Georgiou I Square

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Georgiou I Square in the early 20th century
Georgiou I Square in the early 20th century

Georgiou I Square (Greek: Plateia Georgiou I) is Patras's central square. The square is named after George I of Greece. The square is 134 km (old: about 145 km) west of Corinth, 216 km (old: 238 km) west of Athens, 96 km (old: 100 km) northeast of Pyrgos, 144 km northwest of Tripoli and 77 km northwest of Kalavryta.

The square feature a fountain in the middle and until the 1950s, street lights in the middle. Until the 1950s, trees used to exist by the square. Several shops are around the square. Ermou Street is to the north, Kanaris Street is to the east, Votsis Street is to the south and Riga Fereou Street is to the west.

The square features neo-classical buildings around and it had red shingles with arches.

Contents

[edit] Streets

Its streets intersecting the square includes, all of them are on both sides:

  • Gerokostopoulou Street, west and east (one way westbound)
  • Maizonos Street, northwest and southwest (one way southbound)
  • Korinthou Street, southeast and northeast (one way eastbound)

[edit] Information

The Apollo Theatre in Georgiou Square
The Apollo Theatre in Georgiou Square

It was completed during the Capodistria government with the plan in which it was envoyed under the leader Stamatis Voulgaris in 1829. The plan saw the public of Patras from the beginning in which the city was destroyed during the battle of the Greek Revolution. The plain included the creation of the new city next to the old with grid and horizontal streets and new large squares. During that time, the square began as Dimokratias (Δημοκρατίας), it later changed to Kalamogdarti (Καλαμογδάρτη), Othonos (Όθωνος) after Otto I of Greece, Central Square (Κεντρική Kentriki), Thomopoulou (Θωμόπουλου) after Thomopoulos, Ethniki (Εθνική, literally the national Square), Palligenesias (Παλλιγενεσίας) and since 1863, Georgiou I. By the square features the Apollo Theatre, which was completed by Ernest Schiller, today, many of them are ordered in Italy. It was reconstructed several times and its last time was in 2006. In the square, Periklis Kalamogdartis had its first constitution of Greece and it was named after himself for a while.

After World War II and the Greek Civil War, many neo classical buildings do not exist mainly in the northeastern, the eastern and the southwestern sections. They have been replaced with eight to nine storey buildings in which were completed in the 1960s. Since the 1950s, the GR-8 and the GR-9 runs through the square in which are now secondary routes, its primary route is to the west and the superhighway and the perimeter since 2001 are further east. Traffic lights were installed in the 1960s in Korinthou at the southeast side and Maizonos at the northwest side.

[edit] Renovation

In 2002, the square was renovated, tiles and fountains were renovated, another building in the northwest section was under construction and was completed by Fall of 2004, it features several shops and escalators, it resembles as an outdoor mall with shops. The section from Maizonos and Korinthou and Korinthou and Maizonos were closed in order to alleviate traffic congestion in which lasted for a couple of years. Traffic lights remain nowadays as pedestrian lights, one of the traffic lights at the older intersection remained, the other two were removed.

[edit] Panorama

Its panorama includes the Arakynthos mountains and the mountains of the Etoloakarnania and Fokida prefecture as well as the Panachaiko and the mountains to the southeast including Omplos and the south. The buildings blocks the panorama except for Gerostokopoulou and rarely views from the eastern portion.

[edit] References

  • The first version of the article is translated and is based from the article at the Greek Wikipedia (el:Main Page)
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