Santa Teresa, Rio de Janeiro

Santa Teresa
Neighborhood
Santa Teresa

Location in Rio de Janeiro

Coordinates: 22°55′03″S 43°11′17″W / 22.91750°S 43.18806°W / -22.91750; -43.18806Coordinates: 22°55′03″S 43°11′17″W / 22.91750°S 43.18806°W / -22.91750; -43.18806
Country  Brazil
State Rio de Janeiro (RJ)
Municipality/City Rio de Janeiro
Zone Centro
View of surroundings

Santa Teresa (Portuguese pronunciation: [ˈsɐ̃tɐ teˈɾezɐ]) is the name of a neighborhood in the city of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. It is located on top of the Santa Teresa hill, by the centre of Rio, and is famous for its winding, narrow streets which are a favourite spot for artists and tourists.

The neighborhood originated around the Santa Teresa Convent, built in the 1750s on the Desterro hill. At the end of the 19th and early 20th century it was an upper class borough, as testified by its many opulent villas. Santa Teresa ceased being an upper-class neighbourhood long ago, but it has been revived as an fashionable otspot. It is home to several artists and art studios and galleries. The offer of restaurants and bars is also varied.

One of Santa Teresa's most illustrious inhabitants was Raymundo Ottoni de Castro Maia, an art collector who lived in his Chácara do Céu mansion in the neighborhood. The estate was turned into a museum (Museu da Chácara do Céu) and its exhibits include works by Matisse, Jean Metzinger, Eliseu Visconti, Di Cavalcanti, and Candido Portinari. It is located near the cultural center Parque das Ruínas. In 2006, some paintings were stolen, and haven't been recovered yet.[1]

Another museum is the Museu do Bonde, which tells the history of the famous Santa Teresa Tram since its historic origins. A ride on the tram is a popular attraction among tourists. It sports crossing the old Carioca Aqueduct, going through picturesque streets of the Santa Teresa neighbourhood and wonderful views of the city downhill.

History

View of the Convent of Santa Tereza (on the hill, to the right) in a 1790 painting. The pond in front was filled for the construction of the Passeio Público.

Santa Teresa Convent

The neighborhood arose in the 1750s on the Morro Desterro ("Right Hill"), emerging from the eponymous catholic convent. It was one of Rio de Janeiro's first expansions out of the initial Portuguese settlement in the city center. Initially inhabited by the upper class of the time, several houses and mansions were built, inspired by French architecture of the time, many of which are standing today. All throughout its history, Santa Teresa received many European immigrants.

Around 1850 many people, fleeing the yellow fever epidemic in the city, flocked to the neighborhood. As it was at a higher altitude, Santa Teresa was less affected by the epidemic than the surrounding neighborhoods.

The Santa Teresa Tram has run over the Carioca Aqueduct since 1896.

Santa Teresa tram

Main article: Santa Teresa Tram

In 1872, a tramline was constructed to connect Santa Teresa to downtown Rio de Janeiro, which further advanced the access to the neighborhood. The tram ran up the streets of Rua Joaquim Murtinho and Rua Almirante Alexandrino, crossing the Carioca Aqueduct. Initially, the tram was drawn by mules, before it was equipped with engines and an electrified grid in 1896. The tramcars' colours ranged from green, silver and blue, but came to be painted bright yellow after complaints from residents who said that the tram "disappeared" amid the greenery of the neighborhood. The iconic yellow trams or bondes has become a symbol of Santa Teresa.

By means of organized demonstrations, residents were able to preserve the historic tram system by convincing the government to release funds for the streetcars. After an accident with a tram in 2011 that killed five people,[2] all service on the tram line was suspended for four years, in order to modernize the system.[3][4][5]

Revitalization

Over time, Santa Teresa lost its status as an upscale neighborhood, like many of the historic districts of Rio's South zone. In recent years however, it has become a district of cultural interest because of its architectural value and prime location. In 2009 the city council started a gentrification program to revitalize the neighborhood. Walls were built to stop the surrounding favelas from growing; and taxes were imposed on water, energy and gas supply in order to decrease the number of poor people.

