'Rosario' is the largest city of the
province of
Santa Fe,
Argentina. It is located 300 km (187 miles) northwest of Buenos Aires, on the western shore of the
Paraná River. It has 909,397 residents as of the .
Rosario is the head town of the
Rosario Department and is located at the core of the most important
industrial corridor in Argentina. Its suburbia and several neighboring towns form a
metropolitan area,
Greater Rosario, with 1,121,441 inhabitants.
The city is a major
railroad terminal and the shipping center for northeastern Argentina. Ocean steamers reach the city via the Paraná River, which allows the existence of a 34-
feet deep
port. The
Port of Rosario is subject to
silting and must be
dredged periodically.
[1] Exports include
wheat,
flour,
hay,
linseed and other
vegetable oils,
corn,
sugar,
lumber,
meats,
hides, and
wool. Manufactures include flour, sugar, meat products, and other foodstuffs.
A bridge running over the Paraná River to connect Rosario with the city of
Victoria across the
Paraná Delta was opened in 2003.
Along with
Paraná, Rosario is one of the few Argentine cities that cannot point to a particular individual as its founder. The city's patron is the Virgin of the Rosary (feast day
October 7).
History

Monument in downtown Rosario.

The artificial lake of the ''Parque Independencia''
Main articles: History of Rosario
The permanent settlement of today's Rosario area began of the 17th century. There was no clear foundation date. The first landowner was Captain Luis Romero de Pineda, and the first formal colonial settlement was initiated by Santiago de Montenegro, who was appointed Mayor in 1751.
On
27 February 1812, General
Manuel Belgrano raised the newly created
Argentine flag on the shores of the Paraná, for the first time.
Until the 1850s Rosario was a small village of 3,000 inhabitants, with its port banned from foreign trade by an 1841 decree of
Juan Manuel de Rosas. On
5 August 1852 Rosario was declared a city after a request by
Justo José de Urquiza, who also opened up international trade. By 1880, Rosario had become the first export outlet of Argentina; in 1887 it had about 50,000 inhabitants. It was even declared the federal capital in three occasions, but each time it was vetoed by the Executive Branch.
In the last 15 years of the century, the city more than doubled in population, in part owing to
immigration. Demographic growth took its toll of bad living conditions, epidemics and labour exploitation.
In 1911 the French-owned railway company
Ferrocarril Rosario y Puerto Belgrano opened a line between Rosario and Argentina's main naval base in
Puerto Belgrano.
By 1926 Rosario had 407,000 inhabitants, 47% of them foreign, many brought from Europe in the wake of
World War I.
In
1946 Rosario massively supported
Juan Perón's rise to power. The city received the benefits of the
nationalization and
subsidizing of many industries. Perón
was deposed in 1955. In
1969 workers and students took the streets to protest against the dictatorship (''
Rosariazo''). During the
dictatorship started in
1976, hundreds of citizens were "
disappeared" by the government. The city hosted some matches of the
Football World Cup 1978.
In 1983 Argentina returned to
democratic rule.
Hyperinflation caused an economic collapse of the country in
1989. In Rosario there were
riots with episodes of
looting. Under the
Menem administration the situation became worse as the industrial sector of the city was dismantled by foreign competition and the agricultural
exports stagnated. In 1995
unemployment in the area reached 21.1%, and a large part of Rosario's population fell under the
poverty line. Since then, ''
villas miseria'' (
shantytowns) have grown, usually augmented by internal migration from poorer areas of the country (particularly
Chaco); the last survey (1996) indicated the presence of 91 "precarious urban settlements", with 115,000 inhabitants.
[2]
Since the recovery of the
national economy that followed the
2001 collapse, Rosario's economic situation has improved. The boom in agricultural exports has caused a large amount of consumer spending and
investment. Mayor
Miguel Lifschitz's administration is taking advantage of the economic boom to invest heavily in
public works, as well as public health (which takes up about a quarter of the whole
budget).
Institutions

