Iztacalco

Iztacalco
—  Delegación  —
View of the former San Matías monastery

Seal
Iztacalco within the Federal District
Coordinates:
Country Mexico
Federal entity D.F.
Established 1928
Named for Pre-Columbian city
Seat Río Churubusco y Avenida Té. Col. Ramos Millán
Government
 • Jefe delegacional Francisco Cervantes Sanchez (PRD)
Area[1]
 • Total 23.17 km2 (8.9 sq mi)
Elevation 2,242 m (7,356 ft)
Population 2010 [2]
 • Total 384,326
 • Density 16,587.2/km2 (42,960.7/sq mi)
Time zone Central Standard Time (UTC-6)
 • Summer (DST) Central Daylight Time (UTC-5)
Postal codes 08000 – 08930
Area code(s) 55
Website http://www.iztacalco.df.gob.mx

Iztacalco is one of the 16 delegaciones (boroughs) into which Mexico's Federal District is divided. It is located in the center-east of the district and is the smallest of the city’s boroughs. The area’s history began in 1309 when the island of Iztacalco, in what was Lake Texcoco, was settled in 1309 by the Mexica who would later found Tenochtitlan, according to the Codex Xolotl. The island community would remain small an isolated through the colonial period, but drainage projects in the Valley of Mexico dried up the lake around it. The area was transformed into a maze of small communities, artificial islands called chinampas and solid farmland divided by canals up until the first half of the 20th century. Politically, the area has been reorganized several times, with the modern borough coming into existence in 1929. Today, all of the canals and farmland are dried out and urbanized as the most densely populated borough and the second most industrialized.

Contents

Historic center

Although the borough is completely urbanized, there are still traces of the area’s rural past, especially in the historic center, which corresponds to the original island in the former Lake Texcoco.[3][4] This zones is still divided into six neighborhoods called barrios: Santa Cruz, La Asunción , San Miguel, Los Reyes, Zapotla, San Francisco Xicaltongo y Santiago, along with an area called Santa Anita Zacatlalmanco Huéhuetl. Most of these lie along the Calzada de la Viga.[4]This area was designated as a "Barrio Mágico" by the city in 2011.[5]

The Barrio de Santa Cruz contains some of the oldest structures of the entire borough. One of these is the Capilla de Santa Cruz is located on a small street called Anador Aztlán. It has a Salomonic main portal with vegetative designs. It is only one level topped with a vaulted niche. Inside, there is a gold leaf main altar with a notable wood cross covered in silver and decorated with the image of the Passion of Christ and the date of 1748. The chapel was declared a historic monument in 1972. The Ermita de la Cruz is on Calle Agricultures. It was constructed by the Franciscans in the early 16th century and listed as a historic monument in 1955. The interior contains a crucified Christ done in corn cane paste. It also has an oil painting of the Virgin of Guadalupe. This barrio also contains a number of houses and other structures from the 18th and 19th centuries.[5]

However, the Barrio de la Asunción next door is home to the most important plaza and church of the borough. The plaza is called either Plaza Miguel Hidalgo or Plaza San Matias, located between the parish of San Matías and Calzada de la Viga. It is of two levels with a number of trees and has a traditional kiosk in the center. It also has two important monuments, one of the Aztec glyph still used to designate the area and one of a bust of Miguel Hidalgo from 1870. The parish and former monastery of San Matías was begun in the 16th century. The main portal contains the main entrance, which consist of a richly decorated arch and two columns. Above it is an eight-sided choir window, and above that is a pediment in the form of a truncated triangle. Above this is a crest. There is one bell tower is Baroque. To the left of the facade, there is a dome over a chapel area, which is decorated with human figures and other elements. The interior contains chandeliers, arches and a main altar that features a marine shell.[5] Saint Matthew continues to be the patron saint of the Iztacalco.[6]

The Barrio de Santiago is marked by the Santiago Apóstol Church from the 18th century. It has a façade nearly without curves and almost square, covered in tezontle stone. On each side of the facade, there is a slim bell tower. The main entrance is marked by a simple arch of sandstone which contains a seashell and supported by two pilasters. Above this entrance, there is a clock. The interior is bright due to the many stained glass windows.[5]

