La Plata
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La Plata is the capital city of the province of Buenos Aires, Argentina, as well as of the partido of La Plata. The city was planned to serve as the capital of the province after the city of Buenos Aires was declared as the federal district in 1880. Per the 2001 census [INDEC], the city proper has a population of 574,369 and its metropolitan area has 694,253 inhabitants.
La Plata was officially founded by governor Dardo Rocha on November 19 1882.
Its current mayor is Pablo Bruera.
It was known as Eva Perón City for a certain amount of time.
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[edit] History and brief description
Rocha decided to erect a new city to host the provincial government institutions and the planned university. Urban planner Pedro Benoit designed a city layout based on a rationalist conception of urban centers. The city (see figure) has the shape of a square with a central park and two diagonal avenues, north-south and east-west. This design is copied in a self-similar manner in small blocks of six by six blocks in length. Other than the diagonals, all streets are on a rectangular grid, and are numbered consecutively. Thus, La Plata is nicknamed "la ciudad de las diagonales" ("city of diagonals"). It is also called "la ciudad de los tilos" ("city of tilia") because of the large number of linden trees lining the streets.
The city design and its buildings are said to possess a strong Freemason symbolism. This is said to be a consequence of both Rocha and Benoit being Freemasons.
The designs for the government buildings were chosen in an international architectural competition. Thus, the Governor Palace was designed by Italians, City Hall by Germans, etc. Electric street lighting was installed in 1884, and was the first of its kind in Latin America.
The cathedral of La Plata, in Gothic style, is the largest church in Argentina.
The Curutchet House is one of the two buildings by Le Corbusier in the Americas.
The La Plata University was founded in 1897 and nationalized in 1905. It is well-known for its observatory and paleontology museum. Ernesto Sabato graduated in physics; he went on to teach at the Sorbonne and the MIT before becoming a famed novelist. Doctor René Favaloro was another famous alumnus. During its early years, it attracted a number of renowned intellectuals from the Spanish-speaking world, such as Dominican Pedro Henriquez Ureña.
The city was renamed in 1952 as Eva Perón; the original name was restored in 1955.
The city is home to two football (soccer) teams that play in the first division: Estudiantes de La Plata and Gimnasia y Esgrima La Plata.
[edit] Climate
Usually warm and humid in the summer. Cold weather in the winter.
Average temperature: 16.3° C
Average clear days: 126 Rain: 1023 Mn
Average humidity: 78%
[edit] People
[edit] Sister Cities
- Image:Flag of Israel.svg Beersheba, Israel
- Image:Flag of the United States.svg Louisville, Kentucky, USA
- Image:Flag of Uruguay.svg Montevideo, Uruguay
[edit] References
- (Spanish) Official government website
- (Spanish) Municipal information — Municipal Affairs Federal Institute (IFAM), Municipal Affairs Secretariat, Ministry of Interior, Argentina.
Provincial Capitals of Argentina |
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| (by Province) |
| Buenos Aires · Catamarca · Chaco · Chubut · Córdoba · Corrientes · Entre Ríos · Formosa · Jujuy · La Pampa · La Rioja · Mendoza · Misiones · Neuquén · Río Negro · Salta · San Juan · San Luis · Santa Cruz · Santa Fe · Santiago del Estero · Tierra del Fuego, Antarctica and The South Atlantic Islands · Tucumán |
Image:Flag of Argentina.svg Turismo Carretera | |
|---|---|
Champion drivers | 1939 Ángel Lo Valvo · 1940-41 Juan Manuel Fangio · 1947-48, 1953-54, 1960 Oscar Alfredo Gálvez · 1949-52, 1955-58, 1961 Juan Gálvez · 1959 Rodolfo de Álzaga · 1962-65 Dante Emiliozzi · 1966 Juan Manuel Bordeu · 1967 Eduardo Copello · 1968 Carlos Pairetti · 1969 Gastón Perkins · 1970-71 Rubén Luis di Palma · 1973 Nasif Estéfano · 1974-76 Héctor Gradassi · 1977-78, 1995-97, 1999 Juan María Traverso · 1979-80 F. Espinosa · 1980-81 Antonio Aventín · 1982 Jorge M. Boero · 1983-85 Roberto Mouras · 1986 Oscar Angeletti · 1987-89 Oscar Castellano · 1990 Emilio Satriano · 1991-92 Oscar Aventín · 1993 Walter Hernández · 1994 Eduardo Ramos · 1998, 2000-02 Guillermo Ortelli · 2003 Ernesto Bessone · 2004 Omar Martínez · 2005 Juan Manuel Silva · 2006 Norberto Fontana 2007 Christian Ledesma |
Cars | |
Circuits | Balcarce · Buenos Aires · Comodoro Rivadavia · La Plata · Mar de Ajó · Nueve de Julio · Paraná · Posadas · Rafaela · Río Cuarto · Río Gallegos · San Luis |
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