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Agronomía

Neighbourhoods of Buenos Aires
Av. San Martín Alt calle Pedro Morán
Av. San Martín Alt calle Pedro Morán

Agronomía is a barrio or district in the centre part of Buenos Aires autonomou city, Argentina. It gets its name from the University of Buenos Aires Faculty of Agronomy (Facultad de Agronomía, in Spanish) based in the neighborhood. Its boundaries are Avenida San Martín, Campana, Avenida Salvador María del Carril, Avenida de los Constituyentes, and Avenida Chorroarín. Parque Chas was previously a part of Agronomía, but was awarded barrio status in December 2005.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Agronomía (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Agronomía
General Rivas, Buenos Aires Villa del Parque (Comuna 11)

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N -34.6 ° E -58.483333333333 °
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Address

General Rivas 2493
C1417CUN Buenos Aires, Villa del Parque (Comuna 11)
Autonomous City of Buenos Aires, Argentina
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Av. San Martín Alt calle Pedro Morán
Av. San Martín Alt calle Pedro Morán
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Nearby Places

Villa General Mitre
Villa General Mitre

Villa General Mitre is a neighborhood, or barrio, of Buenos Aires. The ward has a land area of 2.2 km2 (0.85 sq mi), and a population of 36,000. It was named after General Bartolomé Mitre, President of Argentina from 1862 to 1868. Villa Mitre was developed on land originally purchased by Francisco Ruiz de Gaona during the late colonial era, and he lived there until his death in 1813; Gaona Avenue, located along the ward's southern border, was named in his honor. The land was later subdivided into smallholdings mainly devoted to alfalfa, horticulture, and brick kilns. It became home to a large Italian immigrant community during the late 19th century, and in 1901 Mother Frances Xavier Cabrini founded the future Cabrini Institute here (one of 67 around the world, and her first in South America). Initially a subdivision of the Villa Santa Rita ward to the west, Villa Mitre was formally established as such on November 6, 1908; it was named in honor of former President Bartolomé Mitre, who died in 1906. The neighborhood remained prone to flooding until work began in 1929 on converting the Maldonado Stream into an underground storm sewer, above which Juan B. Justo Avenue was inaugurated in 1936. A block-sized lot adjacent to the Cabrini Institute was purchased by the City Government in 1937 to create Sáenz Peña Square, the neighborhood's largest park. Diego Maradona Stadium, home venue for the Argentinos Juniors football team, was inaugurated in Villa Mitre in 2003.