Faculty of Engineering of the
UNR, on Pellegrini Avenue.
Rosario is an important educational center on the national and international level. It is the home of the
National University of Rosario (UNR) since 1968, and of a regional faculty of the
National Technological University (UTN), which are both public and free; also the
Pontifical Catholic University of Argentina (UCA), the
Austral University, the
University of the Latin American Educational Center (UCEL) and the
Interamerican Open University (UAI), which are private institutions.
Rosario is also seat of the
football clubs
Rosario Central (founded 1889) and
Newell's Old Boys (founded 1903), both of whom play in the
Primera División Argentina, plus ¨
Club Atlético Central Córdoba who currently play in
Primera B Metropolitana and
Club Atlético Tiro Federal Argentino who are currently in
Primera B Nacional Argentina.
The city has three notable
newspapers: ''
La Capital'' (Argentina's oldest still-published newspaper, founded 1867), ''
Rosario/12'' (founded 1991), and ''
El Ciudadano & la Región'' (founded 1999).
The city has several
museums, among which are to be noted: the
Juan B. Castagnino Fine Arts Museum, the
Firma y Odilo Estévez Municipal Decorative Art Museum, the
Dr. Julio Marc Provincial Historical Museum, the
Museum of the City, and the
Museum of Contemporary Art of Rosario (MACRo). The
Dr. Ángel Gallardo Provincial Natural Sciences Museum was reconstructed after a fire in 2003 and re-opened in a new location in 2006, and there are projects to move the
National Oriental Art Museum, which currently shares a building with the National Decorative Art Museum in Buenos Aires, to Rosario.
There are many theaters of varying size and importance, such as
El Círculo, the
Sala Lavardén and the
Broadway.

Rosario City Planetarium.
Rosario has a public astronomical complex consisting on an
observatory (inaugurated in 1970) and a
planetarium (1984). It is located within Urquiza Park.
There are four
AM radio stations: three private (licensed by the state) ones, ''LT3'' ''Radio 2'' (''LT2''), and ''LT8'', and one public, ''Radio Nacional Rosario'', property of the national state. Among the multitude (above 200) of
FM stations some notable ones are ''FM Vida'', ''Estación del Siglo'', ''FM Del Rosario'', ''Cristal FM'', ''Radio Hollywood'', ''Fisherton-CNN'', ''Continental Rosario'', ''Radio 10 Rosario'', ''Radiofónica'', ''Clásica Rosario'', etc.
As for
television, Rosario has two private local
channels, Canal 3 and Canal 5 (the latter is part of the national network
Telefé), and a relay station for the public national station,
Canal 7 Argentina. Besides, there are three cable TV networks (the national ones Cablevisión and Multicanal, and a local net, Cablehogar), which support two local channels, Canal 4 Noticias and Canal 6.
Rosario is serviced by a number of public health centers: 5 municipal hospitals (including a
children's hospital and an emergency hospital/
trauma center) and a municipal outpatient-only center, plus 2 large provincial hospitals (
Hospital Provincial and
Hospital Centenario), and their associated
primary care centers in the city proper and its metropolitan area.
The
Rosario Board of Trade hosts the country's largest
commodity market, dealing in cereals and oilseeds, and also the largest
futures exchange (ROFEX). The banking sector includes the state-owned
Municipal Bank of Rosario, with branches and offices throughout the city, and the central branch of the
New Bank of Santa Fe.
Government
Main articles: Government of Rosario

Palacio de los Leones
Rosario is ruled by an Executive Branch represented by a
Mayor (seat:
Palacio de los Leones), and a Legislative Branch, consisting of a Deliberative Council (seat:
Palacio Vassallo). The Mayor is elected for a four-year term. The Council renews half of its 21 members every two years.
The city is divided into six large administrative
districts (Center, North, Northwest, West, Southwest, and South), with Municipal District Centers that provide services to the citizens.
Local people and institutions have been pushing the provincial government to grant Rosario the status of
Autonomous City. Some, with the sponsorship of the governors of Santa Fe, Entre Ríos and Córdoba as well as other important politicians, have put forward a legislative project to move the
National Congress to Rosario, to
decentralise the national government.
Since the return to democracy in 1983, the Mayors of Rosario were
Horacio Usandizaga,
Héctor Cavallero,
Hermes Binner, and the current one,
Miguel Lifschitz (of the
Socialist Party, elected in 2003 and reelected in 2007).
The city does not have a
police force of its own (it is served by the provincial police), but in 2004 it pioneered the creation of a special patrol force of unarmed officers called ''Guardia Urbana Municipal'' ("Municipal Urban Guard").
Geography and urban structure
Main articles: Geography of Rosario

Rosario skyline.