The borough

The borough of Iztacalco is located in the east-center of the Federal District of Mexico City bordering Venustiano Carranza, Iztapalapa and Benito Juárez boroughs, as well as the Mexico State municipality of Nezahualcoyotl .[7] It is the smallest of the city’s boroughs.[8] The territory is divided into thirty eight neighborhoods called “colonias” or “barrios” along with 220 major apartment complexes.[9] The borough hall is located on Avenida Rio Churubusco in the Ramos Millán neighborhood.[7]

Seventy one percent of the borough is occupied by residencies, commerce and service establishments.[8] Fifty four percent of the territory is purely residential, down from 61% in 1980. %.[9] There are 99,577 housing units, almost all of which are constructed of cinderblock and concrete. The average housing unit has 4.1 occupants.[9][4] Many of these constructions are in some state of deterioration, which includes sixty percent of major housing complexes as well as sixty percent of a type of housing situation called a “vecindad.” Mixed use zones, with residences, offices, service and certain industries have increased from 8.6% to 17%. Eleven percent is dedicated to industry. Ninety percent of the land is paved over with only about two percent considered to be green space. Over 97% have basic services such as gas, electricity, garbage and drainage.[9]

The borough has 53.8km of primary roadway, 5.7% of the total for the Federal District with 6,082,261m2 of paved surface.[8] Major thoroughfares include the Viaducto Río de la Piedad which borders the borough on the north going east-west and connecting to the Mexico City-Puebla highway. It is bordered on the east by the Anillo Periférico, with the Circuito Interior passing through the center. Near the old village of Iztacalco is Eje 3 Oriente and Calzada de la Viga. Other important roads include Eje 2, Eje 6 Sur, Eje 1 Oriente and Eje 5 Oriente.[4][7] Four lines of the Metro pass through the borough: Line 9, Line 1, Line 4 and Line 8. Three of these lines meet at Metro Pantitlán, a major hub of the transport system and a major connecting point for busses heading east into the State of Mexico. There are four lines of the trolébus and Metrobús Line 2 passes through as well.[4] The Ciudad Deportiva Magdalena Mixhuca sports complex is located on Avenida Río Piedad in Colonia Magdalena Mixhuca. It contains boasts professional-level playing fields, swimming pools, running tracks and gyms.[7][4] The Palacio de los Deportes, also called the Domo de Cobre (“the Copper Dome”) is located on Avenida Río Churubusco and Viaducto Miguel Alemán in Colonia Granjas México. Connected to the complex is the Escuela Nacional de Entrenadores Deportivos and the Escuela Superior de Educación Física. As a private concert venue, it has hosted such acts as Aerosmith, Robbie Williams, The Cure and Shakira .[7][4]

The Autodromo Hermanos Rodríguez, with adjoining Foro Sol is located on Avenida Viaducto Piedad in Colonia Magdalena Mixhuca. The Foro Sol has also hosted major concerts.[7][4]

The La Viga Lienzo Charro (rodeo ring) is located on Guadalupe Street in Colonia Pantitlán.[4]

The main annual festival in the borough is the anniversary of the parish of San Matias in August, celebrating its establishment as the Franciscan monastery. It features the “charros of Iztacalco” who are based at the Lienzo Charro de la Viga, a tradition based from the 19th century. Other important days include the festival dedicated to Saint Sebastian in January in the Barrio de Zapotla, Carnival in some neighborhoods, the Procession of the Holy Burial on Good Friday and a pre Hispanic festival called Ue-izkal-ilhuitl, or the spring equinox .[4] The borough also hosts an annual youth event called the Festival Juventud. In 2011, this event included two days of rock and ska music at the Faro Iztacalco. It included bands such as Skandalo, Maskatesta and Los Korukos .[10]

Geography and environment

The borough extends over 21.8 km2 or 2,317.4 hectares, all of which is urbanized. It accounts for 1.75% of the total territory of the Federal District, and is the smallest of the 16 boroughs.[4][8] The land is flat and located on the lakebed of Lake Texcoco in the Valley of Mexico at an altitude of 2,235 meters above sea level. Today, however, the lake in this area has dried completely and the canals, wetlands and lake of the territory have completely disappeared.[3][4] The climate is considered to be semi arid and temperate, with only the area bordering Benito Juárez and Iztapalapa considered to be semi moist with rains in the summer. Overall, the borough is the driest in the Federal District, with an annual rainfall of not over 600 to 700mm per year. With over 90% paved over, there are no wild habitats left in the borough. Of the 2.34% dedicated to green space, most of these are traffic islands on major thoroughfares.[4]

