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Belo Horizonte

Coordinates:19°55′S43°56′W / 19.917°S 43.933°W /-19.917; -43.933
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Capital city of Minas Gerais, Brazil
Not to be confused withBello Horizonte, village in Uruguay.

Municipality in Minas Gerais, Brazil
Belo Horizonte
Municipality of Belo Horizonte
Flag of Belo Horizonte
Flag
Coat of arms of Belo Horizonte
Coat of arms
Nicknames: 
Location in Minas Gerais
Location in Minas Gerais
Belo Horizonte is located in Brazil
Belo Horizonte
Belo Horizonte
Show map of Brazil
Belo Horizonte is located in South America
Belo Horizonte
Belo Horizonte
Show map of South America
Coordinates:19°55′S43°56′W / 19.917°S 43.933°W /-19.917; -43.933
CountryBrazil
StateMinas Gerais
RegionSoutheast
Intermediate RegionBelo Horizonte
Immediate RegionBelo Horizonte
FoundedDecember 12, 1897; 127 years ago (1897-12-12)
Government
 • BodyMunicipal Chamber
 • MayorÁlvaro Damião (União Brasil)
Area
331.354 km2 (127.936 sq mi)
 • Urban
282.3 km2 (109.0 sq mi)
 • Metro
9,459.1 km2 (3,652.2 sq mi)
Elevation852 m (2,795 ft)
Population
 (2024)
2,416,339
 • Rank6th
 • Density7,292.32/km2 (18,887.0/sq mi)
 • Urban6,198,834
 • Metro6,351,680 (3rd)
 • Metro density635/km2 (1,640/sq mi)
Demonymbelo-horizontino(a)
GDP (PPP, constant 2015 values)
 • Year2023
 • Total (Metro)$84.8 billion[5]
 • Per capita$15,900
Time zoneUTC−3 (BRT)
Postal code
30000-001 to 31999-999
Area code+55 31
HDI (2010)0.810very high[6]
Websitewww.pbh.gov.br

Belo Horizonte[a] is thesixth-largest city in Brazil, with a population of around 2.4 million, and the third largest metropolitan area, containing a population of 6 million.[7] It is the13th-largest city in South America and the18th-largest in the Americas. The metropolis is anchor to theBelo Horizonte metropolitan area, ranked as thethird most populous metropolitan area in Brazil and the17th most populous in the Americas. Belo Horizonte is the capital ofthe state ofMinas Gerais, Brazil'ssecond-most populous state. It is the first planned modern city in Brazil.

The region was first settled in the early 18th century, but the city as it is known today was planned and constructed in the 1890s to replaceOuro Preto as the capital of Minas Gerais. The city features a mixture of contemporary and classical buildings and is home to several modern Brazilian architectural icons, most notably thePampulha Complex. In planning the city, Aarão Reis and Francisco Bicalho sought inspiration in the urban planning of Washington, D.C.[8] The city has employed notable programs in urban revitalization andfood security, for which it has been awarded international accolades.

The city is built on several hills, and is completely surrounded by mountains.[9] There are several large parks in the surroundings of Belo Horizonte. The Mangabeiras Park (Parque das Mangabeiras), 6 km (4 mi) southeast of the city centre in the hills of Curral Ridge (Serra do Curral), has a broad view of the city. It has an area of 2.35 km2 (580 acres), of which 0.9 km2 (220 acres) is covered by the native forest. The Jambreiro Woods (Mata do Jambreiro) nature reserve extends over 912 hectares (2,250 acres), with vegetation typical of theAtlantic Forest. More than 100 species of birds inhabit the reserve, as well as 10 species of mammals.

Belo Horizonte was one of the host cities of the1950 and the2014 FIFA World Cup. Additionally, the city shared as host of the2013 FIFA Confederations Cup and thefootball tournament during the2016 Summer Olympics.

History

[edit]
Belo Horizonte plan in 1895

Portuguese colonization

[edit]

The metropolis was once a small village, founded byJoão Leite da Silva Ortiz [pt], abandeirante explorer fromSão Paulo. The explorer settled in the region in 1701, leading a gold rush expedition. He then established a farm called "Curral d'el Rey," archaic Portuguese for the "King's Corral".

The farm's wealth and success encouraged people from surrounding places to move into the region, and Curral del Rey became a village surrounded by farms.[10]

Another important factor contributing to the growth of the village was people immigrating from theSão Francisco River region, who had to pass through Curral d'el Rey to reach southern parts of Brazil.

