- Source: Nou Barris
Nou Barris (Catalan pronunciation: [ˈnɔw ˈβaris], lit. "nine neighbourhoods") is one of the ten districts into which Barcelona has been officially divided since 1984. The name refers to the original nine neighbourhoods it was composed of, even though nowadays it's made up of thirteen. It covers an area of 8.04 km2.
It is located in the northern part of the city adjacent to two other districts of Barcelona: Sant Andreu and Horta-Guinardó and grew up extensively out of small urbanised areas near the former municipalities of Sant Joan d'Horta and Sant Andreu de Palomar (now neighbourhoods of Barcelona) in the 20th century, especially from the 1950s on. The district council is located in a former mental institution, the Institut Mental de la Santa Creu.
Neighbourhoods
It is further divided into these neighbourhoods:
Can Peguera
Canyelles
Ciutat Meridiana
La Guineueta
Porta
La Prosperitat
Les Roquetes
Torre Baró
La Trinitat Nova
El Turó de la Peira
Vallbona
Verdum
Vilapicina i la Torre Llobeta
Demographics
In 1998 it had 168,837 inhabitants, having lost over 20,000 people from a population peak in 1991. It's the district of Barcelona with the largest Romani community. In 2005 the population went down again, with 164.981 inhabitants. Since 2000 it's become one of the areas of the city with the strongest presence of immigrants, especially from Romania, Ukraine and Ecuador, and has been largely rehabilitated by the city council. Its density is 20.520 inhabitants/km2.
See also
Districts of Barcelona
Street names in Barcelona
Urban planning of Barcelona
External links
Nou Barris at the city council site
NouBarris.net
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Barcelona
- Piala Raja Spanyol 2020–2021
- Nou Barris
- Sant Andreu
- Barris
- Barcelona
- CF Montañesa
- List of Barcelona Metro stations
- Districts of Barcelona
- Virrei Amat (Barcelona Metro)
- Urban planning of Barcelona
- Juanjo Ferreiro Suárez
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