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The city of Buenos Aires is divided in 48 barrios or neighbourhoods. These neighbourhoods are grouped into comunas or communes, which are "units of decentralized political and administrative management governed by designated residents" [1]
[edit] List of neighbourhoodsIn alphabetical order, with the corresponding population (according to 2001 Census)
The city of Buenos Aires (excluding the outskirts that form Greater Buenos Aires), had about 2,700,000 inhabitants by 2001. [edit] CommunesCommunes are parts of the city. Each commune, or comuna, encompasses one or more neighbourhoods (barrios), which are represented in the respective community centres for administrative purposes. Communes are serially numbered. The list below lists all communes and their constituent neighbourhoods in numerical order:
[edit] Informal barrio namesThe name Barrio Norte is sometimes used to refer to the area around Santa Fe avenue, encompassing parts of Retiro, Recoleta, Palermo, and (sometimes) Balvanera. The name Barrio Sur was used in the past to refer to the southern neighborhoods. It is no longer used in this sense, but the usage survives in the lyrics of the tango Sur, which refer to specific places in Nueva Pompeya, Boedo, and Parque Patricios. Abasto is sometimes used to refer to the zone around the Abasto market (now a shopping mall). It encompasses north-western Balvanera and north-eastern Almagro. Congreso is the area around Congress square, encompassing southeastern Balvanera, northern San Cristóbal and western Montserrat. Catalinas Norte is used to name the high-rise district next to Retiro transportation center and to the financial district, while Catalinas Sur is used (quite rarely) for the lowlands of San Telmo (notably the area around Cosme Argerich hospital). Palermo is the largest barrio and has many subdivisions; Palermo Viejo is the name usually given to the area between Coronel Diaz, Cordoba, Scalabrini Ortiz and Santa Fe Avenues; Palermo SoHo, the city's fashion district, refers to Plaza Julio Cortázar and its surroundings; Palermo Hollywood, across Juan B. Justo Avenue, is a distinctive quarter located in the northernmost side of the barrio where some radio stations, TV networks, movie producers and workshops have settled in the late 1990s. Las Cañitas refers to a few blocks around the Campo Argentino de Polo, crowded with trendy bars, fancy restaurants and some nightclubs. Palermo Queens is used sometimes to refer to the parts of Villa Crespo close to Palermo Viejo. Parque Centenario is sometimes used to refer to the area around Centenario park, at the limit of Almagro, Caballito, and Villa Crespo. Within Belgrano, there are Belgrano "C" and "R" (widely and incorrectly believed to signify "commercial" and "residential", respectively) and Bajo Belgrano ("Belgrano lowlands"), which since the late 1990s includes a small Chinatown. [edit] External links
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