Travelers usually visited a small wooden chapel, where they prayed for a safe trip, so the chapel was named Capela da Nossa Senhora da Boa Viagem, which means "Chapel of Our Lady of the Good Journey." After the construction of Belo Horizonte, the old baroque chapel was replaced by aneo-Gothic church that became the city's cathedral.[11]

Brazilian empire and republic

[edit]
Founding of the city in 1897

The previous capital of Minas Gerais,Ouro Preto (meaning "black gold," due to dark rocks with gold inside found on the region), originally called "Vila Rica" ("wealthy village"), was a symbol of both the monarchicBrazilian Empire and the period when most of Brazilian income was from the mining industry. That never pleased the members of theInconfidência Mineira, republican intellectuals who conspired against the Portuguese dominion of Brazil.

In 1889 Brazil became a republic, and it was agreed that a new state capital, in tune with a modern and prosperous Minas Gerais, had to be established.[12]

In 1893 due to the climatic and topographic conditions, Curral Del Rey was selected by Minas Gerais governorAfonso Pena among other cities as the location for the new economic and cultural center of the state, under the new name ofCidade de Minas, or City of Minas.[13]

Aarão Reis [pt], anurbanist fromPará, was then chosen to design the secondplanned city of Brazil afterTeresina. Cidade de Minas was inaugurated in 1897, with many unfinished buildings as theBrazilian government set a deadline for its completion. The local government encouraged growth through subsidies. It offered free lots and funding for building houses. An interesting feature of Reis' downtown street plan for Belo Horizonte was the inclusion of a symmetrical array of perpendicular and diagonal streets named afterBrazilian states and Brazilianindigenous tribes.[citation needed]

Belo Horizonte, 1970s,National Archives of Brazil

In 1906 the name was changed to Belo Horizonte, which translates to "Beautiful Horizon" in English. The city's name is derived from the surrounding Curral del Rey Mountains, which create a visually striking, hilly ridge that appears as a "beautiful horizon" when viewed from the city.

At that time, the city was experiencing a considerableindustrial expansion that increased its commercial andservice sectors. From its very beginning, the city's original plan prohibited workers from living inside the urban area, which was defined by Avenida do Contorno (a long avenue that goes around the city's central areas).

Reserved for government workers (hence the name of the trendy neighbourhood "Funcionários"), and bringing about an accelerated occupation outside the city's area well provided with infrastructure since its very beginning. Obviously, the city's original planners did not count on its ongoing population growth, which proved especially intense in the last 20 years of the 20th century.

In the 1940s a youngOscar Niemeyer designed the Pampulha Neighbourhood to great acclaim, a commission he got thanks to then-mayor and soon-to-be-presidentJuscelino Kubitschek. These two men are largely responsible for the wideavenues, large lakes, parks, and jutting skylines that characterize the city today.[14] A 1949 American government film favorably reviewed the planning and building of the city.[15]

Belo Horizonte is fast becoming a regional center of commerce. The Latin American research and development center of Google, situated in Belo Horizonte, was responsible for the management and operation of the formersocial networking websiteOrkut. It continues to be a trendsetter in the arts, particularly where music, literature, architecture, and theavant garde are concerned.[16]

Geography

[edit]

Surrounding cities and metropolitan area

[edit]
Belo Horizonte fromISS at night.

The term "Grande BH" ("Greater Belo Horizonte") denotes any of various definitions for the metropolitan area of Belo Horizonte. The legally definedMetropolitan Region of Belo Horizonte consists of 34 municipalities in total, and a population of around six million inhabitants (as of 2021[update], according to Brazil's National Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE)).[17][18]

The intense process of urbanization that is taking place in the metropolitan region has made some of the political boundaries between municipalities in the region obsolete.

The city is now composed of a relatively contiguous urban area, centred on Belo Horizonte, which extends out into municipalities such asContagem,Betim,Nova Lima,Raposos,Ribeirão das Neves,Ibirité,Santa Luzia andSabará, among others.

The municipality is bounded to the north byVespasiano, to the north east by Santa Luzia, by Sabará to the east, by Nova Lima to the southeast,Brumadinho to the south and Ribeirão das Neves, Contagem andIbirité to the west.

According to the currentgeographic classification by IBGE, the municipality belongs to theImmediate Geographic Region of Belo Horizonte, in theIntermediate Geographic Region of Belo Horizonte.