There are only two parks in the borough. The Urbano-Ecológico School-Park is located on Calzada Ignacio Zaragoza in Colonia Agrícola Oriental, near the border of Iztapalapa. This park has less than one hectare. The other large green space is the parkland around the Magdalena Mixhuca Sports Center, which has been reforested with eucalyptus trees.[4]

Demographics

Iztacalco is the most densely populated borough in Mexico City.[3][6] As of 2005, the population was 395,025, with most being from the lower middle to lower classes.[4][8] There are small communities of middle class families in Reforma Iztaccihuatl, Militar Marte and Viaducto Piedad.[4][9] Despite its density, the overall population of the borough has been dropping between one and two percent since 1990, but still about twenty percent of the current population moved into here from somewhere else in Mexico. The population is expected to continue decreasing.[9][8]

There are about 5400 people who speak an indigenous language, with thirty eight different indigenous ethnicities present. About 1,100 of these speak some form of Nahuatl, followed by Zapotec, Mixtec, Otomi, Mazateca, Mazahua and Totonaca. About 91% of the population is Catholic with about seven percent belonging to Protestant or Evangelical churches.[9]

History

While the most accepted interpretation of Iztacalco (from Nahuatl) is “house of salt,” others have been proposed such as “place of white houses.” Originally, the name was written “Ixtacalco” but its current spelling was adopted in the second half of the 20th century.[4] The crest or seal of the borough is the Aztec glyph which has been used to designate the place since at least the time of the Mendocino Codex, which depicts the “house” and “salt” interpretations of the name.[11] It contains a sun shining over a house. Inside the house, there is a grain of salt and two markings that represent raindrops’ tracks.[7]

Because it was originally an island well within Lake Texcoco, Iztacalco was settled by humans later than the rest of the Valley of Mexico .[4] The history of Iztacalco begins in 1309.[11] The Xolotl Codex states that Iztacalco was one of the people’s last stops before they finally settled Tenochtitlan. The island was conquered and subject to the dominion of Texcoco as part of the territory of the Triple Alliance. From the beginning, inhabitants made a living by extracting salt from the brackish waters of the surrounding lake. This salt was consumed until the very early 20th century.[11][4]

Just after the Conquest, the area belonged to a territory called San Juan de Dios ruled directly from Mexico City.[5] A small monastery dedicated to Saint Matthew was constructed in which lived no more than two monks, with no more than 300 indigenous. As the area was very sparsely populated, these monks did not establish satellite parishes, except for the San Antonio hermitage, built for the feast day of this saint. In the middle of the 17th century, baptisms began to be recorded in the area, which then consisted of the main community and eight surrounding neighborhoods called barrios.[9][11] Through the colonial period, Iztacalco was on an island, which impeded its growth. It had only 296 residents in its barrios of Asunción, Santa Cruz, Santiago, San Miguel and Los Reyes.[11]

From the colonial period to the 19th century, various drainage projects in the Valley of Mexico eventually dried Lake Texcoco, creating firm land that would connect the former island of Iztacalco to the rest of the area. The dry land from the lake was formed mostly through the creation of chinampas on which were grown flowers and vegetables.[4] However, from the 19th century to the first decades of the 20th, Iztacalco had a number of canals crisscrossing it, the main one being Canal de la Viga, earlier known as the Acequia Real.[11] The canal extended for 1,560 meters and was thirty meters wide.[5] This made Iztacalco an important strategic transit point between what is now the historic center of Mexico City and the agricultural areas to the south and east such as Chalco and Xochimilco .[6] One of the main docks here was at Zacatlalmanco, which had an important market attached to it.[4] The first steamship passed by here in 1850 which connected Mexico City and Chalco. The canal had a number of pedestrian bridges over it, such as the La Garita. These bridges also doubled as regulators for the canal’s waters due to the floodgates on their supporting arches. The canal also functioned as rural getaway for Mexico City dwellers, especially on Sundays. Until, mid century, the borough area remained rural with small houses of adobe and/or reeds/small branches. Small canoes called trajineras carried cargo and passengers among the various docks on this canal. The canals were filled with aquatic birds such as herons and a local species called chichicuilotes.[12] It was also the scene of one of the most popular festivals of the 19th century, the Viernes de Dolores (Friday of the Virgin of Sorrows), also known as the Fiesta de las Flores (Festival of the Flowers). Starting in 1915, due to health concerns, the canal was closed to traffic and filled into become current major road, with the process completed in the 1930s.[5]

