Sunday 27 September 2020

POBLE NOU IN BARCELONA, THE CATALAN MANCHESTER

Today, The Stones are preparing their next trip to Hawaii.
 
Mireia Stone continues her process of recovering after being missing after a boat accident and The Grandma is doing her last businesses in Manchester, a city very familiar for her, because she lives in Barcelona where there is a popular neighbourhood named Poblenou which during the Industrial Revolution of the 19th century, was the epicenter of Catalan and Iberian industry, earning it its sobriquet of the Catalan Manchester.

El Poblenou, Catalan for new village is an extensive neighborhood of Barcelona in Sant Martí district that borders the Mediterranean Sea to the south, Sant Adrià del Besòs to the east, Parc de la Ciutadella in Ciutat Vella to the west, and Horta-Guinardó and Sant Andreu to the north.

It is technically part of the Eixample, its layout having been drafted by Ildefons Cerdà, although the historic center of the neighborhood, which was once a town entirely separated from Barcelona, predates the grid.

During the Industrial Revolution of the 19th century, Poblenou was the epicenter of Catalan and Iberian industry, earning it its sobriquet of the Catalan Manchester.

Surrounding the extensive cluster of factories stood mostly working class residential areas. When the industrial buzz passed, the neighborhood fell into a state of abandon and after a period of decay, the neighborhood underwent a dramatic transformation.

The Olympic Games in 1992 were the main trigger for this massive transformation of El Poblenou. Many of the areas that have been developed -including the Vila Olímpica, the Diagonal Mar area, and the Fòrum area- arguably comprise their own neighborhoods.

Completing its original, unfinished plan, The Avinguda Diagonal now stretches from Plaça de les Glòries to the sea.

The massive 22@ plan sets to convert Poblenou into the city's technological and innovation district, as well as to increase leisure and residential spaces.

Alongside the newly built, upscale Vila Olímpica and Diagonal Mar areas, many artists and young professionals have converted the former factories and warehouses into lofts, glleries, and shops. Art & Design schools and studios have also opened, making the area known for its creative outlook.

Some of the old factory buildings are now declared historic monuments and are under protection. This is the case of the Factory Hispania SA, built by the Cuban-German merchant Emilio Heydrich, and architect Josep Graner in 1923, or the factory of chemicals Valls, Teixidor i Jordana.

The leafy Rambla del Poblenou, which stretches from Avinguda Diagonal to the beach, is the main commercial street.

El Poblenou lies between the great beaches of Barcelona and city center which allow its residents on the one hand a great chilled beach lifestyle and, on the other hand, proximity to a huge variety of shopping centers, bars and restaurants. Due to its rising popularity, prices of flats in the area have increased dramatically. Besides good beaches this neighborhood offers wide open spaces, green parks and relatively few tourists.

Notable buildings of Poblenou include the Torre Agbar by Jean Nouvel, Herzog & de Meuron's Forum Building, which houses Europe's largest scale model of a city, and the ME Barcelona Hotel, former Habitat Sky Hotel by Dominique Perrault.

Major public spaces include the Parc de Diagonal Mar by Enric Miralles, the Plaça de les Glòries Catalanes, the Parc Central del Poblenou by Jean Nouvel, the beachfront Parc del Poblenou, the vast Parc del Forum, Oficines Diagonal 197 by David Chipperfield, the Media-Tic Building by Enric Ruiz Geli-CLOUD 9 and the historic Poblenou Cemetery as well as many kilometres of beaches.

More information: Cibernàrium

Això és cosa de Can Paquetilla.

Poblenou's refrain

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