Geology and geomorphology

[edit]

Belo Horizonte lies on a region of contact between different geological series of theProterozoic. The geology largely comprisescrystalline rocks, which give rise to the varied morphology of the landscape. It is located in a large geological unit known as thecraton ofSão Francisco, referring to extensive crustal nucleus of central-eastern Brazil, tectonically stable at the end of thePaleoproterozoic and bordering areas that suffered the regeneration at theNeoproterozoic.

Thearchean rocks members of Belo Horizonte complex and supracrustal sequences of the Paleoproterozoic is predominant. The area of Belo Horizonte complex includes the geomorphological unit calledDepression of Belo Horizonte, which represents about 70% of the municipality area and has its greatest expression in the northernRibeirão Arrudas pipeline. Themetasedimentary rocks has its area of occurrence on the south of Ribeirão Arrudas pipeline, constituting about 30% of the area of Belo Horizonte. The characteristics of this area are lithological diversities and rugged topography, which has its maximum expression in theSerra do Curral (Corral Ridge), the southern boundary of the municipality.

Its soil comprises a succession of layers of rocks of varied composition, represented byitabirite,dolomite,quartzite,phyllites andschists different from the general direction northwest–southeast and dip to the southeast. The hills of Belo Horizonte are part of theEspinhaço Mountains and belong to the larger Itacolomi mountain chain. The highest point in the municipality is in theSerra do Curral, reaching 1,538 metres (5,046 ft).

Parks

[edit]
Serra do Rola-Moça State Park.

A centre for conservation and preservation of animals and plants it has also developed environmental education projects. The Zoo, which encompasses a total area of 1.4 million square meters, is located at the Foundation's headquarters and is regarded as one of the most complete in Latin America. It has a collection of close to 900 animals representing 200 species, from Brazil and other parts of the world, as well as the first public butterfly sanctuary in South America.

Pampulha Ecological Park is administered by the Zoo-Botanical Foundation of Belo Horizonte and was inaugurated on May 21, 2004. It is 30 acres (12 ha) of green area that offers to the population and the tourists a permanent programming ofenvironmental, cultural and patrimonial education.

The city contains the 102 hectares (250 acres)Baleia State Park, created in 1988 but still not implemented as of 2014.[19]It contains part of the 3,941 hectares (9,740 acres)Serra do Rola-Moça State Park, created in 1994.[20]

Climate

[edit]
Further information:Climate of Brazil
Storm over the city

Belo Horizonte's has alatitude at 19'55" in the Southtropical zone. Yearly temperatures average between 9 and 35 °C (48 and 95 °F). TheKöppen climate classification of the region istropical savanna climate (Aw), milder due to the elevation, with humid/warm summers and dry/mild winters. Belo Horizonte is located about 500 kilometres (310 mi) from the sea.

Even though inter-seasonal differences are not as pronounced as they are in temperate places, there is a contrast between spring and summer, and between fall and winter. The coldest month is generally July, with a lowest recorded temperature of 3.1 °C (38 °F). The hottest month is usually January.

With an elevation of 852 m (2,795 ft),[21] Belo Horizonte is cooled considerably by the relatively high elevation, which suppresses high maximum air temperatures experienced in nearby cities at lower altitudes. Belo Horizonte's climate is mild throughout the year. Temperatures vary between 11 and 31 °C (52 and 88 °F), the average being 22 °C (72 °F). Winter is dry and mostly sunny, and summer is rainy.