The
Paraná River from the north-east of Rosario, looking into the city center.

Belgrano Avenue, near the Flag Memorial, with
floss silk trees along its central reservation
Rosario lies on the
ravine of the right-hand shore of the Paraná, about 24
m above mean sea level, in a place with a natural slope to the low shore. The point of origin of the city is ''
Plaza 25 de Mayo'' ("
May 25 Square"), now surrounded by the Municipality (''
Palacio de los Leones''), the
Basilica Cathedral of Our Lady of the Rosary, the Central Post Office, the
Decorative Art Museum and a building called ''La Bola de Nieve'' ("The Snowball"). Between the Cathedral and the municipal building is ''
Pasaje Juramento'' ("Oath Passage"), leading to the Flag Memorial. The streets mostly follow a regular
checkerboard pattern.
Córdoba Street begins in the Flag Memorial Park, climbs toward the center, and becomes a pedestrian walk for seven blocks, between Plaza 25 de Mayo and Plaza Pringles. Along Córdoba to the west there is the ''
Paseo del Siglo'' ("Walk of the Century"), with former houses of wealthy families. There is also ''
Plaza San Martín'', and elsewhere, ''
Plaza Montenegro'' (on ''Peatonal San Martín'', the pedestrian-only four blocks of
San Martín Street) and ''
Plaza Sarmiento''.
Oroño Boulevard (going north–south) and
Pellegrini Avenue (east–west) mark the boundaries of the town center together with the river. At their confluence starts the
Parque de la Independencia, that houses the
Juan B. Castagnino Fine Arts Museum, the
Newell's Old Boys football club, and the sports clubs ''Provincial'' and ''Gimnasia y Esgrima'', as well as the
horse racetrack and the former ''Sociedad Rural'' (Rural Society).
Towards the south, beyond Pellegrini Avenue, there are two more boulevards, 27 de Febrero and Seguí, and avenues Uriburu, Arijón and Battle y Ordóñez.
To the west, after Oroño, there are the avenues Ovidio Lagos and Francia, Avellaneda Boulevard and Provincias Unidas Avenue. The main ''
barrios'' in the south are
La Tablada,
Parque Casado,
Las Heras,
Las Delicias and
Las Flores. The city ends in the
Saladillo Stream.
Among the ''barrios'' in the west are
Echesortu,
Belgrano, Triángulo, Moderno, Godoy and
Fisherton. To the north-east there lie
Pichincha, Ludueña,
Lisandro de la Torre (home of Rosario Central's stadium) and Empalme Graneros.
Next to the stadium there is the
Parque Alem, and nearby the Sorrento thermal
power plant. To the north lie the ''barrios'' of
Alberdi, La Florida (with a popular
beach resort of the same name), Parque Field (built under US President John F. Kennedy's Alliance for Progress development plans) and Rucci. The main streets are Alberdi Avenue and its continuation, Rondeau Boulevard (which leads to the
Rosario-Victoria Bridge and the city of
Granadero Baigorria). These are crossed by several avenues: Las Tres Vías, Génova, Sorrento and Puccio.
An important part of Rosario's urban character is its coastline. The city recovered the shore of the Paraná not long ago, thanks to a reorganization of terrains formerly owned by the port and the national railroad system. Going from the center immediately north of the port, the coastline is occupied by parks:
Parque Nacional a la Bandera,
Parque de España,
Parque de las Colectividades and
Parque Sunchales.
Municipal statistics

