A city of east-central Argentina on the Atlantic Ocean south-southeast of Buenos Aires. It is a popular resort with a fishing industry. Population: 541,000.
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A city of east-central Argentina on the Atlantic Ocean south-southeast of Buenos Aires. It is a popular resort with a fishing industry. Population: 541,000.
For more information on Mar del Plata, visit Britannica.com.
| Friday |
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HI:
54°F /
12°C LO: 39°F / 3°C |
| Saturday |
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HI:
56°F /
13°C LO: 44°F / 6°C |
| Sunday |
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HI:
52°F /
11°C LO: 41°F / 5°C |
| Monday |
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HI:
58°F /
14°C LO: 36°F / 2°C |
| Tuesday |
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HI:
60°F /
15°C LO: 39°F / 3°C |
The country code is: 54
The city code is: 223
Local Time: Jul 25, 3:54 PM
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Mar del Plata is an Argentine city located on the coast of the Atlantic Ocean in the
With a population of 541,733 as per the 2001 census [INDEC], it's the 7th largest city in Argentina.
As part of the Argentine recreational coast, tourism is Mar del Plata's main economic activity with seven million tourists visiting the city in 2006. Mar del Plata has a sophisticated tourist infrastructure with countless hotels, restaurants, casinos, theatres and other tourist attractions. Mar del Plata is also an important sports centre with a multi-purpose Olympic style stadium (first used for the 1978 World Cup and later upgraded for the 1995 Pan American Games), 5 golf courses and many other facilities.
As an important fishing port, industry concentrates on fish processing and at least two large shipyards.[1] The area is also host to other light industry, such as textile and food manufacturing.
There is a well-developed packaging machines industry, its quality being recognized in international markets[2]. One of these companies was one of the pioneers in tea bags automatic packaging[3], exporting its original machine-designs abroad. Another company also exports its products and sold royalties to other countries.[4]
During the mid 1980s, Mar del Plata saw the birth of electronics factories, focused mostly on the telecommunications field, with two of them succeeding in the international market.[5]
Located southwest of the city there are quartzite's stonemasons which are traditionally used in construction (see Architecture).
Although since the middle '90s until the first 2000s the area has been hit by a high rate of unemployment, Mar del Plata has the third largest activity rate by city in the country (around 45%).
Pre-Spanish era: The region was inhabitated by Günuna Kena nomads (also known as northern Tehuelches). They were later (after the 11th Century) strongly influenced by the Mapuche culture.
1577-1857: First European explorers. Sir Francis Drake made a reconnaissance of the coast; Don Juan de Garay explored the area by land a few years later. First colonization attempt by Jesuit Order ended in disaster (1751).
1857-1874: The Portuguese entrepreneur Coelho de Meirelles, taking advantage of the country’s abundance of wild cattle, built a pier and a factory for salted meat, but the business only lasts a few years.
1874-1886: Patricio Peralta Ramos acquired the now abandoned factory along with the surrounding terrain, and founded the town on February 10, 1874. Basque rancher Pedro Luro bought a part of Peralta Ramos land for agricultural production. First docks also erected around this time.
1886-1911: The railway line from
1911-1930: The residents, mostly new arrived immigrants from Europe, demanded and obtained the control of the Municipality administration. The socialist were the mainstream political force in this period, carrying out social reforms and public investment. The main port was also built and inaugurated in 1916.
1930-1946: A military coup reinstated the Conservative hegemony in politics through electoral fraud and corruption, but in the local level they were quite progressive, their policies viewed in some way as a continuity of the socialist trend. The seaside Casino complex opened in 1939, was designed by architect Alejandro Bustillo, and the Ruta 2 (Highway #2), the main road to Buenos Aires, also dates from this period.
1946-1955: Birth of the Peronist movement. A coalition between socialists and radicals defeated the new party by a narrow margin in Mar del Plata, but by 1948 the Peronism will dominate the local administration. The massive tourism, triggered by the welfare politics of Perón and the surge of the middle class marked a huge growth in the city’s economy.
1955-1970: After the fall of Perón, the
1970-1989: Slight decline of tourism demand, counterbalanced by the increasing of other industries such as fishing and machinery. General infrastructure renewal under the military rule. The radicals become the main political force after the return of Democracy in 1983.
1989-Present: Though the Peronism replaced the radicals in central government amid a national financial crisis, the latter party continued to rule in Mar del Plata. Some resurge of mass tourism in the early '90s was followed by a deep social crisis in town, with an increase of poverty, jobless rate and emigration. By contrast, the first decade of this Century shows an amazingly quick recovery in all sectors of the ailing economy.
