Alameda Central Explained

Alameda Central
Type:Urban park
Location:Cuauhtémoc, Mexico City, Mexico
Coords:19.4356°N -99.1439°W

Alameda Central is a public urban park in downtown Mexico City. Established in 1592, Alameda Central is the oldest public park in the Americas.[1] [2] Located in Delegación Cuauhtémoc between Juárez Avenue and Hidalgo Avenue, the park is adjacent to the Palacio de Bellas Artes and can be accessed by Metro Bellas Artes.

Description

The Alameda Central park is a green garden with paved paths and decorative fountains and statues, and is frequently the center of civic events. The area used to be an Aztec marketplace. On 11 January 1592, Viceroy Luis de Velasco II ordered the creation of a public green space for the city's residents.[3] The name comes from the Spanish word álamo, which means poplar tree, that were planted here.[4] This park was part of the viceroy's plan to develop what was, at that time, the western edge of the city. It has become a symbol of a traditional Mexican park and many other parks in the country take on the name "Alameda" as well.[5]

Public art

Fountains and statues in the park include:

History

The original park was less than half the size of the current one, reaching only from where the Palacio de Bellas Artes is now to the location of the Hemiciclo de Juárez. What is now the western section of the park originally was a plain plaza built during the Inquisition in Mexico and known as El Quemadero (The Burning Place). Here witches and others convicted by the Inquisitors were publicly burned at the stake. By the 1760s, the Inquisition had nearly come to an end, and in 1770, viceroy Marqués de Croix had this plaza torn up to expand the park. The park was expanded again in 1791, when the Count of Revillagigedo built a wooden fence around the park to make it exclusive for the nobility. However, when Mexican Independence was won in 1821, the Alameda was the center of popular celebrations. In 1846, when President Santa Anna rode triumphantly into Mexico City, he ordered the fountains in the park be filled with alcohol.[5]

The five classical fountains are of French design and inspired by Greco-Roman mythology. More statues were added to the park in the 19th century. Gas lamps were installed in 1868, which were replaced by electrical lighting 1892. By the end of the 19th century, the park had become popular with all social classes in Mexico. Much of the current layout of the park, with its starburst pattern of paths around fountains and the central kiosk dates from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.[5]

By the late 19th century, the park included a bandstand and gas (now electric) lamps. On the south side of the park, facing toward the street is the Hemiciclo a Juárez, which is a large white semi-circular monument to Benito Juárez, one of Mexico's most beloved presidents.[4]

The park's statues include Désespoire and Malgré Tout, by Jesús Fructuoso Contreras, and a monument donated by the German community which is dedicated to Beethoven in commemoration of the centenary of his 9th Symphony.[6]

In 2012, the park went through a rehabilitation which began in May and was completed in December. The renewal included replacing the damaged pavement with marble, the improvement of the vegetation (including the planting of new trees), new light posts, and improvement of existing park features (e.g. benches and the fountains).[7] As part of the rehabilitation, the once ubiquitous street vendors are no longer allowed to operate within the park.[8]

During the COVID-19 pandemic, the Mexico City authorities closed the Alameda Central and other public spaces in the historic centre to prevent crowds from gatherings, in an effort to decrease COVID-19 transmissions. The closure of the Alameda and other historic public spaces affected some vulnerable populations, including homeless people, beggars, street vendors, street performers, and male sex workers, to the extent that they resisted leaving or found ways to return to public space, revealing different forms of long-lasting social inequalities and struggles for the use of urban space.[9]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Meade. Julie. Moon Mexico City. 2016. Avalon Publishing. 9781631214097. en. Just west of Bellas Artes, the Alameda Central is the largest green space in the center of the city and the oldest public park in the Americas..
  2. Web site: Three Kings Day in Mexico, a holiday in flux. LA Times Blogs - La Plaza. 6 January 2011. Consider the scene this week at the Alameda Central, the downtown Mexico City park historians describe as the oldest planned urban green space in the Americas..
  3. Web site: Cumplirá la Alameda Central 413 años. archivo.eluniversal.com.mx. El Universal. es. 10 January 2005.
  4. Book: Noble, John . Lonely Planet Mexico City . 2000 . Lonely Planet . Oakland CA . 1-86450-087-5 .
  5. Book: Humphrey, Chris . Moon Handbooks Mexico City . 2005 . 46–47 . Avalon Travel Publishing . Emeryville, CA . 1-56691-612-7 . registration .
  6. Book: Pohlsander. Hans A.. German Monuments in the Americas: Bonds Across the Atlantic. 2010. Peter Lang. 978-3034301381. 133.
  7. Web site: Rehabilitación de la Alameda Central y su Entorno . obrasenmiciudad.df.gob.mx . October 3, 2014 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20141006114336/http://www.obrasenmiciudad.df.gob.mx/?p=23653 . October 6, 2014 .
  8. Web site: Ambulantes no volverán a la Alameda Central: Ebrard. Azteca Noticias. 29 September 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20160304192652/http://www.aztecanoticias.com.mx/notas/mexico/122570/ambulantes-no-volveran-a-la-alameda-central-ebrard. 4 March 2016. dead.
  9. Fernando Gutiérrez (2023) ‘I will stay here’: public space and social inequality during the COVID-19 pandemic, Journal of Urban Design, https://doi.org/10.1080/13574809.2023.2245336