Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/neighbourhoods-of-buenos-aires

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Barracas, Buenos Aires

Neighborhood in Argentina


Neighborhood in Argentina

FieldValue
nameBarracas
native_name_langspa
typeNeighborhood of Buenos Aires
image_skylineBuenos Aires - Barracas - Colegio Santa Felicitas - 20071215d.jpg
image_captionThe St. Felicity School
mapframeyes
mapframe-zoom12
mapframe-pointnone
map_captionLocation of Barracas in Buenos Aires
mapsize150px
image_blank_emblemBarracas emblem.png
blank_emblem_size100px
blank_emblem_typeEmblem
pushpin_map
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameArgentina
subdivision_type1Autonomous City
subdivision_name1Buenos Aires
subdivision_type2Comuna
subdivision_name2C4
parts_typeImportant sites
parts_stylepara
area_total_km27.6
population_total77474
population_as_of2001
population_density_km2auto
timezone1ART
utc_offset1-3
blank_name_sec1Day
blank_info_sec1December 13website =
footnotesEstación Buenos Aires

| mapframe-zoom = 12 | mapframe-point = none

Barracas is a barrio, or district, in the southeastern part of the city of Buenos Aires, Argentina. It is located between the railroad of Ferrocarril General Manuel Belgrano and the Riachuelo River, and the streets Regimiento de Patricios, Defensa, Caseros, Vélez Sársfield, Amancio Alcorta, Lafayette, and Lavardén. The name "Barracas" comes from the word barraca, which refers to a temporary construction of houses using rudimentary materials.

History

In the 18th century, "Barracas" began to grow on the banks of the Riachuelo River, becoming a slave quarter, as well as an area for leather tanneries, and abattoirs.

On March 24, 1791, a bridge was built that gave the neighborhood an important strategic value during the British invasions of the Río de la Plata. In 1858, part of this bridge was destroyed by flood and was replaced by a new iron bridge in 1871. There were a series of problems with this new bridge until the inauguration of its replacement in 1931, which still stands today.

Throughout most of the 19th century, the neighbourhood was home to some of the wealthiest families of the city. Santa Lucía avenue was the principal centre of activity and contained many of the city's most famous stores at the time. However, an 1871 yellow fever epidemic that swept through many southern parts of the city forced most wealthy families and the area's middle class to relocate to the north of the city, leaving the neighbourhood to become the working-class area that it remains today.

A number of wealthy Argentine families retained properties in Barracas during much of the 20th century, maintaining them as rental units of varying quality. Immigrants, especially Italians, started to settle here and it became popular with the working-class. Modest cafés were opened, attracting people with a lower financial status. Factories dominated the economy of the area up until around 1980, although they continue to provide an important source of employment.

The factories of Barracas began to close afterwards, and fewer train services were operated through the area. Freeway construction during the 1980s resulted in the loss of over 20 residential buildings and two public parks. The barrio set the stage for activist director Fernando Pino Solanas's 1987 film Sur (South). A chronicle of the lives of a group of friends and stockyards co-workers during Argentina's last dictatorship, Sur was as much an ode to Barracas as it was a narrative of the havoc many working-class Argentines lived through in that era.

The painting of colorful façades on Calle Lanín by local artist Marino Santa María during the 1990s has helped foster a number of redevelopment projects in the area, notably the conversion of the former Piccaluga textile factory into upscale lofts, which was completed in 2008.

Design District

The Church of Santa Felicitas was built by the Guerrero Family in memory of their dead daughter and inaugurated in 1876.

Inside one of the sector of the neighborhood there is a 'Design District', an initiative tending to create a design and manufacture center. This effort is intended to help the south part of the city and to consolidate Buenos Aires as a UNESCO city of design, the project is based on easy credit and possibilities for those entrepreneurs who are willing to move their offices and manufacturing plants to this center, that is between the avenues Pedro de Mendoza, Velez Sarfield and the streets Australia, Brandsen and Herrera. Between the strategies for this center there are preferred loans, tax exceptions, marketing strategies and subsidies to repair real state that is too old.

Art

The "Sistine Chapel of Football" is an artwork exhibited at the Sportivo Pereyra club in Barracas. It honors two of the greatest stars in the history of Argentine football: Diego Maradona and Lionel Messi along with other leading figures such as Juan Román Riquelme, Gabriel Batistuta, Mario Kempes, Sergio Agüero, Claudio Caniggia, Ricardo Bochini and Ariel Ortega. It is inspired by Michelangelo's classic fresco The Creation of Adam found in the Vatican's Sistine Chapel in Rome. It was created in 2014 by the Argentine graphic designer and artist Santiago Barbeito (a.k.a. Santuke) but it was not until May 2018 that it became globally popular thanks to the viralization of a video filmed by an amateur who uploaded it to social networks.

Notable houses

  • Casa de Esteban de Luca

References

References

  1. link. (March 13, 2016 (Spanish) by [http://ambito.com ámbito.com] August 29, 2011)
  2. "Argentina tiene una réplica futbolera de la Capilla Sixtina".
  3. Por Pablo Antonio Cavallero. (April 18, 2018). "De Barracas al mundo, cómo se creó la "Capilla Sixtina" del fútbol: "En el Mundial hay que venir a rezar acá"".
  4. (April 1, 2018). "En Argentina hacen una versión futbolera de la 'Capilla Sixtina'".
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Barracas, Buenos Aires — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report