Agro-Velho
Nova Póvoa | |
---|---|
district of Póvoa de Varzim | |
Agro-Velho | |
Avenida Repatriamento dos Poveiros | |
district location in the city's urban area | |
Póvoa de Varzim | |
Country | Portugal |
Municipality | Póvoa de Varzim |
Demographics | |
Postal Code | 4490 |
Area code(s) | 252 |
Agro-Velho, historically and popularly known as Nova Póvoa, is one of the eleven officially designated districts located in the Portuguese city of Póvoa de Varzim. It is a beach resort district located around Lagoa Cove.
It was mostly developed between the 1970s and the 1980s with high-rise buildings in the area of a dried-up saltwater lagoon, and it is the north expansion of the city's traditional beach district, Bairro Norte. Most of the highrise buildings of the city are clustered in this area, around Vasco da Gama avenue.
The beachfront area was the location of a Roman fish factory complex, one of the buildings dated to the 1st century,[1] the district only developed in the 20th century with the northwards expansion of Avenida dos Banhos and opening of Avenida Vasco da Gama. Early attractions include the horse track Velódromo in 1925, which later became Gomes de Amorim stadium, home of Sporting Club da Póvoa (1916-1940s), Varzim S.C. stadium in 1932, and the Póvoa de Varzim Bullfighting Arena in 1949. It became the sports center of Póvoa de Varzim for much of the 20th century.
Urban morphology
Agro-Velho is bounded by Bairro Norte on the south, Parque da Cidade on the east, A Ver-o-Mar to the North, and by the Atlantic Ocean to the west.
It is located on the site of a former lagoon. The name of the district's beach, "Lagoa" (Lagoon in English) is taken from it. The district is the northwards expansion of Póvoa's traditional beach district, the Bairro Norte.[2]
Beaches
The district's main beach is Lagoa, in Lagoa Cove, there are others in the cove's flanks, such as Beijinhos and Verde Beach to the south and Fragosinho to the North. Lagoa has a surfing spot and the beachfront is, currently, mostly pedestrian and has beach bars.
Main streets and squares
Avenida Vasco da Gama, the south boundary with Bairro Norte, is one of the main central business avenues of the city. The wide Praça Almeida Garrett is the main district's square, but unofficial Touro Square, with its famous sculpture, between Vasco da Gama and Repatriamento dos Poveiros is the most charismatic and famous of the district's squares.
In the waterfront, the district is bounded by Rua do Varzim Sport Club street, the street is now mostly pedestrian, and rua Gomes de Amorim (EN13 Highway) on the east, Avenida Repatriamento dos Poveiros and its expansion (Rua 27 de Fevereiro) cross the district.
Venues
Relevant sports venues of the city are located in the beachfront: the Varzim S.C. Stadium, Póvoa de Varzim Bullfighting area for bullfighting, horse shows and music concerts, Varzim Lazer swimming and tennis complex, and Clube Desportivo da Póvoa swimming and pavilion complex.
Highrises
Agro-Velho has the tallest building in Póvoa de Varzim, the Edíficio Nova Póvoa (built between 1973–1979) with around 100 meters and 30 floors. The tower has over 1,000 residents during the summer, this building alone has more inhabitants than several civil parishes in Portugal. Until the year 2000, it was the tallest building in Portugal and is still the tallest residential building in Portugal.
Axis Hotel Vermar was designed by architect Rui Cesariny Calafate, and originally it is the Vermar Hotel (1974) created by Sopete, which previously owned Casino da Póvoa. Other high-rises include Nr.70 with 19 floors, Cristal Mar (18), Eça de Queiroz (18), Torre de São Pedro (16), Norton de Matos, Silva Porto, and several others.
References
- ↑ Amorim, Manuel (2003). A Póvoa Antiga. Na Linha do horizonte - Biblioteca Poveira CMPV.
- ↑ Relatório do Plano de Urbanização da Póvoa de Varzim (in Portuguese) — CMPV, Departamento de Gestão Urbanística e Ambiente
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