Vicente López Partido

Vicente López
Partido de Vicente López
Department

Coat of arms

location of Vicente López Partido in Greater Buenos Aires
Country Argentina
Established December 21, 1905
Founded by provincial law 2959
Seat Olivos
Government
  Mayor Jorge Macri, PRO
Area
  Total 34 km2 (13 sq mi)
Population
  Total 270,929[1]
Demonym(s) vicentelopense
Postal Code B1636
IFAM BUE131
Area Code 011
Coordinates 34°31′S 58°29′W / 34.517°S 58.483°W / -34.517; -58.483
Patron saint Jesús en el Huerto de los Olivos
Website http://www.mvl.gov.ar

Vicente López is a partido located in the north of Greater Buenos Aires in Buenos Aires Province, Argentina. The capital is Olivos. According to the 2001 national census, the partido has 269,420 residents. Vicente López is located 20 km from the city of Buenos Aires and 80 km from La Plata.

Its 33 km²[2] makes Vicente López the smallest partido of Buenos Aires Province.

Maipú Avenue, the most important of the partido.

Toponymy

Vicente López y Planes.

The partido's name honors Vicente López y Planes, an Argentine writer and politician, the writer of the lyrics of the Argentine National Anthem, governor of Buenos Aires province (after the fall of Juan Manuel de Rosas) and then President of Argentina succeeding Bernardino Rivadavia.

López y Planes also composed El Triunfo Argentino, an ode to the resistance during the English invasion of Buenos Aires. At the beginning it was thought to call it "Olivos", the name of the most important district of Vicente López.

Location

The partido is bordered by the city of Buenos Aires to the South, General San Martín Partido to the West, San Isidro Partido at the North and Río de la Plata to the East.

Districts

Districts of Vicente López

In 1998, the municipality of Vicente López was named by the United Nations as the best in Latin America and the Caribbean.

Demography

Vicente López is the 8th most populated Partido of Greater Buenos Aires. Most of the inhabitants are descendants of Italian and Spanish immigrants. There are also descendants of German, Polish, Ukrainian, Armenian and Croatian amongst other nationalities.[3]

The partido has 280,929 inhabitants according to the 2010 Census.

References

View of the area from the Río de la Plata.
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