''Parroquia del Perpetuo Socorro'', a church in the Lisandro de la Torre neighbourhood.
The municipality of Rosario comprises 178.69 km², of which 117 km² are urbanized, in 6,306 housing blocks. Of this area, 9.37 km² (5.3%) is devoted to green spaces (parks, boulevards, plazas), which gives over 10 m² of green space per inhabitant.
Electric power is supplied to the whole urban area. Running water reaches 97% of the population (about 350,000 homes). Natural gas is provided to 227,152 homes.
[3]
As of 2007, and since the beginning of the recovery of the national economy, the city is experiencing a real estate boom. In the period 2003–2006, the construction sector has added 2 million m², investing about $900 million. Despite this increased supply, prices have increased by 10% compared to the values during the 1990s, and rents have soared by 165%. Experts believe that this growth is propelled by the increased purchasing power of farmers around Rosario, helped by competitive exports, and the overall preference for safer investment options ("in bricks").
[4]
Climate and natural hazards
The Rosario area has a ''
Pampean'' temperate
climate, with average temperatures of 23.4
°C (maximum) and 11.6 °C (minimum), and an annual rainfall of 1,038
mm. Snow is almost unheard of (the last instance was in 1973); serious
earthquakes,
hurricanes and
volcanic eruptions are virtually impossible.
Transportation

An express interurban bus in downtown Rosario.
Main articles: Rosario International Airport,
Port of Rosario,
Buenos Aires-Rosario-Córdoba high-speed railway
The city has about 40 urban
bus lines, and several short-distance lines that serve the whole metropolitan area. The urban buses charge a relatively small fee (owing to the national government's heavy subsidies on fuel for
public transportation), pre-paid by means of a disposable paper
card with a
magnetic stripe which can be bought from
post offices, automatic vending machines, and private businesses. For emergencies, a larger fee can be deposited in cash, using a
coin machine in the bus unit. The interurban lines have differential fees and some allow payment in cash only.
The urban bus fleet was partially renewed during the recovery of the national economy, since 2003; as of 2005 the average age of the buses is 5 years and 11 months. The better economic context has also induced an increased use of public transportation, and comparatively less use of bicycles. According to the
Rosario Transportation Office, in 2005 there were about 11 million bus trips per month.
[5]
_(2).jpg)
The front door and clock tower of the Mariano Moreno Bus Terminal, on Cafferatta St., Rosario
The Bus Terminal (''
Terminal de Ómnibus Mariano Moreno''), from which long-distance buses depart, is placed in a central geographic location, some 25 blocks from the "town center", in front of the ''
Patio de la Madera'' complex. A secondary node is located in the center, on ''Plaza Sarmiento''. A bus trip from Rosario to Buenos Aires takes about four hours. In January 2006 the Terminal saw a daily average of 900 bus arrivals and departures (about 36,000 passengers).
Rosario has a medium-sized
taxi fleet, with units painted black and outlined in yellow. Some belong to radio-taxi companies and can be reserved by telephone; others only in the streets. As the economy of Argentina recovers, the capacity of the taxi fleet has been strained by higher usage. In September 2005, the Deliberative Council approved a moderate rise in taxi fees and the compulsory installation of radio-call systems in all taxi units.
As a curiosity, Rosario has a large number of vehicles which run on
natural gas, as it happens also in Argentina as a whole, and all gas stations provide it. Its price is quite low compared to the alternatives. The idea to transform all buses to this system did not prosper; most buses run on cheap (subsidized)
diesel, and one line uses electricity from an aerial network.
Rosario is linked to the rest of the country by a number of roads: the
Aramburu Highway (southeast, to Buenos Aires),
National Route 9 (from Buenos Aires to Rosario and then north and west up to Jujuy and Bolivia), the
Brigadier Estanislao López Highway (north, to Santa Fe City),
National Route 11 (to the north of Santa Fe, Formosa and Paraguay),
National Route 33 (to the southwest of Santa Fe and the province of Buenos Aires, and then through
National Route 7 to San Luis, Mendoza and Chile),
National Route 34 (north to Santiago del Estero, Tucumán and Bolivia), and
National Route 174 (east, to Entre Ríos, over the Rosario-Victoria Bridge).

