Campolongo | |
Settlement Type: | Neighbourhood of Pontevedra |
Coordinates: | 42.4271°N -8.6446°W |
Subdivision Type: | Country |
Subdivision Name: | Spain |
Subdivision Type1: | City |
Subdivision Name1: | Pontevedra |
Unit Pref: | Metric |
Population Total: | 7,000 |
Postal Code Type: | Postal code |
Postal Code: | 36001, 36003 |
Campolongo is a neighbourhood in the city of Pontevedra (Spain). It has a residential, administrative, educational and commercial function.
The Campolongo neighbourhood is located in the south and southwest of the city of Pontevedra. It is bounded to the north by Augusto García Sanchez Avenue and the Gafos River, to the south by the PO-10, to the east by Alcalde Hevia street and to the west by Rosalía de Castro street. The northern part of the neighbourhood has many green areas and is currently in the city centre. The Gafos River runs through the neighbourhood.
Until the 1950s, the Pazo de Campolongo, located in Iglesias Vilarelle Street, was surrounded by large fields, which gave the neighbourhood its name (Campolongo = Long Field). Then in the 1960s Francisco Franco ordered it to be transferred stone by stone to the Casa de Campo (Madrid).[1]
In the 1950s, the area was home to the city's railway station, where the Plaza de Galicia is now located, and the railway tracks occupied what is now Augusto García Sánchez Avenue. The old station was in use until 3 July 1966. At the end of the 1960s, this station was dismantled and relocated to the Gorgullón neighbourhood. The new military buildings in Pontevedra, designed in 1965 by the architect Xosé Bar Boo, were built in this area between 1966 and 1969.[2] [3] [4] [5]
In August 1960, the Department of Urban Planning of the Ministry of Housing in Madrid decided to entrust a study for the preliminary phase of the so-called Polígono de Campolongo (Campolongo Land Development Area) to the architects Julio Cano Lasso, Fernando Moreno Barberá and Juan Gómez González. Campolongo, with 132,000 square metres next to the city centre, was the ideal space for the city's expansion. The official announcement of the approval of the Polígono de Campolongo took place on 22 December 1961.
In October 1968, the plan was made available to the public for a month at the Provincial Housing Office and in the following months, the development of the land began thanks to the National Housing Plan.
Later, in 1970, the Gafos River was canalized and a large promenade was created above it in December 1970[6] In 1971 the General Director of Housing, Martín Eyries Valmaseda, accompanied by the first provincial authorities, visited the Campolongo neighbourhood, together with the Mayor Augusto García Sánchez.[7] In 1972 the Campolongo Primary School was built. In 1975, the Pontevedra City Council officially received from the General Director of the National Housing Institute, Ramón Andrada Pfeiffer, the completion of the urbanisation of the neighbourhood. In 1976, 1977 and the following years, many of the buildings on Augusto García Sánchez Avenue were built.[7] A central park was laid out and in 1979, construction began on the St. Joseph's Church, which was inaugurated on 23 October 1983.[8]
In 1996, the city council cut down the eucalyptus trees in Campolongo near what is now María Victoria Moreno Avenue and created a new park on the land where they were located,.[9] [10]
The old artillery barracks were demolished in 2005 (the land to build it had been expropriated in 1924 for this purpose).[11] In its place, the Administrative Complex of Pontevedra was built, inaugurated in 2008,[12] which houses the provincial offices of the Galician Government and the provincial Tax Office and several residential buildings, in addition to the new military sports centre and a post office.
In the 2010s a modern weather station was installed in the district.[13]
In 2019, a new children's playground was opened.[14] The Campolongo sports centre, the city's largest, was also completely renovated by the BeOne Sport and Fitness chain and opened in 2020.[15]
Nowadays, the southern part of the district is occupied by subdivisions and single-family houses. In the residential area of San Blas there is a chapel dedicated to this saint, built in the 18th and 19th centuries. In the 1990s, San Blas changed its appearance, thanks to the construction of houses in its lower part and the construction of a Carrefour Planet hypermarket in its upper part.
Campolongo is a central area of Pontevedra that is organised around three squares: the Plaza de Galicia (with a fountain in the middle and a large bus shelter on the south side), the Plaza de la Libertad behind the Courthouse or Palacio de Justicia (where the Statue of Liberty is located) and the Plaza de la Constitución, in front of the Church of San José, where the monument to the Spanish Constitution of 1978 is located. Campolongo is also dotted with the Campolongo Park, where there is a large children's playground with a zip line and swings and slides, as well as a fountain and a Galician granary on stilts in two of the green areas, and the María Vinyals Park in front of the Provincial Administrative Centre of Pontevedra.
The city centre is also organised by two parallel axes running east–west: Augusto García Sanchez Avenue and María Victoria Moreno, and two parallel axes running north–south: General Antero Rubín Avenue and Alcalde Hevia street.
Campolongo has an important educational heritage, as it is home to several of the city's schools:
Most of the city's government offices and agencies are located in the area:
The district also has two underground car parks, the 415-space Parking Central, opened in 1998[22] and the 716-space Parking Campolongo, opened in 2009.[23]
The neighbourhood celebrates the festivities of its patron San José for several days around 19 March each year.[24]