Portugués River Explained

Río Portugués
Name Other:Río Baramaya,
Río Ponce,
Río Tibes
Source1 Location:Barrio Portugués, Adjuntas, Puerto Rico
Mouth Location:Bucaná River
Progression:Guaraguao
San Patricio
Tibes
Portugués
Machuelo Arriba
Sexto
Quinto
Tercero
Cuarto
San Antón
Playa
Subdivision Type1:Commonwealth
Subdivision Name1:Puerto Rico
Subdivision Type2:Municipality
Subdivision Name2:Ponce
Length:18.43miles[1] [2]
Source1 Elevation:2853feet[3]
Mouth Elevation:3feet[4]
Discharge1 Avg:16000cuft/s[5]
Basin Size:20.33sqmi[6] [7]
River System:Río Bucaná
Tributaries Right:Chiquito River
Corcho River (Adjuntas)

Río Portugués is a river in the municipality of Ponce, Puerto Rico. In the 19th century, it was also known as Río de Ponce.[8] [9] Twenty-one bridges for motor vehicle traffic span Río Portugués in the municipality of Ponce alone.[10] The river is also known as Río Tibes in the area where it flows through barrio Tibes in the municipality of Ponce.[11] Río Portugués has a length of nearly 30km (20miles) and runs south from the Cordillera Central mountain range into the Caribbean Sea. The Portugués is one of the best-known rivers in Ponce because of its prominent zigzagging through the city and its historical significance.[12] The river is historically significant because the city of Ponce had its origins on its banks. It was originally known as Río Baramaya (Baramaya River).[13] It has its mouth at 17.9808°N -66.6239°W. This river is one of the 14 rivers in the municipality.

Origin

Río Portugués has its origin in Cerro Guilarte,[14] located the western part of barrio Portugués in the bordering municipality of Adjuntas,[15] just north of Ponce, and drains into the Caribbean Sea after running for some 27.6km (17.1miles).[16] The river has a discharge of 16,000 feet3/second.[17] The toponymy, or origin of the name, comes from one of its first settlers, Pedro Rodríguez de Guzman, known as el Portugués ("the Portuguese") because his ancestry was from Portugal.[18] [19]

Tributaries

Río Chiquito is one of the tributaries of Río Portugués (i.e., Río Chiquito feeds into Río Portugués).[20] In the sectors and sub-barrios that it traverses, the locals call the river by the name of such sector/barrio. Thus names such as Río Cedro, Río Nuez, Río Moscada, and Río Tibes as the unofficial local name of Río Portugués in the sectors known as Cedro, Nuez, Moscada and Tibes.[21]

Course of the river

Starting at its origin in Barrio Portugués, Adjuntas, Río Portugués, as it is known locally, begins to form at an altitude of approximately 2,853 feet (870 m) above sea level.[22] The river then runs in a southerly direction parallel to PR-10 for most of its trajectory, crossing barrios Guaraguao, San Patricio, and Tibes. It brushes barrio Machuelo Arriba on its southwestern corner after it crosses PR-10 just west of the intersection of PR-10 and PR-504, immediately north of the Ponce city limits. From there it enters barrio Machuelo Abajo and continues south crossing Avenida Betances/Avenida Tito Castro (PR-14), at a point about half a mile west of the intersection of routes PR-12 and PR-14. A few hundred feet before the Avenida Betances bridge over Río Portugués in the city of Ponce, the river divides barrios Sexto, located west of the river, and Machuelo Abajo, to the east. It continues south crossing Calle Guadalupe, at which point it divides barrio Quinto to the west and Machuelo Abajo to the east. This point is just west of Club Deportivo de Ponce. Several hundred feet further downstream, at Miguel Pou Boulevard–PR-1 and Puente de los LeonesTricentennial Park, the river divides barrios Tercero and San Antón. Further downstream, the river runs immediately west of La Ceiba Park on Calle Comercio (route PR-133) in sector Cuatro Calles. After crossing Calle Comercio, Río Portugués divides barrios Cuarto and San Anton, and continues its southerly course towards Avenida Las Américas (PR-163).

