ANO LIOSIA


'Ano Liosia' or 'Ano Liossia' (Greek: Άνω Λιόσια) is a suburb in the northwestern part of Athens, Greece. Ano Liossia has grown rapidly over the last twenty years. A large number of Roma live in this suburb of the Greek capital. The mountain range of Aigaleo is to its southwest. The view of the southeastern portion of the Parnitha ranges lies to the north. Other panorama of two other mountains are Penteli and the Hymettus. A mountain slope is to the west. Since February 2004, Attiki Odos runs between the town and GR-1/E75 to the east. The interchange is at Dimokratias Avenue. The Ano Liosia Ring at number 65 is presently under construction and will be opened to bypass Ano Liosia. It is located to the west and is connected with the Aigaleo Ring. It is located E of Eleusis and the Peloponnese, SE of Thiva, SSE of Chalkida, W of Mesogeios Avenue and about 15 km N of Athens, about 20 km Piraeus and Poseidonos Avenue. A suburban railway station is being constructed at Fylis Interchange of Attiki Odos with Fylis Avenue. The station will be part of the new railroad line between Athens and Corinth. The railway station of the old metric line has been recently (and maybe definitely) closed.

Contents
Geography
Radio station
Sports teams
Sites of interest
Transportation
Other
History
Population
External links

Geography


View of Athens from Ano Liosia

Ano Liosia except for the northwest and the southwest were mainly made up of farmlands. Pasture farming, groves and mixed farming were common. Urban development replaced much of the farmlands between the 1970s and the 1990s and are rarely continuing. Today, half of the municipality are urbanized or residential. The rocky landscapes with bushes dominates the rest of the land.

Radio station



Xenios FM - 94.3 and 97.4 FM - http://www.xenios943.gr

Sports teams



Akratitos - a Greek football/soccer team which was founded in 1963

Das Ano Liosia - a Greek basketball team

Sites of interest



Ano Liosia Olympic Hall where wrestling and judo were played in the 2004 Summer Olympics

★ Stadium for Akratiios rarely plays in this stadium

★ Basketball stadium for Das Ano Liosia

★ Football/soccer stadium for Akratitos

Transportation


Ano Liosia Proastiakos station

Ano Liosia is connected to the rest of Athens by various bus lines, most notably the B12 and E42 lines, as well as by the Proastiakos rail network.

Other


Ano Liossia has schools, lyceums, gymnasia, banks, a police station, a post office, supermarkets, a recycling plant, parks and squares (''plateies'').

History


Ano Liosia was rebuilt after World War II and the Greek Civil War.
On September 7, 1999, an earthquake damaged homes but were in the hundreds or thousands range. The 11th International Chess Tournament took place in Ano Liosia in 2001. The municipality opened outside the municipality a campground in Myrsini Beach northwest of Myrsini in the northwestern part of the Prefecture of Ilia. It is known as ''LM Beach'' and has been opened since 2002.
The havoc of the nearby Parnitha fire (See also: Summer 2007 Wildfires in Greece) devastated the northern portion of the area and nearly devastated the city. The fires reached during the evening hours of June 28, 2007 and was seen throughout the night. It calmed down on June 30. Approximately 50 square kilometres of its land were contained.

Population


Year Population Change
1981 16,862 -
1991 21,397 +4,535 or +26.9%
2001 26,423 +5,026 or +23.49%

External links



Mapquest - Ano Liosia, street map not yet available

★ Coordinates:

★ http://www.chess.gr/anoliosia/

Das Ano Liosia

eqs/athens1999/photo1/ano_liossa.html September 7, 1999 earthquake in Ano Liosia

★ Ano Liosia Olympic Hall


★ http://www1.omega.gr/athens2001/anoliosia.htm


★ http://www.worldstadiums.com/stadium_pictures/ europe/greece/athens_liossia.shtml


★ http://www.stadia.gr/anoliossia/anoliossia.html

Future Doukissis Plakentias - Ano Liosia Olympic Hall Line - Athens Metro
'Northwest:' Fyli 'North:' Fyli and Acharnes 'Northeast:' Acharnes
'West:' Aspropyrgos 'Ano Liosia' 'East:' Acharnes
'South:' Ilio, Kamatero and Petroupoli 'Southeast:' Zefyri


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