''Patio Parada'', NCA railway company headquarters.
The
Rosario Airport is located far from the urbanized area, some 13 km away from the center, partly in the municipal jurisdiction of
Funes. After decades of stagnation, in recent years it has expanded its technical capacities and can now service international flights.
The
Port of Rosario, located on the shore of the southern part of the city, is dredged to a depth of 34 feet and can serve
Panamax kind vessels. It is managed by an autonomous public entity that oversees a concession to a mixed Spanish-Argentine corporation. In 2003 its traffic amounted to 2.9 million
tonnes.
The passenger train system was severely damaged by the privatization of most railway companies in the early 1990s, but is slowly recovering. The lines of the
Nuevo Central Argentino railway company service most of the
cargo. Additionally, two private passenger railway companies provide limited services to several major cities.
Trenes de Buenos Aires runs weekly trains south to
Retiro Station (Buenos Aires) and north to
Santa Fe. The company
Ferrocentral also operates weekly trains south to Buenos Aires and northwest to
Córdoba and
Tucumán.
There is an ongoing project to build a
Buenos Aires-Rosario-Córdoba high-speed railway, scheduled to be started in 2007. Once finished, in 2009 o 2010, a
high-speed train will join Rosario to Buenos Aires in 90 minutes at 250/300 km/h, while a high-yield conventional diesel train will reach Córdoba in about 2½ hours.
Communications
Rosario is located at the center of Argentina's
optical fiber ring. The main data transport companies offer all their services in the city, from public phones to
mobile networks and
broadband Internet access through
DSL,
cable modem and
Wi-Fi, and including public Internet navigation centers (
cybercafes).
About 86% of homes have a domestic
telephone line, giving a total of 272,170 lines; cell phone usage has also become pervasive, as happened in Argentina as a whole since the beginning of the 21st century, reaching over 36% of the residents (330,000 mobile lines in July 2004). This demand, exacerbated by low prices and sale promotions, and coupled with restrictions on the installation of antennas and alleged lack of investment by the providers, sometimes degrades the quality of the service. Most notably, the mobile network collapsed almost completely in the celebrations of
Christmas,
New Year's Day and
Friend's Day in 2004 and 2005.
Culture
Rosario is characterized by an intense cultural activity in many art disciplines, with a national and international reach. The city has given Argentina important characters in the fields of music, painting, philosophical and political thought, poetry and prose, medicine, and law.
Notable people from Rosario
''See . This list is not exhaustive.''
★ Artists and educators
Leticia Cossetini and
Olga Cossetini
★ Artists
Antonio Berni,
Gustavo Cochet and
Julio Vanzo
★ Painter and sculptor
Lucio Fontana
★ Sculptors
Erminio Blotta and
Guillermo Gianinnazzi
★ Writer
Roberto Fontanarrosa and
Jorge Riestra
★ Revolutionary and guerrilla leader
Ernesto "Che" Guevara
★ Singer and actress
Libertad Lamarque
★ Actors
Alberto Olmedo,
Darío Grandinetti and
Luis Machín
★ Singers and composers
Juan Carlos Baglietto,
Fito Páez,
Liliana Herrero (Herrero is from Villaguay, Entre Ríos, but moved to Rosario at 18),
Leandro Gato Barbieri,
Lalo De Los Santos and
Litto Nebbia
★ Opera singers
José Cura and
Felipe Romito
★ Chess grandmaster
Gerardo Barbero
★ Politicians
Lisandro de la Torre,
Guillermo Estévez Boero,
Rafael Bielsa and
María Eugenia Bielsa
★ Football (soccer) coach
Marcelo Bielsa
★ Football (soccer) players
Javier Mascherano,
Maxi Rodriguez and
Lionel Messi
★ Paleontologist
José Bonaparte
★ Science fiction author
Angélica Gorodischer (born in Buenos Aires, but residing in Rosario since childhood)
★ Pianist
Daniel Rivera
★ Psychoanalyst
Juan-David Nasio
Language