Culture

Picturesque corner of Ladeira de Meireles

Traditionally Santa Teresa is a renowned gathering place for intellectuals, academics, artists and politicians, who are attracted by its historic character, cultural life and standard of living. Due to this profile, it is a former district of opinion with political participation in popular movements. There are also a large number of NGOs who provide services and support to the favelas located around Santa Teresa.

Largo dos Guimarães in Santa Teresa

Santa Teresa is also a vibrant gastronomic center, mainly around the Largo dos Guimarães, as well as an artistic center. Due to the large number of artists and art studios, the neighborhood has come to be called Rio's Montmartre. The bohemian lifestyle has contributed to Santa Teresa being a main tourist attraction of Rio de Janeiro.

The neighborhood, affectionately called "Santa" by locals, is composed of several steep staircases, slopes, cobbled roads and tortuous alleys, which provide the character of the neighborhood. These sloping roads connect Santa Teresa to the surrounding districts of Centro, Glória, Laranjeiras, Fátima, Cosme Velho, Catumbi, Catete and Rio Comprido. At the highest point of Santa Teresa, which gives access to Tijuca National Park and Corcovado, there is a broad panoramic view of the city.

Education

The Associação Civil de Divulgação Cultural e Educacional Japonesa do Rio de Janeiro ("Civil Association of Japanese Educational and Cultural Dissemination of Rio de Janeiro", known in Japanese as the "Rio de Janeiro Japanese School"), a Japanese international day school, was previously located in Santa Teresa.[6] It is now located in Cosme Velho.[7]

Principal roads

Rua Paschoal Carlos Magno
  • Escadaria do Convento de Santa Teresa
  • Escadaria do Fialho
  • Escadaria Manoel Lebrão
  • Escadaria Santa Isabel
  • Ladeira do Castro
  • Ladeira dos Guararapes
  • Ladeira do Durão
  • Rua Aarão Reis
  • Rua Alice
  • Rua Almirante Alexandrino
  • Rua André Cavalcanti
  • Rua Aprazível
  • Rua Monte Alegre
  • Rua Cândido Mendes, antiga Rua Dona Luíza.
  • Rua Francisco Muratóri
  • Rua Hermenegildo de Barros
  • Rua Joaquim Murtinho
  • Rua Júlio Otoni
  • Rua do Oriente
  • Rua Paula Mattos
  • Rua Prefeito João Felipe
  • Rua Santa Cristina
  • Rua Santo Amaro

Panorama

Aerial panorama from Santa Teresa: Botafogo neighborhood left, Sugarloaf Mountain in the back and Crist the Redeemer on top of Corcovado in the top right corner.

References

  1. Art theft
  2. "Acidente com bonde em Santa Teresa mata cinco pessoas". globo.com (in Portuguese). Retrieved 10 March 2016.
  3. "Five die in Rio de Janeiro tram derailment". BBC News. 27 August 2011. Retrieved 24 May 2013.
  4. Tramways & Urban Transit magazine, October 2015, p. 413. LRTA Publishing (UK).
  5. "Bondes de Santa Teresa recebem 2 mil passageiros no sábado" [Santa Teresa tram carries 2,000 passengers on Saturday] (in Portuguese). G1 (Rede Globo). 1 August 2015. Retrieved 2015-11-29.
  6. Home page. Associação Civil de Divulgação Cultural e Educacional Japonesa do Rio de Janeiro. February 14, 2009. Retrieved on March 18, 2014. "RUA MARCEL PROUST 201,SANTA TERESA, RIO DE JANEIRO,R.J,BRASIL,CEP20251-130"
  7. "学校紹介." Associação Civil de Divulgação Cultural e Educacional Japonesa do Rio de Janeiro. Retrieved on March 18, 2014. "Rua Cosme Velho,1166,Cosme Velho RIO DE JANEIRO,R.J,BRASIL,CEP22241-091"

External links

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