Villa Devoto
Villa Devoto is a neighborhood or district located in the northwestern area of the city of Buenos Aires, Argentina. Its administrative limits are defined by Lope de Vega, General Paz, San Martín, and Francisco Beiró Avenues; and Joaquín V. González, Baigorría, and Campana streets.
Villa Devoto | |
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Nickname: Garden of Buenos Aires | |
Country | Argentina |
Autonomous City | Buenos Aires |
Comuna | C11 |
Area | |
• Total | 6.6 km2 (2.5 sq mi) |
Population | |
• Total | 71,013 |
• Density | 11,000/km2 (28,000/sq mi) |
Time zone | UTC-3 (ART) |
Villa Devoto, a primarily middle class to upscale neighborhood, is characterized by quiet tree-lined streets and is often considered as The Garden of Buenos Aires. A lower-density, wealthy residential subsection known as Devoto R is located around Arenales Square, in the ward's north-central section.
Villa Devoto is served by the FC Urquiza and FC San Martín commuter railway lines.
History
Part of General San Martín Partido until the Federalization of Buenos Aires, the area was an exurb at the time and was known as Villa Gainza y Lynch. A rail link was built by the Buenos Aires and Pacific Railway, which inaugurated Devoto Station in 1888.
The district was named after Count Antonio Devoto, who became the landowner of most of the present day district in 1904. The Count Devoto was a member of the elite of Buenos Aires. King Victor Emmanuel III of Italy granted Devoto the title of count in 1916 in gratitude for his assistance to the Kingdom of Italy during World War I; Devoto died a few months later.
Devoto owned one of the largest mansions of Buenos Aires, known as Devoto Palace. The mansion was built by Italian architect Juan Antonio Buschiazzo, its 10,000 m² (107,000 ft²) decorated in bronze, silver and gold with ironwork forged in Italy, as well as Florentine mosaics. Prince Umberto di Savoia stayed there during a state visit in 1924. Devoto died before Buschiazzo's work was complete, and the mansion was demolished around 1940. He did not leave any descendants, and his remains lie at the Basílica of San Antonio de Padua in Villa Devoto.
The Metropolitan Seminary of Buenos Aires, alma mater to many of Argentina's bishops and archbishops, was established in Villa Devoto in 1899; among its alumni was the future Pope Francis. The Devoto Penitentiary, the city's sole remaining jail, was established in 1927. The ward became a bedroom community in later decades, as well as home to a sizable English Argentine and American expatriate community; a Garden Club was established by the English-speaking community in 1978.
Sports
Villa Devoto is home to two football clubs:
- Kimberley, formerly affiliated to dissident Federación Argentina de Football (then merged with official AFA), having played in the top division, Primera División, during the 1910s. In 2006 Kimberley rejoined AFA to compete in the futsal tournaments organised by the Association.[1]
- General Lamadrid, established in 1950 and currently playing in Primera C Metropolitana.
Landmarks
- San Martín line - Devoto Station
- Café de García, a neighborhood landmark since 1927
- Church of the Immaculate Conception
- Delfín Gallo School
- Devoto Public Library
- Zubizarreta Hospital
Personalities
- Jorge Bergoglio, the 266th and current Pope of the Catholic Church studied in 1958 at the Metropolitan Seminary of Villa Devoto.
The following have all been residents of Villa Devoto:
- Olegario Víctor Andrade, poet
- Josemaría Listorti, TV comedian
- Diego Maradona, footballer
- Mario Pergolini, TV producer
- Gabriela Sabatini, tennis player
See also
References
- Kimberley: crecer de la mano del futsal by Cristian Claverie on AFA website
External links
- Official website
- Portal de Villa Devoto (Spanish)
- Devoto Info (Spanish)
- Devoto Magazine
- Devoto Barrio (Spanish)
- Devoto Hoy Portal (Spanish)
- Info on Devoto (Spanish)