El Poblado
El Poblado is the 14th commune in the metropolitan area of the city of Medellín, Colombia. According to a 2005 census the population was 94,704, distributed among its land area of 23 km2, and by the year 2015, it had a population of 128,839. The comuna consists of 24 barrios, and is located in the south-east of the city. Its western boundary with the comuna of Guayabal runs along the Medellín River; to the south, it borders the city of Envigado, to the east, the township of Santa Elena, and to the north, the comunas of La Candelaria and Buenos Aires.
El Poblado is also known as Las Manzanas de Oro because it is the main center of the industrial and commercial life of the second largest economy of Colombia.
The name El Poblado derives from the first Spanish settlement of the Aburrá Valley in 1616 that was built in what is today its main square. In 1675, the Spanish administration founded another village in El Sitio de Aná, today's Berrío Square, designed to become the center of the future Medellín; instead, El Poblado itself became the main economic center during the 20th century.
History
The Spanish explorer Francisco Herrera y Campuzano established the first European settlement in the Aburrá Valley, in what is today El Poblado Square, by a royal edict of March 2, 1616. The new village, called San Lorenzo de Aburrá had a population of 80 indigenous people. A later edict stated that indigenous people, white and mestizos, could not live together, and by 1675, the Spanish administration moved the center to a new village in what is today the Berrio Square. El Poblado became a marginalized township until the 20th century.In 1845, the parish was given the name San José del Poblado and had a plaza, streets and land for sale. At that time the most famous fincas were Provenza, Manila, Patio Bonito, Vizcaya, Castropol and Astorga, that would remain the barrio names.
At the beginning of the 20th century, El Poblado was the preferred area for wealthy families of the city to buy rural villas. At the time, travel between El Poblado and Medellín was difficult, but the area was attractive for the industrialists and business families that settled Barrio Prado in what is now the downtown area. With the construction of the Medellín - El Poblado Avenue, the land became valuable for urban settlements, and the villas or "fincas" were built in Envigado. During the 1930s, farming families from outlying areas came to Medellín looking for new opportunities, and were attracted by the industrialization of the city in El Poblado. This inspired the creation of a new barrio, Barrio Lleras, financed by Banco Central Hipotecario.
In the 1950s, El Poblado was included in the city due to the extension of industrial activities along the Medellín River to the south. The rich families of Barrio Prado started to move to El Poblado because La Candelaria became overpopulated and the land rose in price.
In the 1970s El Poblado became the place for Medellín's wealthy residents and was the second urban center; it was given the nickname Milla de Oro and the Zona Rosa was established – an exclusive tourist area for business, night clubs and general activities for locals and visitors.
Geography
El Poblado consists of 1,432.58 hectares, encompassing 39% of the Medellín municipality. It is located in the southeastern zone of the city towards the mountains of the Aburrá Valley. The Medellín River borders its western side, separating it from the Guayabal Commune and its elevation east of the river rises from approximately 1,538 meters above sea level to over 2,000 meters at its highest point.Several streams descending from the eastern mountain flow into the Medellín River and pass throughout El Poblado. The most important ones are El Poblado and Aguacatala creeks.
Demographics
According to the 2005 Annual Medellín Statistics Report, El Poblado has a population of 94,704 inhabitants. The age distribution is under age 39, from ages 15 to 39, and who were 65 or older.In addition, another 2005 report from the Medellín municipality estimates that 66.5% of the housing in El Poblado belongs to the richest class in Colombia known as ; 27.5% belongs to the high-middle class ; 4.2% belongs to the middle class; 1.3% to the low-middle class and 0.5% to the poor class.
According to figures presented by the DANE census 2005, the ethnographic composition of the district is: White, Mestizos and Afro-Colombians.
Neighborhoods
The commune is divided into 22 "barrios" or neighborhoods:
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Streets and transport
Streets
The main streets of the Comunas are oriented north to south following the direction of the Medellín River. Due to the undulating and varied relief of the area, there are many kind of streets, which are often named due to their orientation:- Avenidas: a main street, meaning avenues.
- Carrera: a street that goes from north to south.
- Calle: a street that goes from east to west.
- Loma: a street that goes to a specific hill.
- Circunvalar: a street that goes around a specific area.
- Transversal: a street that is not oriented east to west.