Climate data for Belo Horizonte (1991–2020, extremes 1949–present)
MonthJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecYear
Record high °C (°F)35.4
(95.7)
35.2
(95.4)
33.9
(93.0)
32.8
(91.0)
32.9
(91.2)
30.5
(86.9)
32.0
(89.6)
34.0
(93.2)
36.6
(97.9)
38.4
(101.1)
36.0
(96.8)
34.8
(94.6)
38.4
(101.1)
Mean daily maximum °C (°F)28.7
(83.7)
29.1
(84.4)
28.4
(83.1)
27.6
(81.7)
25.7
(78.3)
24.9
(76.8)
24.9
(76.8)
26.3
(79.3)
27.9
(82.2)
28.7
(83.7)
27.7
(81.9)
28.2
(82.8)
27.3
(81.1)
Daily mean °C (°F)23.7
(74.7)
24.0
(75.2)
23.5
(74.3)
22.6
(72.7)
20.6
(69.1)
19.6
(67.3)
19.4
(66.9)
20.5
(68.9)
22.0
(71.6)
23.0
(73.4)
22.7
(72.9)
23.3
(73.9)
22.1
(71.8)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F)20.0
(68.0)
20.2
(68.4)
19.8
(67.6)
18.8
(65.8)
16.6
(61.9)
15.4
(59.7)
15.2
(59.4)
15.8
(60.4)
17.4
(63.3)
18.8
(65.8)
18.9
(66.0)
19.5
(67.1)
18.0
(64.4)
Record low °C (°F)10.4
(50.7)
10.0
(50.0)
11.7
(53.1)
8.4
(47.1)
7.4
(45.3)
3.1
(37.6)
5.4
(41.7)
6.2
(43.2)
8.8
(47.8)
9.4
(48.9)
9.1
(48.4)
12.8
(55.0)
3.1
(37.6)
Averageprecipitation mm (inches)330.9
(13.03)
177.7
(7.00)
197.5
(7.78)
82.3
(3.24)
28.1
(1.11)
11.4
(0.45)
5.4
(0.21)
10.6
(0.42)
49.2
(1.94)
110.1
(4.33)
236.0
(9.29)
339.1
(13.35)
1,578.3
(62.14)
Average precipitation days(≥ 1.0 mm)1510117311148141792
Averagerelative humidity (%)69.366.268.666.364.362.658.454.055.359.968.571.063.7
Averagedew point °C (°F)17.9
(64.2)
17.6
(63.7)
17.7
(63.9)
16.5
(61.7)
14.1
(57.4)
12.9
(55.2)
11.7
(53.1)
11.4
(52.5)
12.9
(55.2)
15.0
(59.0)
16.8
(62.2)
17.9
(64.2)
15.2
(59.4)
Mean monthlysunshine hours182.6190.8190.0201.5215.4223.8236.6244.8211.2204.4164.7162.02,427.8
Source 1:Instituto Nacional de Meteorologia[22][23][24][25][26][27][28]
Source 2:NOAA (dew point),[29] Meteo Climat (record highs and lows)[30]

Demographics

[edit]
João Pessoa Square in Belo Horizonte.
See also:Brazilians,Demographics of Brazil, andImmigration to Brazil

Ethnic groups

[edit]
Race and ethnicity in Belo Horizonte
EthnicityPercentage
White
43.6%
Pardo (Multiracial)
42.6%
Black
13.5%
Asian
0.2%
Amerindian
0.1%
Historical population
YearPop.±%
19701,235,030—    
19801,780,839+44.2%
19912,020,161+13.4%
20002,238,526+10.8%
20102,375,151+6.1%
20222,315,560−2.5%
Source:[31]

According to the2022 census, there were 2,315,560 people residing in the city of Belo Horizonte.[32] The census revealed the following numbers: 1,008,878White people (43.6%), 986,302Pardo (Multiracial) people (42.6%), 312,920Black people (13.5%), 4,881Asian people (0.2%), 2,486Amerindian people (0.1%).[32]

In 2010, the city had 428,893 opposite-sex couples and 1,090same-sex couples. The population of Belo Horizonte was 53.1% female and 46.9% male.[33]

The Metropolitan Region of Belo Horizonte, calledGreater Belo Horizonte, is the3rd most populous of Brazil, after onlyGreater São Paulo (with 19,672,582 people, first in Brazil and5th in the world) andGreater Rio de Janeiro (with 14,387,000 people). The city is the6th most populous of the country.

During the 18th century, Minas Gerais received manyPortuguese immigrants, mainly fromNorthern Portugal as well as many enslaved Africans.[34]

Belo Horizonte has a notableItalian influence; around 30% of the city's population have someItalian origin.[35] TheItalian culture is present in the cuisine, dance, and language.[36] People ofGerman,Spanish,French, andSyrian-Lebanese ancestries also make up sizeable groups.

