Buenos Aires has officially 48 community districts. Many of them are further subdivided into sub-barrios whose names often reflect famous buildings in these subzones. Once is one of these rather unoffical neighborhoods. It is basically a part of the Balvanera barrio but hardly anyone uses this denomination. Once's namesake is the massive Once de Septiembre train station. The Spanish word once means "eleven". The train station was named after Buenos Aires' rebellion against the Federal government on September 11, 1852. So don't get confused, it has nothing to do with the 9/11 terrorists attacks in the US.
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Very interesting post! That looks like some kind of government building in the background ...
ReplyDeleteSydney is divided into municipalities and then further into suburbs. 48 is a lot of community districts. How many people live in BA? I think in Sydney there is something over 4 million people.
ReplyDeleteI will research this as the day goes on.
A great shot of the building, and I liked the language and history lesson too.
ReplyDeleteSo very interesting! Lovely architecture.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful blue sky and interesting mix or architecture - bravo!
ReplyDeleteThat's a great name for a neighborhood.
ReplyDeleteI think it would take me awhile to get accustomed to your city.
ReplyDeleteOf COURSE, once is 11. In French, 11 is onze. It does make some sense.
ReplyDeleteI'd LOVE to be there some day.
48 community districts sounds like a lot. I know BA is pretty big but still. Is there only one city hall for the entire city or are there administrative subdivisions?
ReplyDeleteGreat blog thanks. I've learned so much about Buenos here. I want to visit.
ReplyDeleteJulie, Buenos has apparently got a population of 7 million with another 3 million just outside the city's official border.
ReplyDelete48 districts? I think I need to Google Buenos Aires and see what the population is!
ReplyDeleteWell, I just checked it out - 13 million!
ReplyDeleteI did not think of 9/11. Instead, I thought it was an Argentinian branch of Organización Nacional de Ciegos Españoles, the association for the blind that runs the lottery in Spain.
ReplyDeleteNow that's some trivia.
ReplyDeleteI had to read the post again because I thought of "Once" as an English word. Locally, we spell eleven as "onse." The root word is Spanish of course.
Hi you can fine more info in this link about the Great Buenos Aires the megalopolis
ReplyDeletehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greater_Buenos_Aires tu get a most clear idea