Gràcia

Coordinates: 41°24′24″N 2°09′29″E / 41.40667°N 2.15806°E / 41.40667; 2.15806
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Plaça de Trilla (Plaza of Trilla) in Gràcia

Gràcia (Catalan pronunciation: [ˈɡɾasiə]) is a district of the city of Barcelona, Spain. It comprises the neighborhoods of Vila de Gràcia, Vallcarca i els Penitents, El Coll, La Salut and Camp d'en Grassot i Gràcia Nova. Gràcia is bordered by the districts of Eixample to the south, Sarrià-Sant Gervasi to the west and Horta-Guinardó to the east. A vibrant and diverse enclave of Catalan life, Gràcia was an independent municipality for centuries before being formally annexed by Barcelona in 1897 as a part of the city's expansion.

Neighbourhoods

The district of Gràcia comprises five neighbourhoods:[1]

Code Neighborhood Population (2009) Area (ha) Density (inhabitants/ha)
28 Vallcarca i els Penitents 15 687 120,9 129,8
29 El Coll 7 299 35,8 203,9
30 La Salut 13 332 64,4 207,2
31 Vila de Gràcia 52 801 132,6 398,2
32 Camp d'en Grassot i Gràcia Nova 34 838 65,0 536,4
Gràcia 123 957 418,6 296,2

History

Gràcia was established in 1626, by a Novitiate of Carmelites, who established a convent there, called "Nostra Senyora de Gràcia (Our Lady of Grace)". Following the War of the Spanish Succession, Gràcia remained an independent municipality in the direction of the Serra de Collserola mountains (north/northwest) from central Barcelona. Passeig de Gràcia, the street which is today home to the most exclusive international fashion brands and hotels, has been described as Barcelona's version of the Champs-Élysées. [citation needed] Initially, this street was a simple country road linking the town to the larger city, through the plain of Barcelona.

During the mid-1800s, Barcelona rapidly industrialised and significantly expanding its borders from those of the Roman walls and old city. The advent of new industry drew significant numbers of Catalans from the surrounding countryside, spurring a shift from a rural, agriculturally-based economy to an urban economy focused on manufacturing and trade.[2]

Between 1801 and 1850, the population of Barcelona grew by over fifty percent, from 115,000 to roughly 187,000 citizens. This industrial expansion created a number of problems.[3] Packed living quarters, densely lined streets, and poor public infrastructure all contributed to squalor and disease and that plagued the city's poorer citizens. Life expectancy plummeted to just 23 years for poorer inhabitants and 36 years for those from wealthier backgrounds. The sewage system was overwhelmed by the mass of people sharing cramped streets, which were poorly designed and offered little in terms of fresh air or ventilation. The Junta de Derribo, published in the 1840s provides an account of this period.[citation needed]

Modern map of the districts of Barcelona; Gràcia can be seen in red.

In 1854, the government of Barcelona recognised the need for an answer to these population issues, and began planning the construction of what would become the Eixample district. Situated between the old city of neighbourhoods such as

Barri Gòtic, and El Born, and the outlying municipalities of Gràcia, Sant Martí, Sants, and Montjuïc, the Eixample (alternatively known as L’Eixample or Ensanche, in Catalan). These plans underwent a number of iterations. In 1855, the Ministry of Development, under the authority of the federal government in Spain at the time, commissioned Ildefons Cerdà, a Catalan urban planner, to design the new district.[4] However, the local government, rejected Cerdà's plan in a politically-motivated decision [citation needed
].

A subsequent project competition was held, but Cerdà's entry lost to one supported by the local city council, that of Antoni Rovira i Trias, another Catalan urban planner. Rovira i Trias played a central role in demolition of the 18th-century military installation, Ciutadella, which helped open Barcelona to the developments of the new century. Despite losing the contest, Cerdà's plan (which was heavily criticised at the time by his contemporaries as being overtly socialist) weathered the controversy and became the basis of the Eixample district, as it retained the support of the central Spanish government.

Over the next forty years, as the plan took hold and the city began to sprawl, the Eixample rapidly pushed Barcelona's borders closer and closer to the long-independent municipality of Gràcia. In 1897, Barcelona formally annexed the town of Gràcia, and it has existed since as a neighborhood of the Catalan capital. Although no longer independent, Gràcia has long maintained a distinct identity as a unique district of the diverse, larger metropolis to which it belongs.[citation needed]

Life in Gràcia