Rosario viewed from a point above the Paraná River(1970)
Rosario is one of the main urban centers of the
Rioplatense Spanish dialect. The intra-dialectal differences with Buenos Aires and other cities in the same area are minimal, though ''rosarinos'' aspirate and suppress their final ''-s'' more than ''
porteños'', and there are also minor
lexical variants.
The city has a local
language game, sometimes employed as
slang, called ''
Rosarigasino'' (related to ''
jeringonza'').
Holidays
★
June 20: ''Día de la Bandera Nacional'' (
National Flag Day). Commemoration of General
Manuel Belgrano's death. National holiday. Military and civic parade at the National Flag Memorial, including the world's longest flag (more than 10 km long), which is carried by citizens along the National Flag Park.
★
July 20: ''
Día del Amigo'' (Friend's Day). This celebration of friendship is common throughout Argentina, but especially popular as a mass phenomenon in Rosario, as in other large cities in the country.
★
21 September:
Spring Day and Student's Day. National informal holiday for students and young people in general. Even though the precise time of the astronomical spring
equinox is variable, seasons in Argentina are conventionally deemed to begin on the 21st day of the corresponding month. People from Rosario usually gather at the city's parks, travel to nearby towns (notably
Funes) or cross the Paraná River to visit the island resorts.
★
October 7: ''Día de la Virgen del Rosario'' (Day of the Virgin of the Rosary, patron of the city). This is a local public holiday and a free day for schools and university students, municipal employees, and employees of the provincial state residing in Rosario. The patron's feast is marked by Catholic celebrations and a procession.
''See also:
Public holidays in Argentina.''
In addition to these official holidays, high school students in the 2000s created a humorous observance, self-styled "holiday", called ''
Día de la Chupina'' ("Hooky Day"), which is celebrated on the last Friday of April by skipping class altogether and loitering in the downtown.
Events
★ ''
Festival Latinoamericano de Video Rosario'' (Rosario Latin American Video Festival). Annual event (September), starting in 1994.
★ ''
Encuentro Internacional de Escultura en Madera-Piedra-Hierro de Rosario'' (International Meeting of Wood-Stone-Iron Sculpture in Rosario). Annual event (September/October), since 1993.
★ ''
Encuentro y Fiesta Nacional de Colectividades'' (Communities Meeting and National Celebration). Annual event, starting in 1985, showcasing music, song, dance, cuisine and customs of foreign communities in Argentina, in the ample room provided by the ''Parque Nacional a la Bandera'' (National Flag Park). Usually held in November; in 2004 it was postponed to the beginning of December in order to avoid overlap with the
Third International Congress of the Spanish Language.
★ ''
Festival Internacional de Poesía de Rosario'' (International Poetry Festival). Annual event since 1993 (November).
★ ''
Festival Iberoamericano de Cine de Rosario'' (Ibero-American Film Festival). Annual event since 2003 (November).
★ ''
Leyendas'' ("Legends"). A cartoon, role-playing and science fiction convention. Annually since 1999, usually in autumn (April/May), sometimes in spring (November).
Sister cities
Rosario has a number of
sister cities around the world. Sisterhood agreements are intended to foster solidarity and collaboration between cities and regions that share characteristics, historical links or common problems. See
list of twin towns and sister cities in Argentina.
Sources
★
Municipalidad de Rosario - Historia
★
Municipalidad de Rosario - Información geográfica
★
★
External links
''Most links are in Spanish; some provide English-language versions.''
★
Municipality of Rosario (official website)
★
Rosario Cursos y Congresos Courses and Congresses in Rosario
★
RosarioCity Website of Rosario city and its region
★
Rosario.com.ar, commercial guide to Greater Rosario
★
Ente de Turismo Rosario (tourism office, also
English-language summary)
★
National University of Rosario
★
La Capital (newspaper)
★
El Ciudadano & la Región (newspaper)
★
Night life and entertainment
★
Rosario Alternativo Short stories for the learned traveller
★
Administrative Entity of the Port of Rosario (ENAPRO) (also
in English)
★
Bolsa de Comercio de Rosario (Rosario Board of Trade)