Calle de Preciados explained

Calle de Preciados
Type:Pedestrian street
Length M:500
Location:Sol, Centro, Madrid, Spain
Direction A:South
Terminus A:Puerta del Sol
Direction B:North-West
Terminus B:Plaza de Santo Domingo
Junction:Plaza de Callao

Calle de Preciados (or simply Preciados) is a public pedestrian street in central Madrid, Spain, which spans from Puerta del Sol to Plaza de Santo Domingo via Plaza de Callao, where it takes a bend.[1] It is about long.[2]

History

The street was built on land previously occupied by the Convent of Las Descalzas Reales and the harvest plots of the . According to tradition, the name of Preciados (in use at least since the 17th century) comes from two brothers ('the Preciados') who installed in the area after buying plots to monks and thrived by working as Spanish; Castilian: almotacenes (an archaic job description pertaining the certification of weights and measures).[3] [4]

Already in 1905, the street was an important retail area, with a predominance of the tailoring and textile sector, shoe and footwear, pharmacy, as well as catering businesses.[5] Throughout the 20th century, commercial activity boosted in the wake of the growth of Galerías Preciados and Corte Inglés department stores (by the purchase of neighbouring businesses).[6] Starting in December 1967, the street started being closed to traffic on a temporary basis for the Christmas season owing to the large flow of pedestrians. On 20 October 1973, the permanent pedestrianisation of the street (together with Calle del Carmen's) was formally inaugurated by Mayor .[7] Galerías Preciados could not cope with El Corte Inglés' growth and ended being acquired by its rival in 1995.[8] As of 2018, Preciados is one of the busiest pedestrian streets in Europe.[9]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: La casa de campo de los Reyes de Castilla que se convirtió en la calle más comercial de Madrid. ABC. 19 February 2015. M.R.. Domingo.
  2. Web site: La calle Preciados en Madrid sufre una huida de inquilinos en sus locales comerciales. Merca2. 2 December 2020. Alejandro. Morales.
  3. Web site: La apreciada calle Preciados. El Mundo. 12 December 2021. Víctor de la. Serna.
  4. Book: Peñasco de la Puente, Hilario. Las calles de Madrid: noticias, tradiciones y curiosidades. Carlos. Cambronero. 1889. Madrid. Establecimiento tipográfico de D. Enrique Rubiños. 209.
  5. 10. 2012. 1138-7319. Las raíces de una metrópoli: el centro financiero de Madrid a principios del siglo XX. Universidad Carlos III de Madrid. Getafe. The roots of a metropolis: the financial centre of Madrid at the beginning of the twentieth century. Santiago de. Miguel Salanova. Hispania Nova.
  6. Book: Toboso Sánchez, Pilar. http://antigo.anphlac.org/sites/default/files/Sanchez%20PT.pdf. Los orígenes cubanos de El Corte Inglés y de Galerias Preciados: los dos grandes almacenes del comercio em España. IX Encontro Internacional da ANPHLAC (Associaçao de Pesquisadores e Professores de História das Américas): Goiânia, 26 de julho a 29 julho de 2010. 2010. 978-85-61621-03-2.
  7. Las calle de Carmen y Preciados, "salon de estar" de las gentes de Madrid. 3–4. Villa de Madrid. 0042-6164. Rafael. Chico. 1973.
  8. Web site: La compañía que nació de una pequeña sastrería en el centro de Madrid. 15 September 2014. Cinco Días.
  9. Web site: Lugares de Madrid por donde antes pasaban coches y ya no te acuerdas. Público. 29 December 2018. Manuel. Tapia Zamorano.