Mar del Plata is the most popular destination for conventions in Argentina after
These are the most important shows and festivals:
The local Government sponsors a stable Symphonic Orchestra, as well as a Conservatorium and a School of Classical and Modern Dance.
The main museums are the following:
Culture and Sports Personalities:
The common linguistic and social background of the city is that of the so called rioplatense culture.
The development of the city as a season resort in early 20 century led the upper class tourists from Buenos Aires to built-up an European-inspired architecture, based mainly on the picturesque and later on the art deco styles. This gave Mar del Plata the pompous nickname of the Argentine Biarritz. During the '30s and well beyond the '40s, local architects and builders, like Auro Tiribelli, Arturo Lemmi, Alberto Córsico-Picollini and José Camusso recreated and transformed the picturesque values into a middle-class scale, marking the beginning of the so called Mar del Plata Style, consisting in small samples of the luxury-laden summer residences of the high society, built for the summer visitor as well as for the local resident.
These chalets comprised basically a stone façade, a gable
roof covert with Spanish or French tiles, prominent eaves and a front porch. This gives the town
some distinctive urban character among the other Argentinean cities, even if
the needs of the growing mass of tourists in the '60s imposed large apartment buildings and skyscrapers as the predominant
landscape downtown.[6]
The weather pattern for the region is that of an oceanic climate, with humid and moderate summers and relative cool winters, although polar air masses from Antarctica are frequent. The average temperatures for January reach 20°C (68 Fahrenheit) and 8°C for July (46 Fahrenheit). The West-Southwest winds bring down the temperature below 0°C (32 Fahrenheit), while the Southeast ones (the so called Sudestada) are stronger, producing coastal showers and rough seas, as well as strong squalls, but the cold is much less intense.[7]
There are about 20 days of frost each year, and almost 60 in the west hills area (some 300 mts above the sea level). Snowfall is not so uncommon, but snow accumulation on the ground is rare, a phenomenon that takes place every 6 years or so, according to the last 40 year's data.
Particularly remembered are the 1975 and 1991 snowstorms, but there was also some snow accumulated in 1994 and 1997 in the highest hills area of Sierra de los Padres, in 1995 along the southern coast, and the latest during the first hours of July 10, 2004. There were two low-intensity snowfalls in September 1986 and June 2007.[8]
There is fog in the last days of fall, and springtime is often marred by sea winds and sudden temperature's changes.
There are some ten days of 30°C (86 Fahrenheit) each summer, certainly milder values than the rest of the pampas region. Usually, the summer nights are cool and pleasants, with values between 13º to 17°C (55 to 63 Fahrenheit).[7]
Mar del Plata is the head of the department (Partido) of General Pueyrredón. The Mayor of the city and department is Daniel Katz of the Radical Civic Union. The Honorable Concejo Deliberante (the town council) has some legislative powers. The term of office for both the Mayor and council members is four years.
In 1919, Mar del Plata became the first town in South America to have a
The Government official page has a comprehensive listing of all Mayors and Commissioners of Mar del Plata from 1881 to the present.
There is an extensive but interesting work by the American sociologist Susan Stokesabout the democratic process in Mar del Plata since 1983 in comparison to other regions of Argentina: PDF-1.
You can also read the following paper: PDF-2.
One of the main thesis of her articles is that the social and economic development of Mar del Plata was quite atypical, with a strong prevalence of middle-class values that discouraged the policy of clientelism that is the common background in other urban environments of Argentina.
Mar del Plata is mentioned in at least two B movies of Hollywood's Directors:
The city airport code for IATA (International Air Transport Association) is MDQ , even if the most logic and common sense determines it should be MDP. But the latter abbreviation is already in use for Mindip-Tanah (Indonesia). The initialism was adopted by a popular Surfboard fans TV show, also originated in Mar del Plata.
The so called Golf sauce (a combination of mayonnaise and ketchup) has its origin in the kitchens of the Golf Club Mar del Plata, in the very first decades of the 1900s.
Argentina's top soccer player, Diego Armando Maradona, scored his two first goals in Argentina First Division league in the old San Martín Stadium in Mar del Plata, on November 14 1976. Maradona played for Argentinos Juniors, which defeated San Lorenzo de Mar del Plata 5-2.
Clarín newspaper edition, Buenos Aires, June 28 1994
Video files from Channel 8, Mar del Plata, TN news and Crónica TV (some of them are now available "http://www.youtube.com/AccionNaval#prof" class='external text' target="wpext">here)
Unless otherwise indicated, all the sources are written in Spanish.
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