Bella Vista, Montevideo

Coordinates: 34°52′31″S 56°11′12″W / 34.87528°S 56.18667°W / -34.87528; -56.18667
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Capurro - Bella Vista
Monument to Joaquín Suárez
Monument to Joaquín Suárez
Street map of Capurro - Bella Vista
Street map of Capurro - Bella Vista
Location of Capurro - Bella Vista in Montevideo
Location of Capurro - Bella Vista in Montevideo
Coordinates: 34°52′31″S 56°11′12″W / 34.87528°S 56.18667°W / -34.87528; -56.18667
Country Uruguay
DepartmentMontevideo Department
CityMontevideo

Bella Vista is a barrio (neighbourhood or district) of Montevideo, Uruguay and part of the Capurro / Bella Vista composite barrio, with Artigas Boulevard separating the two.

Location

Bella Vista shares borders with Capurro to the north west, Prado to the north, Reducto to the east, Aguada and the Port of Montevideo (which belongs to the Ciudad Vieja) to the south, and it borders the Bay of Montevideo to the south west.

The south part of Bella Vista has also been known as Arroyo Seco (dry stream) from as early as 1756. The name is still used today, though there are no precise limits that describe this area.

History

Though there had been a few villas in this area before the 1840s, among which the residence of

Estación Central General Artigas
in Aguada took its place.

Main streets and squares

The main streets of Bella Vista are Agraciada Avenue, Joaquín Suárez Avenue and Rambla Balthasar Brum, which runs along the coastline. Its two main squares are Plaza San Martín, dedicated to the Argentine independence hero, and Plaza Joaquín Suárez, dedicated to the politician and twice President of the Republic, whose statue, on the south edge of the square, marks the beginning of the homonymous avenue.

Buildings and locations

On Tapes street is located the Sanctuary of Our Lady of Perpetual Help and St. Alphonsus (Parroquia Nuestra Señora del Perpetuo Soccorro y San Alfonso), notable among other for its architecture and on Agraciada Avenue the Armenian Apostólic church. Along the Rambla most notably are the central installations of the electric power company of Montevideo, the "UTE - Central José Batlle y Ordóñez",[1] and behind it is the Palacio de la Luz, housing the administrative offices of the UTE. Three blocks southwest of Plaza San Martin is the Museo Geominero del Uruguay, which belongs to the National Direction of Mining and Geology.[2]

The west part of this barrio, which runs parallel to the Rambla, is an industrial area, with many old industrial buildings which serve now as warehouses. Among other functioning industries is the beer factory Fábricas Nacionales de Cerveza.[3]

Places of worship

Armenian Genocide, Montevideo, with sculpture by Nerses Ounanian
.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Administración Nacional de Usinas y Trasmisiones Eléctricas (UTE). "UTE : La energía que nos une". Archived from the original on 5 October 2011. Retrieved 5 April 2011.
  2. ^ Dirección Nacional de Minería y Geología. "Museo Geominero del Uruguay". Archived from the original on 30 August 2011. Retrieved 5 April 2011.
  3. ^ Fábricas Nacionales de Cerveza. "FNC Uruguay". Retrieved 5 April 2011.

External links