El Poblado Avenue
This is one of the main thoroughfares in Medellín, and it changes name several times along the eastern mountain of the city connecting the most northern barrios of Medellín like Manrique to the southern Envigado. In El Poblado it has the name of the comunas, starting at its intersection with the 30th Avenue at its north and connecting with the El Poblado - Envigado at its south. The avenue passes by El Poblado Square and Calle 10, which is noted for its thriving commerce and nightlife.Las Vegas Avenue
The avenue is oriented north to south and runs along the eastern side of the Medellín River and is the urban limit of the Commune. It is also the continuation of Industrialist Avenue that starts in 33rd Street finishing in 10th Street, where it becomes Las Vegas until the end of the commune in the south.Las Palmas Highway
This is a road that connects Medellín to the near eastern region of the Antioquia State. The road is also the eastern limit of the commune and has many commercial buildings, hotels, restaurants and places to view the Aburrá Valley. The road starts in the intersection of 33rd Street and El Poblado Avenue. It is a long ascent to the eastern mountain, which gives a good view of the valley. There is also a small and twisting road that goes from the center of the commune to the highway crossing and named La Cola del Zorro.Other important ways
As an alternative from going north to south through El Poblado there are two transversales : the Transversal Inferior and Transversal Superior. The main streets are oriented mostly from north to south, due to the rising mountainous terrain running from west to east. The most well known west-east streets following the rising terrain to the highest area of the commune are:- 10th Street
- 14th Street
- 5th South Street
- Los Balsos Hill Street
- 37th Street.
- 29th Street.
- 10th Street.
- 12th South Street.
Transportation
Metro de Medellín
The Metro of Medellín has three stations in the city of El Poblado along the 1st Line going from north to south through the Industrials and Las Vegas Avenue.- El Poblado Station on the cross of Las Vegas Avenue and 10th Street. It is also near to the bridge of 10th Street that connects with Guayabal Commune.
- Aguacatala Station near 12th South Street.
- Ayurá Station, the last Metro station within the municipality of Medellín.
Buses
- The Poblado 130.
- The Poblado 131 Barrio Colombia.
- The Poblado-Exito 132.
- The Poblado-San Lucas 133.
- The Poblado Intercontinental-Las Lomas 134.
Metroplús
The Metroplus is a new transportation project in Medellín that will integrate the current subway stations to different sectors of the city. In the case of El Poblado, the Metroplus will provide service from the Industrialists Station near El Poblado Avenue to Zúñiga Creek. It will have 12 stations.Squares and malls
El Poblado contains some of the more well known squares and malls of Medellín.- El Poblado Square: The main square that is important for being the exact spot where the Spaniards founded the first European settlement in the Aburrá Valley in 1616 and it is considered the first seed of Medellín. There are no remains of that time however. The square is a very traditional Antioquian square that follows the Spaniard architecture with the main building being the Saint Joseph Church. The square is on the intersection of El Poblado Avenue and 10th Street, this last one a preferred place by young people because its nightlife.
- The Lleras Park: Located between the 9th and 10th Streets and the 35th and 38th carreras. It is also known as Zona Rosa which in Latin America means a place of nightlife, restaurants, discos, youth gatherings and other kinds of recreation.
- El Tesoro Commercial Park
- Oviedo Shopping Mall: Located in the Golden Mile
- Santafé Shopping Mall: Located in the Golden Mile
- Sandiego Shopping Mall
- Viscaya Shopping Mall
- Premium Plaza Shopping Mall
Education
- Universidad EAFIT: Located on Las Vegas Avenue and has a high reputation nationally and internationally. It was established in 1960 as a college for administrative business, finance and industrial formation for national development. In 2004 it was declared by the same administration as "Park University" as an ecological proposal for the city.
- : Located in the Transversal Superior near Calle 10. It started in 1979 as Instituto Ciencias de la Salud but has since expanded and now has several schools: School of Medicine, School of Dentistry, School of Veterinary and Zootechnics, Law School, School of Psychology and School of Biomedical Engineering. It has a high reputation within the country and internationally.
- Jaime Isaza Cadavid Polytechnic: Located next to Eafit University this government-owned polytechnic was founded in 1964 and offers professional and technical education.
- INEM José Félix de Restrepo: A government-owned high school that is one of the biggest in the city and attended by youths from many other barrios of Medellín.
- Gimnasio Los Pinares
- Lord College
- El Palermo
- San José de Las Vegas
- New School
- Montessori School
- Euskadi School
- Fontán School
- Gimnasio Los Cedros
El Castillo Museum
Its first resident was José Tobón Uribe, who had initially brought the architecture plans from France. He lived there until 1943 when business man Diego Echavarría Misas purchased the property as a family residence. In 1971, Echavarria Misas donated the castle to the City of Medellin as a museum.