10°29′21″N 66°52′25″W / 10.4892714°N 66.8737124°W
Sabana Grande | |
Former name(s) | Abraham Lincoln Avenue (50s-1983), Main Street of Sabana Grande (1700s-1950s) |
---|---|
Part of | Parroquia El Recreo of Libertador Municipality and Chacao Municipality |
Type | public space, shopping thoroughfare |
Owner | PDVSA La Estancia, Caracas Metro, private entrepreneurs |
Length | 1,5 Km (1,8 Km Luis Brión Square added) |
Location | Caracas |
Postal code | 1050 |
Nearest metro station | Plaza Venezuela Metro Stop, Sabana Grande Metro Stop, Chacaíto Metro Stop |
San Antonio neighborhood end | Las Acacias Avenue |
Quebrada Chacaíto end | Plaza Luis Brión (Luis Brión Square) |
East | Luis Brión Square |
West | Plaza Venezuela (Venezuela Square) |
Construction | |
Commissioned | 70s |
Construction start | 70s |
Completion | 1983 |
Other | |
Designer | PDVSA La Estancia |
Known for | shopping, tourism, business, financial district |
Status | completed, active |
The Boulevard of Sabana Grande is an important leisure and shopping area located in eastern Caracas in the geographic center of the Metropolitan District of Caracas. It is a pedestrian-only, tree-shaded public space.[1] In 2011, the boulevard of Sabana Grande went through a rehabilitation process founded by PDVSA La Estancia.[2] A commercial and financial district, Sabana Grande is the commercial corridor, and a tourist district of Caracas.[3] The boulevard of Sabana Grande is home to the most important ornithological collection in Latin America, the William Phelps Ornithological Collection.[4][5] Until the beginning of the 20th century, it was called Calle Real (Royal Street) because it was the town's main road.
History
editThe boulevard of Sabana Grande was built on what was previously known as Abraham Lincoln Avenue.[6] The land was ideal for the construction of the Caracas Metro. As early as 1968, El Nacional suggested that the fate of Abraham Lincoln Avenue was to remove cars from the street and turn it over to pedestrians.[7]
Sabana Grande is the location of the main connections of the Caracas Metro system and has three stations: Plaza Venezuela, Sabana Grande and Chacaíto.[7] The Boulevard of Sabana Grande extends from the Los Andes Building to Quebrada Chacaíto, where Chacao municipality begins. Following the subway project in Caracas, whose construction began in 1975, more Caraqueños began to arrive at Sabana Grande.[8]
Following the problems between Caracas Metro and Libertador municipality of Caracas over who had responsibility for it, the boulevard of Sabana Grande was not maintained in the 1990s, but then re-emerged through a series of changes that were applied.[9] In 1994, the Caracas Metro finally granted the administration of the boulevard to the Libertador municipality. In 2007, based on its historical value, the Venezuelan government commissioned its recovery to PDVSA and the Libertador municipality.[10][11]
Culture
editThe boulevard of Sabana Grande was recently restructured. This commercial corridor has places and buildings of high historical, cultural and patrimonial value, icons of the modern architecture of twentieth century Venezuelan. PDVSA Centro de Arte La Estancia, in the process of renovating the boulevard in 2011, identified a total of nine heritage properties in the second section of the pedestrian promenade.[12][13]
The boulevard of Sabana Grande houses a number of important artworks. PDVSA La Estancia tried in Sabana Grande to connect art with the public spaces of Caracas.[14] In Sabana Grande some sculptures have been removed and new ones have been added in recent years. The artwork Volumen by Francisco Narváez was not located in Sabana Grande at the time of its rehabilitation but was later included in the urban and artistic furniture of the place.
The registration of all the properties has not been carried out and it is necessary to perform an exhaustive investigation to determine who the architects were of all the important buildings on Sabana Grande. As of 2019, the designer of the who Araure Building located on the boulevard was unknown, even though it was declared part of the Architectural Heritage of Caracas. Most of the architectural heritage of Sabana Grande dates back to the twentieth century, although some buildings from the nineteenth century stand out, such as the Immaculate Conception Church of the Recreo.[15]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ MERIN, JENNIFER (1989-11-05). "A Leisurely Approach to Fashionable Caracas". Los Angeles Times. ISSN 0458-3035. Retrieved 2018-05-10.
- ^ "Proyecto de rehabilitación integral Bulevar de sabana Grande". Archived from the original on 2014-04-27. Retrieved 2018-11-10.
- ^ "Bulevar de Sabana Grande – Caracas en 450". caracasen450.com (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2018-05-10.
- ^ Kirschstein, Marcos (29 January 2018). "El bulevar de Sabana Grande esconde un misterio de ochenta años". Audiovisual. Retrieved 10 March 2018.
- ^ acfiman.org/site/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/39.pdf
- ^ Martín Frechilla, Juan José (2004). Diálogos reconstruidos para una historia de la Caracas moderna. Caracas, Venezuela: CDCH UCV.
- ^ a b Andrade Racenis, Vanessa (September 2004). "Sabana Grande Punto de Encuentro" (PDF). Tesis de Grado: 60. Retrieved 10 March 2018.
- ^ Flores Ramírez, Gildred Del Valle (2015). "Reordenamiento integral de la avenida casanova y su zona de injerencia" (PDF). Tesis de grado Universidad Simón Bolívar USB. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 March 2018. Retrieved 20 March 2018.
- ^ Andrade Racenis, Vanessa (September 2004). "Sabana Grande Punto de Encuentro" (PDF). Tesis de Grado: 60. Retrieved 10 March 2018.
- ^ El boulevard de Sabana Grande
- ^ "BALÚ ABRE NUEVA TIENDA EN SABANA GRANDE | Ocean Drive Venezuela". oceandrive.com.ve. Archived from the original on 2018-01-11.
- ^ Ramirez, Auri; Lozada, José (2017). "Historia del activismo LGBTI en Venezuela" (PDF). Tesis de Grado Universidad de los Andes.
- ^ "Cuando cae la noche en Caracas". Climax. 2015-07-07. Retrieved 2018-05-10.
- ^ "Pdvsa La Estancia: 12 años de gestión indetenible - MippCI". minci.gob.ve (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2018-05-29.
- ^ Morín Licón, Gladys Georgely (2007). "La comunicación ciudadana prospera en Sabana Grande: como un espacio público que se recupera ayuda a la interrelación de los habitantes de Caracas" (PDF). Tesis de Grado UCV. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-05-23. Retrieved 2018-05-30.