Vale do Aço metropolitan area
Vale do Aço Metropolitan Area | |
---|---|
Metropolitan Area of Brazil | |
Coordinates: 19°55′8.88″S 43°56′19.2″W / 19.9191333°S 43.938667°W | |
Country | Brazil |
Region | Southeast |
State | Minas Gerais |
Area | |
• Total | 807.246 km2 (311.679 sq mi) |
Elevation | 852.19 m (2,796 ft) |
Population | |
• Total | 451,351 |
• Density | 7,290.8/km2 (17,521/sq mi) |
Time zone | BST (UTC-3) |
• Summer (DST) | BDT (UTC-2) |
Postal Code | 30000-000 |
Area code(s) | +55 31 |
The Vale do Aço Metropolitan Region (pronounced: [ˈvali du ˈasu], Região Metropolitana do Vale do Aço in Portuguese) is a metropolitan area in Minas Gerais, Brazil, comprising only the four municipalities of Coronel Fabriciano, Ipatinga, Santana do Paraíso and Timóteo, but have an influence area of 22 other municipalities.
History
The name means Steel Valley in Portuguese. This region is also known as "a Região de Siderurgia" (Ironcasting Region), as it holds a great number of iron and steel processing companies along the course of the Rio Doce and its tributary, the Rio Piracicaba.
The industrialization was possible after the construction of the Estrada de Ferro Vitória Minas, a large railway that crossed almost untouched forest regions in the 1920s, to connect the Metropolitan Area of Vitória to Belo Horizonte. Soon after the conclusion of the railway, the ironcasting Belgo-Mineira started its activity in Coronel Fabriciano, buying local timber for charcoal production, using the it as fuel for its factories.
In 1944 Acesita, now called ArcelorMittal Timóteo, is installed in nowadays Timóteo. Acesita produces special steel, mainly the stainless steel. In 1948 the municipality of Coronel Fabriciano is emancipated, including in its domains the area of nowadays Timóteo and Ipatinga.
In 1956 Usiminas is installed in the region of Ipatinga. In 1964 both Ipatinga and Timóteo are separated from Coronel Fabriciano.
In 1973 Cenibra is installed in Belo Oriente, a municipality located in Vale do aço's influence area.
The metropolitan area was officially defined in 1998 and has a population of 430,700 (IBGE estimate 2005).
Municipalities
There is officially no main city in the Metropolitan Area of Vale do Aço. However, Ipatinga is much larger than the other cities, with about 240,000 inhabitants. The second largest city is Coronel Fabriciano, with about 105,000 inhabitants, followed by Timóteo, that has 80,000.
Municipality | Area (km²) | Population (2008)[1] |
PIB (2005)[2] | HDI (2000)[2] |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ipatinga | 166 | 241.720 | 4.422.997.000 | 0,806 |
Coronel Fabriciano | 221 | 104.415 | 451.426.000 | 0,789 |
Timóteo | 145 | 79.813 | 1.942.089.000 | 0,831 |
Santana do Paraíso | 276 | 24.105 | 108.346.000 | 0,712 |
Total | 808 | 449.340 | 6.824.858.000 | 0,803 |
Industrial Activity
The largest industries of the region are ArcelorMittal Timóteo and Usiminas, both iron-casting. Cenibra, a pulp factory in Belo Oriente, is also large. There are several other minor industries, some of them heavily connected with the major ones, as suppliers or costumers of its products.
The region has a large eucalyptus monoculture, that was initially used to make charcoal for iron-casting. Lately, imported mineral charcoal was adopted in Usiminas and Acesita, so the eucalyptus is now mainly used to supply the pulp factory of Cenibra as raw material.
Photos
-
Partial view of downtown Coronel Fabriciano, with Timóteo in the horizon.
-
Aperam South America's headquarters (old ArcelorMittal Timóteo), in Timóteo
-
Saint Sebastian Cathedral, in Coronel Fabriciano
-
Shopping Vale do Aço, a shopping mall in Ipatinga
-
Main campus of Unileste, a University in Coronel Fabriciano
-
Christmas Cantata in Timóteo
-
Serra dos Cocais (Cocais hills), in Coronel Fabriciano
-
Parque Ipanema, in Ipatinga
-
"Praça da Estação", the Main Square of Coronel Fabriciano
-
BR-381 (a federal highway) passing through Santana do Paraíso
-
New buildings in Santana do Paraíso
See also
References
- ↑ "Tabela 793 - População residente, em 1º de abril de 2007: Publicação Completa". Sistema IBGE de Recuperação Automática (SIDRA). 2007-11-14. Retrieved 2008-05-29.
- 1 2 "Produto Interno Bruto dos Municípios 2002-2005" (PDF). Instituto Brasileiro de Geografia e Estatística (IBGE). Retrieved 30-maio-2009. Check date values in:
|access-date=
(help)