Neighbourhoods of Buenos Aires







Buenos Aires, autonomous city and capital of Argentina, is composed of forty-eight neighbourhoods (locally known as barrios). The city is also legally divided into communes, each one including one or more barrios. Among the most visited and populated barrios are Palermo, Recoleta, Puerto Madero, Belgrano, San Telmo, La Boca, Monserrat and Caballito. Sectors of the city are also traditionally known as neighborhoods by the inhabitants of Buenos Aires, but not officially by the authorities of the city; some examples include Chinatown, Barrio Norte and the Microcentro.




Contents






  • 1 List of neighbourhoods


  • 2 Informal neighbourhood names


  • 3 References


  • 4 External links





List of neighbourhoods


In alphabetical order, with the corresponding population and the commune they are grouped in.









































































































































































































































































































Name
Area in km²
Population
Commune

Agronomía
2.1
13,963
15

Almagro
4.1
128,206
5

Balvanera
4.4
137,521
3

Barracas
7.6
73,377
4

Belgrano
6.8
126,816
13

Boedo
2.6
45,563
5

Caballito
6.8
170,309
6

Chacarita
3.1
25,778
15

Coghlan
1.3
18,021
12

Colegiales
2.3
52,391
13

Constitución
2.1
41,894
1

Flores
7.8
142,695
7

Floresta
2.3
37,247
10

La Boca
3.1
43,413
4

La Paternal
2.2
19,058
15

Liniers
4.3
42,083
9

Mataderos
7.3
62,206
9

Monserrat
2.2
39,175
1

Monte Castro
2.6
32,782
10

Nueva Pompeya
6.2
60,465
4

Núñez
4.5
49,019
13

Palermo
15.9
225,245
14

Parque Avellaneda
5.1
51,678
9

Parque Chacabuco
3.8
54,638
7

Parque Chas
1.4
18,926
15

Parque Patricios
3.7
37,791
4

Puerto Madero
2.1
406
1

Recoleta
5.9
165,494
2

Retiro
2.8
38,635
1

Saavedra
5.6
48,956
12

San Cristóbal
2.1
46,494
3

San Nicolás
2.3
28,667
1

San Telmo
1.2
23,198
1

Vélez Sársfield
2.4
34,084
10

Versalles
1.4
13,556
10

Villa Crespo
3.6
83,646
15

Villa del Parque
3.4
55,502
11

Villa Devoto
6.4
67,712
11

Villa General Mitre
2.2
34,204
11

Villa Lugano
9.0
108,170
8

Villa Luro
2.6
31,859
10

Villa Ortúzar
1.8
21,256
15

Villa Pueyrredón
3.3
38,558
12

Villa Real
1.3
13,681
10

Villa Riachuelo
4.1
13,995
8

Villa Santa Rita
2.2
32,248
11

Villa Soldati
8.6
39,477
8

Villa Urquiza
5.4
85,587
12


Informal neighbourhood names


The name Barrio Norte refers to the area around Avenida Santa Fe, encompassing parts of Retiro, Recoleta, and Palermo.


The name Barrio Sur was used in the past to encompass the southern neighborhoods. This name has mostly fallen out of use, but survives in the lyrics of the tango Sur, which refer to specific places in Nueva Pompeya and Boedo, and in the short story "The South" by Jorge Luis Borges, where the conventional wisdom is recalled that "the South begins when crossing Rivadavia Avenue".


Abasto is sometimes used to refer to the zone around the Abasto market (now a shopping mall), many times in association with the life of Carlos Gardel. It encompasses north-western Balvanera and north-eastern Almagro.


Congreso is the area around Congress square, encompassing southeastern Balvanera, northern San Cristóbal and western Monserrat.


Catalinas Norte is the high-rise district next to Retiro transportation center and to the financial district, while Catalinas Sur is used (quite rarely) for the lowlands south of San Telmo (notably the area around Cosme Argerich hospital and at the bottom of Parque Lezama).


Palermo is the largest barrio by area and has several informal subdivisions; Palermo Viejo is the name usually given to the area between Coronel Diaz, Cordoba, Scalabrini Ortiz and Güemes; Palermo Chico and Barrio Parque the most upmarket part of Palermo is on Palermo's north-eastern edge, includes the National Museum of Decorative Arts and MALBA, the Museum of Latin American Art and many of the wealthy and famous old homes some now used as Ambassador's residences; Palermo Soho, the city's fashion district, refers to Plaza Julio Cortázar and its surroundings; Palermo Hollywood is a distinctive quarter located in the northern edge of the barrio where radio and TV stations, movie producers and workshops have settled in the late 1990s. Las Cañitas refers to a few blocks around the Campo Argentino de Polo, crowded with trendy bars, fancy restaurants and nightclubs. "Palermo Queens" is used sometimes to refer to the parts of Villa Crespo close to Palermo Viejo. Other than Palermo Viejo and Palermo Chico, these names are of recent vintage (1990s and later) and are related to the gentrification process that Palermo and its peripheral areas are undergoing.


Parque Centenario is sometimes used to refer to the area around Centenario park, at the limit of Almagro, Caballito, and Villa Crespo.


The southern parts of Flores were reclaimed from swampland, and the names Bajo Flores and Bañado de Flores are used for these areas.


Within Belgrano, there are Belgrano "C" and "R" (widely and incorrectly believed to signify "commercial" and "residential", respectively) and Bajo Belgrano ("Belgrano lowlands"), which since the late 1990s includes a small Chinatown.


A tango song named "Cien barrios porteños" (The 100 barrios of Buenos Aires), sung by Alberto Castillo, is sometimes invoked (informally) to support the claim that there are indeed a hundred neighbourhoods in the city. This number may be reached by including some suburbs in the tally.



References





External links



  • Barrios History Government of the Buenos Aires city (Spanish)








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