008 marked a turning point: Fundación Ciencia & Vida was selected in the first call of CONICYT’s Basal Financing Program for Centers of Scientific and Technological Excellence, consolidating a long-term model for scientific development. The Basal program not only provided stable resources for several years; it also demanded high standards of productivity, international networking, human-capital training, technology transfer, and outreach. For the Foundation, the award meant integrating and scaling research lines in immunology, virology/microbiology, molecular biology, and plant biotechnology, strengthening the interaction among the laboratory, the clinic, and productive sectors. In parallel, graduate and outreach programs were expanded, and partnerships with national and international centers of excellence were deepened. Beyond financing, the Basal program entailed a performance contract: goals, indicators, and periodic evaluations that compelled the Foundation to professionalize its scientific and communications management and to articulate a public narrative about the value of science for development. That learning—governance, metrics, impact—would prove decisive in facing the program’s renewal a decade later.

2019

Ciencia & Vida + USS

On November 25, 2019, Universidad San Sebastián and Fundación Ciencia & Vida announced an academic and scientific alliance to “unite teaching and research activities” and to shape a joint Science and Bio-entrepreneurship Park, with operations beginning in 2020. This joint effort represented the convergence of two complementary strengths: the Foundation’s critical mass, platforms, and culture of innovation; and USS’s academic, clinical, and territorial reach. As a result, advanced training capacities were amplified, new opportunities for translational research were enabled, and the insertion of scientific work into society was strengthened. The shared commitment to scientific development in dialogue with higher education, health, and the knowledge economy acted as a catalyst for new initiatives—from centers and laboratories to graduate programs and ventures—consolidating a hub of science and bio-entrepreneurship with a public vocation and international projection. This milestone contributes to Fundación Ciencia & Vida’s founding mission: to pursue excellent science, train talent, and transform that knowledge into value for Chile

2021

Basal Renewal

After the first phase, the Foundation applied for and again secured Basal funding in the 2017 call (code AFB170004), ensuring continuity and growth for the following period. This second award recognized the accumulated scientific and technology-transfer results, while setting new goals: internationalization, consolidation of technological platforms, attraction of young researchers, and expansion of the innovation portfolio. The renewal coincided with institutional changes in the system: in 2020, CONICYT was replaced by the National Agency for Research and Development (ANID), and the Ministry of Science drove a reorganization of the Centers of Excellence. The second award reaffirmed the value of a comprehensive approach—frontier research, advanced training, international collaboration, and outreach—and strengthened the Foundation’s position as a key actor in Chile’s science, technology, knowledge, and innovation ecosystem.

Our 
Founders

Fundación Ciencia & Vida was created in 1997 by Chilean scientists Bernardita Méndez, Mario Rosemblatt, and Pablo Valenzuela.

For almost 25 years it supported the development of fundamental science, as well as the creation of science-based companies. It housed the Millennium Institute of Fundamental and Applied Biology (MIFAB) (1999-2009) and obtained basal funding awarded to Scientific and Technological Centers of Excellence (2006-2016). It served as the cornerstone for the creation of our new Centro Ciencia & Vida (2021-2031).

Bernardita Méndez, PhD

President & Cofounder

Pablo Valenzuela, PhD

Scientific Director & Cofounder

Mario Rosemblatt, PhD

Executive Director & Cofounder

Board of Directors

The Board of Directors steers the Center’s mission and long-term strategy, ensuring scientific excellence, ethical standards, and sustainable growth. Bringing together leaders from academia, industry, and the public sphere, the Board provides independent oversight of research priorities, budgeting and resource allocation, risk management, and impact measurement. It supports the development of talent, fosters international partnerships, and guides technology transfer and entrepreneurship, aligning discovery with real-world application. The Board meets regularly to review key performance indicators, approve major initiatives, and uphold transparency and accountability, so that science, training, and outreach advance coherently under a shared vision.

Bernardita Mendez, PhD

Cofounder and President of FCV

Pablo Valenzuela, PhD

Cofounder and Scientific Director of FCV

Mario Rosemblatt, PhD

Cofounder and Executive Director of FCV

Carlos Vio, PhD

President of Universidad San Sebastián

Alejandro Pérez

Member of the board and past president of Universidad San Sebastián

Javier Valenzuela

Prorector of Universidad San Sebastián

Team of collaborators

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