Through the 19th century, the community of Iztacalco and Mexico City would remain entities mostly separated by farmland and chinampas. This was also true of a number of communities which are now part of the borough such as Mixiuhca, Zacatlalmanco, La Magdalena, Santa Ana and San Matias.[3] Up until the 20th century, the territory remained a maze of chinampas divided by canals large and small with carp and even snakes.[6]

In 1855, the districts and municipalities of the Federal District were reorganized, with the municipality of Iztacalco consisting of the communities of San Matías, San Juanico, Santa Anita, Magdalena Atlacolpa, Asunción Aculco, Santa Cruz, Santiago, San Miguel, La Asunción, San Sebastián Zapotla, Los Reyes, San Francisco, San Antonio Zacahuisco as well as two ranches called Cedillo and De la Viga or De la Cruz Metlapalco. In the mid 19th century, the area’s population was dominated by indigenous peoples. In 1892, there was land redistribution among the families of the area, consisting of 255 hectares what belonged to three ranches.[12]

At the end of the 19th century, Iztacalco was part of the Tlalpan prefecture with a population of about 2800.[12] In 1900, it became part of the prefecture of Guadalupe Hidalgo, one of the six the Federal District was divided into at the time. In 1929, the current borough was formed.[5]

The urban sprawl of Mexico City began to reach the borough in the first decades of the 20th century. As the canals were filled in, they were converted into the primary roadways which still remain today. Canal de la Viga is now Calzada de la Viga.[4][12] The first industries in the area were established in the middle of the 20th century as the area was at the city’s periphery, but its proximity to the historic center made its urbanization quick.[4] The first industries in the areas were those making cardboard boxes, cushions, furniture, chemicals and food processing. The installation of factories and housing developments changed Iztacalco from rural to completely urban in less than four decades. Since the 1930s and especially since the 1950s, land became divided into housing lots as the canals and swamp was drained into dry land. Most of this housing was for the working classes. These include neighborhoods such as La Cruz, Pantitlán and Granjas México to house workers for factories built in the same areas.[12]

Citizens of the borough began directly electing borough officials in 2000, these include the borough president and the borough’s two representative’s to Mexico City’s government. Today, some of the most dangerous neighborhoods of the city are located in this borough.[4]

Economy

Iztacalco is ranked ninth in economic marginalization in the Federal District with over 32% considered to be living in poverty. Over 85% are considered to be at least moderately economically marginalized, the highest in the district.[9] As of 2007, about 55% of the population over the age of twelve is employed either in the formal or informal economy, with most of these between the ages of 35 and 39.[9][8] About 48% of those in the total workforce do not have work in the formal economy. Well over half the workforce is male but the percentage of women has been rising since 1990. 0.1% work in agriculture, 20.9% work in mining, construction and manufacturing, and 75.7% work in commerce and services.[9]

Eleven percent of the borough and 11.7% of establishments are dedicated to industry and manufacturing, the second highest percentage in the District.[4][8] The Ciudad Deportiva de la Magdalena Mixihuca is the second largest industrial zone in the Federal District.[3] Just under 50% of establishments are in commerce and just over 37% are in services, but there are no major office buildings.[8][4] The borough has eleven hotels, one five-star, two four-star and four three-star.[8]

Education

There are twenty three public day care centers, run by various governmental agencies. There are 147 kindergartens, with 63 of these run by the delegation. There are 128 public primary schools. There are fifty five public middle schools, thirty five of which are general studies and twenty are geared to vocational instruction. There are thirteen private middle schools.[9] High schools include Plantel 2 de la Escuela Nacional Preparatoria (UNAM), la Preparatoria Iztacalco , dependiente del Instituto de Educación Media Superior del Distrito Federal (IEMS-DF) and Plantel 3 del Colegio de Bachilleres Metropolitano.[4]

