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Villa Soldati


FieldValue
nameVilla Soldati
native_name_langspa
typeNeighborhood of Buenos Aires
image_skylineParque Roca Villa Soldati.jpg
image_captionThe Cámpora Freeway and the Soldati housing complex
image_mapVSoldati-Buenos Aires map.png
map_captionLocation of Villa Soldati within Buenos Aires
mapsize150px
pushpin_map
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameArgentina
subdivision_type1Autonomous City
subdivision_name1Buenos Aires
subdivision_type2Comuna
subdivision_name2C8
parts_typeImportant sites
parts_stylepara
p1Parque de la Ciudad
Parque Roca Stadium
area_total_km28.7
population_total41228
population_as_of2001
population_density_km2auto
timezone1ART
utc_offset1-3

Parque Roca Stadium

Villa Soldati is a neighbourhood in Buenos Aires, Argentina, located in the South-West of the city. It has a population of approximately 41,000 people, 40% of which live in Barrio Soldati, a public housing development built between 1973 and 1979.

The ward is delimited by 27 de Febrero Ave., Coronel Esteban Bonorino, General Francisco Fernández de la Cruz Ave., Varela, Perito Moreno Ave., Castañares, and Escalada streets.

Founded in 1908 by Dr. José Soldati as "Villa Lugano," the area originally included what today is the Villa Lugano neighborhood. The first lots were sold in 1911, but the area's topography led to frequent flooding, and much of the area was left undeveloped. The neighborhood was bolstered by the establishment of the large La Vascongada dairy in 1930, but the opening of a landfill in 1936 dampened hopes for the area's future growth. Villa Soldati was formally demarcated as such in 1972.

On the morning of June 11, 1962, a train struck a bus on a level crossing in Villa Soldati, killing 43 people, mostly children

The area saw dramatic changes during the tenure of military-appointed Mayor Osvaldo Cacciatore, when he attempted to revitalize the ward (the city's poorest) with the construction of the Parque de la Ciudad, an amusement park. Built after 1977 over the former landfill, the bankruptcy of the developer (Interama) in 1980 led to controversy when Cacciatore had the city absorb the group's debts of over US$100 million; in the end, the amusement park's planned 15 million yearly visitors never came (attendance has never topped 1 million).

The Parque Roca Stadium, a multi-purpose facility, opened in Villa Soldati in 2006, became the home of the Argentina Davis Cup Team, and hosted a semifinal match of the 2006 Davis Cup as its first sporting event.

|File:La Torre del Parque de la Ciudad.jpg|alt1=The amusement park space tower|The amusement park space tower

References

References

  1. ''Train Wrecks'' by Edgar A. Haine, pages 143-144, Publ 1993 {{ISBN. 0-8453-4844-2
  2. [http://www.villalugano.com.ar/barrio/historia/evolucion2.php Villa Lugano {{in lang. es]
  3. es] {{webarchive. link. (November 3, 2007)
Info: Wikipedia Source

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