Make an offer: a wealthy landowner in Costa Rica says developers will bet on medical tourism
Patricia Nazario
Latin Trade
January 1, 2005
In his 70s, Jim Sparrow is a slender man with a receding hairline. He stands at
six feet tall, and his hazel eyes peer over the top of his silver-rimmed glasses
as he speaks. He's enthusiastic, and when he talks about Puerto Pedregosa, he sounds
like a kid at Christmas.
Puerto Pedregosa is a US$225 million real-estate development project in Guanacaste,
a province on Costa Rica's Pacific coast. When developed, it will be a medical-destination
resort that will contain a state-of-the-art hospital, a medical university, first-class
hotels and timeshare condominiums. Sparrow bought the 188 hectares of property in
the early 1970s for $16 million. Today he wants to sell it for $32 million, although
he claims its appraised value is four times more.
"We get offers," says Sparrow, "and look more at development plans than money,"
although he would not reveal the identity of the potential developers. His long-time
female companion, Star Cunningham, sits by his side and finishes his sentences.
"We get to double our money and investors feel like they're getting a good deal,"
says Cunningham. "Besides, if it works out, every hotel and small business will
be a success."
The couple moved to Costa Rica from Canada a decade ago to develop the idea. Today
they live in the two-bedroom presidential suite of a modest hotel in San Jose. Their
office and assistant are across the hall. That was Sparrow's idea of retiring, says
Cunningham.
The couple, now 20 years together, call each other soul mates. They're both from
western Canada: Cunningham from Central Alberta and Sparrow from Edmonton. He's
one of four boys from a working-class family. His parents raised grain and livestock
on a 65-hectare farm 80 kilometers outside of town. Sparrow says times then were
tough. Growing up, they had no running water. His mother worked as a nurse to make
extra money, and horses were their only mode of transportation. "My neighbor got
a tractor," says Sparrow, "so that made me want to work harder to buy my father
one."
At 15, he started skipping school to work on oil rigs to make some money to help
out the family. At first, he told his father he was earning the bucks playing poker.
But eventually the truth came out: Sparrow confessed he liked working on the rigs,
playing cards and then going to school, in that order. Inevitably, he dropped out
of high school in the ninth grade and started pulling double shifts on the rigs.
"They learned me one thing," says Sparrow. "Keep your head down, ass up and don't
argue until you know what you're doing, eh!"
Sparrow learned the oil industry from the ground up. He made money and invested
it wisely, he says. Eventually he became a very prominent businessman in Canada
and the United States, working for the company he founded, Sparrow Industries, a
supplier for the oil and gas industry. He brags about never having drilled a dry
hole and speaks modestly about the other business ventures that multiplied his wealth,
including agriculture and real-estate developments. He's a jokester at heart who
loves eating dessert first, but he gets serious whenever he talks about protecting
the environment and personal safety. A lesson, Sparrow says, he doesn't take lightly.
"I went to an oil rig and guys on there had died the night before," said Sparrow.
"I was only 16 years old. That changed me forever and now it's safety first."
Safety and the environment took top priority for Sparrow Industries as they do for
the Puerto Pedregosa project. The couple wants to preserve the areas natural, lush
landscape, encourage local folkloric traditions and create new jobs for the people
living in the nearby town of Matapalo, three kilometers from the site. The couple
affectionately refers to it as the forgotten village. Matapalo's development is
important because its 14,000 residents will be the main labor pool for future Puerto
Pedregosa employees.
"The level of careers and optimism for small businesses is a big goal," says Cunningham.
"Five-star luxury provides careers for folks. It creates a need for top-quality
tomatoes, lettuce, rice," she says. The project Hill help Costa Ricans rise to a
new level of agriculture, Sparrow says, so it's a win-win situation.
Giving back. The couple has supplied dozens of instruments for Matapalo's music
school, developed a computer center and invested thousands of dollars to create
a public library. The contributions are considered business expenses, but it's an
effort of which Sparrow and Cunningham are especially proud.
Sparrow calls Puerto Pedregosa his last big project. He is dedicating it to his
younger brother, Donny, who was killed in a car accident eight years ago. That is
the reason, he says, it has taken so long to get the project off the ground. For
years, the threesome waited for the right time to start the project. After Donny's
death, Sparrow nearly walked away. But Cunningham stuck by his side and she's helping
this pioneer blaze through what Sparrow calls his final frontier.
Copyright 2005 Freedom Magazines, Inc.