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Parque Patricios


FieldValue
nameParque Patricios
native_name_langspa
typeNeighborhood of Buenos Aires
image_skylineFile:ParqueDeLosPatricios-1.jpg
image_captionParque de los Patricios park
image_mapPPatricios-Buenos_Aires_map.png
map_captionLocation of Parque Patricios within Buenos Aires
mapsize150px
pushpin_map
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameArgentina
subdivision_type1Autonomous City
subdivision_name1Buenos Aires
subdivision_type2*Comuna*
subdivision_name2C4
parts_typeImportant sites
parts_stylepara
p1Caseros Prison, Caseros Prison Demolition Project, Estadio Tomás Adolfo Ducó
area_total_km23.8
population_total40885
population_as_of2001
population_density_km2auto
timezone1ART
utc_offset1-3

Parque Patricios is a barrio located on the southern side of Buenos Aires, Argentina belonging to the fourth comuna.

Parque Patricios underwent a transformation during the beginning of the 1900s. The government moved the main slaughterhouse to Mataderos, removed refuse piles and the notorious trash incinerators ("la quema") and the cemetery used during the 1871 yellow fever epidemic, now Parque Ameghino. Parks, a zoo and hospitals were put in their place. Parque Patricios received its name from the park of the same name, designed by Carlos Thays, the French architect who designed many of the most distinctive parks in the north of the city including the Botanical Garden and Bosques de Palermo.

This barrio features many hospitals which treat patients from all parts of Argentina, as well as the notorious former Caseros Prison. It is also the home of Club Atlético Huracán, a First Division football team, and their stadium Estadio Tomás Adolfo Ducó. Parque Patricios is bordered by the barrios of Barracas and Nueva Pompeya to the south; Constitución to the east; San Cristóbal to the north; and Boedo to the west.

In more recent years, the area has received connections to Line H of the Buenos Aires Underground, in particular at Parque Patricios station, connecting it to the network for the first time.

The headquarters of the Government of Buenos Aires were moved to Parque Patricios in 2015, as part of a strategy to drive economic growth in the south and lessen the economic divide with the north of the city. The building was designed by British architect Norman Foster.

References

References

  1. "Página/12 :: Espectaculos :: Caseros, memoria del horror estatal".
  2. [https://www.buenosaires.gob.ar/noticias/la-nueva-sede-del-gobierno-porteno-en-parque-patricios La nueva sede del Gobierno porteño, símbolo del cuidado ambiental] - Buenos Aires Ciudad, 3 April 2015.
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