There are five centers dedicated to special education and nine centers that work with special needs children in the regular school system. There are fourteen vocational schools above the middle school level.[9] It has eleven public libraries, mostly serving elementary school aged children. It has ten “casas de cultura” which mostly serve only the neighborhoods in which they are found.[4] 3.1% of the population is illiterate.[8] To combat high dropout rates, the government of Mexico City offers stipends to families of school aged children as long as the children remain enrolled in public schools.[4]

The Unidad Profesional Interdisciplinaria en Ingeniería y Ciencias Sociales y Administrativas (UPIICSA) del Instituto Politécnico Nacional is located in the borough, which offers majors in engineering, computer science and administration.[4] The Escuela Normal de Educación Física trains physical education teachers.[9]

References

  1. ^ "Delegación Iztacalco" (in Spanish) (PDF). Sistema de Información Económica, Geográfica y Estadística. http://www.siege.df.gob.mx/estadistico/pdf/monografias/izc.pdf. Retrieved 2008-09-18. 
  2. ^ 2010 census tables: INEGI
  3. ^ a b c d e "Historia y Tradiciones [History and Traditions]" (in Spanish). Mexico City: Borough of Iztacalco. http://www.iztacalco.df.gob.mx/historia.aspx. Retrieved October 30, 2011. 
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad "Iztacalco" (in Spanish). Enciclopedia de Los Municipios y Delegaciones de México - Distrito Federal. Mexico: INAFED. 2010. http://www.e-local.gob.mx/work/templates/enciclo/EMM09DF/delegaciones/09006a.html. Retrieved October 30, 2011. 
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Quintanar Hinojosa, Beatriz, ed (2011). "Barrios Mágicos". México Desconocio Guia Especial (Mexico City: editor Impressiones Aereas SA de CV): 131–135. ISSN 1870-9400. 
  6. ^ a b c d Angeles González Gamio (October 15, 2006). "Iztacalco en la historia oral [Iztacalco in oral history]" (in Spanish). La Jornada (Mexico City). http://www.jornada.unam.mx/2006/10/15/index.php?section=opinion&article=034a1cap. Retrieved October 30, 2011. 
  7. ^ a b c d e f g "Iztacalco" (in Spanish). Mexico City: Secretaría de Turismo del Distrito Federal. http://www.mexicocity.gob.mx/contenido.php?cat=30900&sub=8. Retrieved October 30, 2011. 
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Delegación Iztacalco [Borough of Iztacalco]" (in Spanish). Mexico City: Secretaría de Desarrollo Económico. 2007. http://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&q=cache:sTQUI_PlU3kJ:www.siege.df.gob.mx/estadistico/pdf/monografias/izc.pdf+iztacalco&hl=es-419&gl=mx&pid=bl&srcid=ADGEESgUybzf0qlhWBGkvxvSZ_opam6qHE76EObZoxyZmbyWVwUw-u8LDq2rmcdb-YXLL7Wgn10zXSngSEf723IzULnFkF4TN2O9JnZwRdZn2Zl_x1fADaCT7WuDr4AFNPZqugsbNhFo&sig=AHIEtbS7ieZsOkjRkWzjURrB9SJ6BaXDxw&pli=1. Retrieved October 30, 2011. 
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Demografía de la Delegación Iztacalco [Demographics of the Borough of Iztacalco]" (in Spanish). Mexico City: Borough of Iztacalco. http://www.iztacalco.df.gob.mx/Folders/Demografia/demografia.pdf. Retrieved October 30, 2011. 
  10. ^ Sandra Carrasco (August 31, 2011). "Disfruta dos días de ska y rock en Iztacalco [Enjoy two days of ska and rock in Iztacalco]" (in Spanish). El Universal (Mexico City). http://www.eluniversaldf.mx/iztacalco/nota33054.html. Retrieved October 30, 2011. 
  11. ^ a b c d e f "Origenes y Glifo de Iztacalco [Origins and glyph of Itzacalco]" (in Spanish). Mexico City: Borough of Iztacalco. http://www.iztacalco.df.gob.mx/historia2.aspx. Retrieved October 30, 2011. 
  12. ^ a b c d e "Iztacalco en el México independiente [Iztacalgo in an independent Mexico]" (in Spanish). Mexico City: Borough of Iztacalco. http://www.iztacalco.df.gob.mx/historia3.aspx. Retrieved October 30, 2011. 

External links