The following table summarizes the course of the river in terms of roads crossed. Roads are listed as the river flows from its origin in Ponce's Barrio Guaraguao in the north to the Caribbean Sea in the south (N/A = Data not available):

No.Barrio RoadRoad's
km marker
NBI ID[23] Bridge name
(if any)
Direction
(of bridge traffic)
Coordinates Notes
1Guaraguao19.1 025961 Unnamed Both 18.1205°N -66.6588°W 0.5 km N of PR-515
2San Patricio[24] 14.8 N/A Unnamed Both 18.1203°N -66.6553°W 0.3 km E of PR-10, on Camino Soñadora
3TibesN/A N/A Unnamed Both 18.1028°N -66.6431°W 0.1 km N of Camino Robles; Bridge obliterated by the Portugues Dam
4TibesN/A 004901 Unnamed Both 18.0975°N -66.6417°W At entrance to Camino Pastillo; Bridge obliterated by the Portugues Dam
5TibesN/A N/A Unnamed Both 18.0887°N -66.6403°W 0.1 km S of PR-503 in Central Barrio Tibes; Bridge obliterated by the Portugues Dam
6Tibes9.3 023261 Unnamed Both 18.0481°N -66.6252°W Just north-northwest of Centro Ceremonial Indígena de Tibes in Southern Barrio Tibes
7Portugués Rural6.9 026711 Unnamed Both 18.0378°N -66.6114°Wbetween PR-503 and PR-504
8Portugués Rural0.1 022481 Unnamed Both 18.0354°N -66.6117°W 0.1 km east of PR-503, in Barrio Cantera
9Machuelo Abajo2.0 018521 Unnamed Both 18.0198°N -66.6073°W PR-14 is aka Ave. Tito Castro in this area (aka, Ave. Betances)
10Cantera1.7 022061 Both 18.0173°N -66.607°W PR-14 is aka Calle Guadalupe in this area
11Tercero126.9 019221 Both 18.0126°N -66.6076°W 0.5 km east of Plaza Las Delicias
12San Antón1.2 018561 Unnamed Both 18.0081°N -66.6066°W At Parque de la Ceiba
13San AntónCalle Campos Street has no km markers 018021 Unnamed Both 18.0052°N -66.6068°W At east end of Calle Campos, in comunidad Bélgica
14San Anton1.0 010852 Unnamed WB 18.003°N -66.6072°WAt Av. Las Américas, east of Hospital Dr. Pila
15San Antón1.0 010862 Unnamed EB 18.0029°N -66.6072°W At Av. Las Américas, east of Hospital Dr. Pila
16San Antón3.6 018921 Unnamed Both 17.9989°N -66.6057°W Av. Santiago de los Caballeros/Av. Malecón, between Av. Las Américas and Ponce By-pass. PR-12 used to be signed PR-14 in this area
17San Antón229.0 015941 Unnamed Both 17.997°N -66.6019°W Ponce By-pass 0.4 km east of PR-12
18San Antón103.7 022691 Unnamed Both 17.9856°N -66.5977°W Flows as Río Bucaná
19PlayaAv. Caribe N/A N/AUnnamed Both 17.9752°N -66.5989°W Flows as Río Bucaná
20Playa227.7 005841 CaracolesBoth 17.9961°N -66.614°W Ponce By-pass, between Av. Hostos and Plaza del Caribe; This was part of the former course of the river
21Playa3.3 001451 Río PortuguésBoth 17.9935°N -66.6153°W Av. Hostos just south of Ponce By-pass; This was part of the former course of the river
22Playa2.4 002751 Unnamed Both 17.9829°N -66.6233°W Av. Padre Noel by Villa Pesquera; This was part of the former course of the river
 

Former and current course

For flood control purposes, in the 1970s Río Portugués was diverted by the U.S. Corps of Engineers from emptying directly into the Caribbean Sea at Playa de Ponce to feeding into the Río Bucaná which then empties into the Caribbean Sea. This channelization project started in 1974[25] and was completed in 1997.[26] It was a multimillion-dollar investment, with just the first phase costing $120 million.[27]

Former course

The former course of Río Portugués, prior to being diverted and channelized by the U.S. Corps of Engineers in the 1970s, followed from the area just north of Avenida Las Américas/PR-163[28] [29] in a south-southwesterly fashion crossing Avenida Las Américas immediately east of Hospital Dr. Pila. It then continued south behind the Governmental Center/Puerto Rico Police Ponce Area headquarters, and followed a trajectory almost parallel to Avenida Hostos (PR-123, formerly PR-10). It then crossed PR-2 immediately east of the intersection of Avenida Hostos and Ponce Bypass/PR-2, at the sector called "Caracoles". From there the river used to continue flowing southerly, at one point just edging the area where Plaza del Caribe now stands. This old course then took a sharp westerly turn and crossed Avenida Hostos, at the now historic Puente Río Portugués. From this point it continued running south-southwesterly where it (now, since the newly built PR-52) crossed PR-52. From here the river flowed another one mile (1.6 km) crossing the low-lying area of Barrio La Playa at Avenida Padre Noel before draining into the Caribbean Sea about 30 or 40 yards from Avenida Padre Noel, in the area called Villa Pesquera.

Current course

Once the U.S. Corps of Engineers canalized Río Portugués as it flowed through the city of Ponce, the Corps also diverted its course from a south-southwesterly course to a south-southeasterly course. This diversion started immediately south of the river's intersection with Avenida Las Américas.

From Avenida Las Américas the river now flows, channelized, in a south-southeasterly after crossing Avenida Las Américas about a quarter of a mile east of Hospital Dr. Pila. After crossing Avenida Las Américas in downtown Ponce, the river comes to the location where in the 1970s it was diverted by the US Corps of Engineers from a southwesterly path to its current southeasterly path. Taking a sharp easterly turn, Río Portugués enters barrio San Antón, and crosses route PR-12/Avenida Malecon about one quarter of a mile north of PR-12's intersection with PR-2. Shortly thereafter the river bends to become southbound and crosses route PR-2, about one quarter of a mile east of PR-2's intersection with PR-12. The river then borders the Julio Enrique Monagas Family Park on the park's western edge until, still canalized, it feeds into Bucaná River about half a mile south of PR-2. The point where Río Portugués feeds into Río Bucaná is about one quarter of a mile north of PR-52 (a.k.a., Autopista Luis A. Ferré) and can be seen from the southbound side of PR-52.

Bucaná River

After this point Río Portugués is no longer called Río Portugués. It becomes Río Bucaná (Bucaná River) and divides barrios Playa on its western bank and barrio Bucaná on its eastern bank. From there the river continues flowing in southerly course as a single canalized river for half-mile, crossing Autopista Luis A. Ferré/PR-52. Another one mile (1.6 km) of southerly flow and the river empties as a single stream into the Caribbean Sea just east of La Guancha, safely avoiding most low-laying populated areas.[30]

Uses

Today Río Portugués is one of the most popular rivers for swimming in southern Puerto Rico.[31]

Portugués Dam

See main article: Portugués Dam.

In 1986, the U.S. Congress approved funding to build the Portugués Dam for Río Portugués about 4miles northwest of Ponce. Construction began in April 2008[32] and, when finished, the dam will be the first roller-compacted concrete thick arch dam built anywhere in U.S. soil by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.[33] [34] The Cerrillos Dam over Río Cerrillos was finished in 1992, and had also been approved by Congress in 1986. The cost to build the Portugués Dam is over $192 million.[35]

The dam will consist of a dike of 220 feet high by 1,230 feet wide. It will use 368,000 cubic yards of compressed concrete. As of 22 March 2009, 88 percent of the concrete work had been completed. Its scheduled completion date is 2013. The total investment is $375 million USD.[36]

Preservation

In 1971, Mr. and Mrs. Clark Foreman, owners of the Adjuntas property where Río Portugués originates, granted the development rights of their property in Adjuntas to the Conservation Trust of Puerto Rico, thereby establishing the first scenic and conservation easement in Puerto Rico. The deed of easement and its restrictive covenants protect a 40acres tract of land that includes the headwaters of Río Portugués. Although the title to the land remains with the Foreman family, the easement restricts the use of the land, safeguarding its trees, vegetation, and other natural resources against destruction or alteration in perpetuity. Today, 42acres of Río Portugués scenic easement in Adjuntas's humid forest are a protected entity of the Conservation Trust of Puerto Rico.[37]

Archeological site

An important archeological finding, labeled "PO-29: Jácana", was made on the banks of the river. Artifacts were transferred to Jacksonville, Florida and then returned to a museum in Puerto Rico.[38] [39]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.drna.gobierno.pr/biblioteca/publicaciones/hojas-de-nuestro-ambiente/13-LOS%20RIOS%20T..pdf Los Rios.
  2. http://www.recursosaguapuertorico.com/CAPITULO_III_ABRIL2008.pdf Recursos de Agua de Puerto Rico.
  3. http://www.prfrogui.com/geocities/rios.htm Rios mas importantes de Puerto Rico.
  4. http://www.gis.otg.gobierno.pr/maptest Maptest
  5. Ferdinand Quiñones and Karl G. Johnson. The Floods of May 17–18, 1985 and October 6–7, 1985 in Puerto Rico. U.S. Geological Survey. Open File Report 87-123. Prepared in Conjunction with the Puerto Rico Department of Natural Resources, Puerto Rico Environmental Quality Board, and the Puerto Rico Highway Authority. San Juan, Puerto Rico. 1987. Page 15.
  6. http://www.drna.gobierno.pr/biblioteca/publicaciones/hojas-de-nuestro-ambiente/13-LOS%20RIOS%20T..pdf Los Rios.
  7. http://www.recursosaguapuertorico.com/CAPITULO_III_ABRIL2008.pdf Recursos de Agua de Puerto Rico.
  8. Eli D. Oquendo-Rodriguez. Pablo L. Crespo-Vargas, editor. A Orillas del Mar Caribe: Boceto historico de la Playa de Ponce - Desde sus primeros habitantes hasta principios del siglo XX. First edition. June, 2017. Editorial Akelarre. Centro de Estudios e Investigaciones del Sur Oeste de Puerto Rico (CEISCO). Lajas, Puerto Rico. Page 55.
  9. Government of the Municipality of Ponce. Periodico "El Señorial". Special issue: Carnaval Ponceño 2013. February 2013. Page 17. Ponce, Puerto Rico.
  10. https://bridgereports.com/pr/ponce/ National Bridge Inventory Data: Puerto Rico, Ponce.
  11. http://www.visitaponce.com/recursos.aspx Government of the Autonomous Municipality of Ponce. Recursos Naturales. Ponce Ciudad Señorial
  12. Sunny A. Cabrera Salcedo. Hacia un Estudio Integral de la Toponimia del Municipio de Ponce, Puerto Rico. Ph. D. dissertation. May 1999. University of Massachusetts Amherst. Graduate School. Department of Spanish and Portuguese. Page 49.
  13. http://areciboweb.50megs.com/pr/ponce.html Ponce, Puerto Rico.
  14. https://books.google.com/books?id=rzyA0BhHHCIC&pg=PA187 Las Fiestas Populares de Ponce y La Villa de Ponce.
  15. http://www.obedcintron.com/extractolibro_ed3.pdf Los ríos y embalses de Adjuntas.
  16. http://www.prfrogui.com/geocities/rios.htm Río Portugués.
  17. Ferdinand Quiñones and Karl G. Johnson. The Floods of May 17–18, 1985 and October 6–7, 1985 in Puerto Rico. U.S. Geological Survey. Open File Report 87-123. Prepared in Conjunction with the Puerto Rico Department of Natural Resources, Puerto Rico Environmental Quality Board, and the Puerto Rico Highway Authority. San Juan, Puerto Rico. 1987. Page 8.
  18. Government of the Municipality of Ponce. Periodico "El Señorial". Special issue: Carnaval Ponceño 2013. February 2013. Page 17. Ponce, Puerto Rico.
  19. Another source names this early settler "Pedro Perdomo de Guzmán". It is not clear which of the two names is the correct name, or if his name was perhaps Pedro Rodriguez Perdomo de Guzmán or some other variation. See Historia de Nuestros Barrios: Portugués, Ponce. Rafael Torrech San Inocencio. El Sur a la Vista. Ponce, Puerto Rico. Elsuralavista.com. 14 February 2010.
  20. http://www.salonhogar.com/est_soc/pr/pueblos/ponce/index.htm Estudios Sociales. Ponce, Puerto Rico: Hidrografia.
  21. http://www.pucpr.edu/facultad/fsuarez/285/asignacion1/Ponce%20Puerto%20Rico.pdf Ponce, Puerto Rico.
  22. http://www.prfrogui.com/geocities/rios.htm PRFROFUI. RÍOS MAS IMPORTANTES DE PUERTO RICO.
  23. https://bridgereports.com/pr/ponce/ National Bridge Inventory Data: Puerto Rico, Ponce.
  24. https://www.openstreetmap.org/?mlat=18.13878&mlon=-66.67313&zoom=15#map=18/18.12032/-66.65528 Camino Soñadora Bridge, Barrio San Patricio, Ponce, Puerto Rico, at OpenStreetMap.
  25. Carmelo Rosario Natal. Ponce En Su Historia Moderna: 1945-2002. Published by Secretaría de Cultura y Turismo of the Government of the Autonomous Municipality of Ponce. Ponce, Puerto Rico. 2003. p. 118.
  26. http://www.planosycapacetes.com/small_26.jpg Proyecto de año: Represa Portugues, Construccion con Ingenieria Extrema.
  27. Carmelo Rosario Natal. Ponce En Su Historia Moderna: 1945-2002. Published by Secretaría de Cultura y Turismo of the Government of the Autonomous Municipality of Ponce. Ponce, Puerto Rico. 2003. p. 118.
  28. https://www.primerahora.com/noticias/puerto-rico/nota/inauguranlanuevarepresaportuguesenponce-988046/ Inauguran la nueva Represa Portugues en Ponce.
  29. https://www.elnuevodia.com/noticias/locales/nota/inauguranlarepresaportuguesenponce-1705249/ Inauguran la Represa Portugués en Ponce: La nueva estructura protegerá a 40,000 residentes contra inundaciones.
  30. http://pubs.usgs.gov/sir/2005/5243/SIR2005_5243.pdf Surface-Water, Water-Quality, and Ground Water Assessment of the Municipio of Ponce, Puerto Rico, 2002-2004.
  31. http://www.periodicolaperla.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=6184:recreacion-para-todos-sin-salir-de-la-perla-del-sur&catid=119:articulos&Itemid=342 Recreación para todos sin salir de Ponce.
  32. http://www.periodicolaperla.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=3264:con-inyeccion-multimillonaria-gobernador-resalta-su-gestion-a-favor-de-la-region-sur&catid=81:locales&Itemid=198 Gobernador resalta su gestión en el Sur.
  33. http://www.techvideobytes.com/video/382120844 Dam over Río Portugués
  34. http://www.oficinascomerciales.es/icex/cda/controller/pageOfecomes/0,5310,5280449_5282957_5284971_634485_PR,00.html Portugues Dam.
  35. http://www.periodicolaperla.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=3264:con-inyeccion-multimillonaria-gobernador-resalta-su-gestion-a-favor-de-la-region-sur&catid=81:locales&Itemid=198 Gobernador resalta su gestión en el Sur.
  36. http://www.periodicolaperla.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=2433:no-se-detiene-la-represa-portugues&catid=135:actualidad-del-sur&Itemid=423 No se detiene la Represa Portugués.
  37. http://www.fideicomiso.org/ Hacienda Buena Vista. Río Portugués.
  38. Web site: La colección arqueológica de Jácanas: estableciendo los hecho[1] . [IN]Genios . 13 April 2018 . es . 28 November 2019.
  39. Web site: Espenshade . Chris . The Cultural Landscape of Jacana: Investigations of Site PO-29, Municipio de Ponce, Puerto Rico . Academia.edu . 3 August 2015 . 28 November 2019.