Religion

[edit]
Our Lady of Good Voyage Cathedral is the seat of theRoman Catholic Archdiocese of Belo Horizonte.
See also:Religion in Brazil,Protestantism in Brazil, andRoman Catholic Church in Brazil
ReligionPercentageNumber
Catholic59.87%1,422,084
Protestant25.06%595,244
No religion8.02%190,414
Spiritist4.07%96,639

Source:IBGE 2010.[37]

TheCatholic Church includes the territory of the municipality of Belo Horizonte and 28 other municipalities in the ecclesiastical jurisdiction of theArchdiocese of Belo Horizonte, which hasDivinópolis,Luz,Oliveira andSete Lagoas as suffragan dioceses. The archbishop's see is in theCathedral of Our Lady of Boa Viagem. Some of the churches in Belo Horizonte have great artistic value, especially theChurch of São Francisco de Assis, inPampulha. The church's architectural design was byOscar Niemeyer and its structural calculations were byJoaquim Cardoso. Its interior houses the Stations of the Cross, made up of fourteen panels byCândido Portinari, considered one of his most significant works. The external panels are by Cândido Portinari (figurative panel) and Paulo Werneck (abstract panel). The gardens were designed byBurle Marx.Alfredo Ceschiatti sculpted the bronze bas-reliefs in the baptistery. Other shrines worth mentioning are theBasilica of Our Lady of Lourdes with itsneo-Gothic style, in the Lourdes neighborhood; theChurch of São José, in thehypercenter and the Church of São Judas Tadeu, in the Graça neighborhood. The Catholic Church recognizes Our Lady of Boa Viagem as the city'spatron saint.[38]

Human development

[edit]
Savassi is a developed neighbourhood in Belo Horizonte.

In 1993, under mayor Patrus Ananias de Souza, the city started a series of innovations based on its citizens having the "right to food." These include, for example, creatingfarmers' markets in the town to enable direct sales and regularly surveying market prices and posting the results across the city.[39] The city's process ofparticipatory budgeting was linked with these innovations, as a result of which theinfant mortality rate was reduced by 50% in a decade.[40][41]

There is some evidence that these programs have helped support a higher quality of life for the local farmers partnering with the city and that this may be having positive effects on biodiversity in the Atlantic rainforest around the city.[41][42] The city's development of these policies garnered the first "Future Policy Award" in 2009, awarded by theWorld Future Council, a group of 50 activists (includingFrances Moore Lappé,Vandana Shiva,Wes Jackson, andYoussou N'Dour[43]) concerned with the development and recognition of policies to promote a just and sustainable future.

The city has undertaken an internationally heralded project called Vila Viva ("Living Village" in Portuguese) that promises to "urbanize" the poorest areas (favelas), relocating families from areas with high risk of floods and landslides but keeping them in the same neighborhood, paving main avenues to allow public transportation, police and postal service to have access. All the work is done with 80% of locals, reducing unemployment and increasing family income.[44][45] Former mayorFernando da Mata Pimentel was nominated forWorld Mayor in 2005 on the strength of these and other programs.[44]

Economy

[edit]
Main articles:Economy of Belo Horizonte andEconomy of Brazil
Former headquarters ofUsiminas in Pedro Melo Square.
Business district of the city.

Belo Horizonte receives large numbers of visitors, as it is in the Brazilian main economic axis, exerting influence even on other states. Multinational and Brazilian companies, such as Google,Deloitte,Thoughtworks,Localiza andOi, maintain offices in the city. The service sector plays a very important role in the economy of Belo Horizonte, being responsible for 85% of the city's Gross Domestic Product (GDP), with other industry making up most of the remaining 15%. Belo Horizonte has a developed industrial sector, being traditionally a hub of the Braziliansteel-makingl andmetallurgical industries, as the state of Minas Gerais has always been very rich inminerals, specifically iron ore.

Belo Horizonte is the distribution and processing centre of a rich agricultural and mining region and the nucleus of a burgeoning industrial complex. Production is centred on steel, steel products,automobiles, and textiles. Gold,manganese, andgemstones mined in the surrounding region are processed in the city.[46]The main industrial district of the city was set during the 1940s inContagem, a part of greater Belo Horizonte. Multinational companies likeFIAT (which opened its plant in Betim in 1974),Arcelor, andToshiba have subsidiaries in the region, along with textiles like Group Rachelle Textil, Ematex and Cedro Textil,cosmetic, food,chemicals,pharmaceuticals,furnishing andrefractory companies. Among the companies headquartered in the city are steel producer Açominas (held byGerdau, one of the largest multinationals originated in Brazil);Usiminas; Belgo-Mineira (held byArcelor);Acesita (partially held by Arcelor); mobile communicationVivo; andTelecom Italia Mobile, Dasein Executive Search, executive coaching company, as well as theNYSE-listed electrical companyCEMIG. Leading steel product makers Sumitomo Metals of Japan and Vallourec of France also have plans to construct an integrated steel works on the outskirts of the city.

There are also a large number of small enterprises in the technology sector with regional to nationwide success, particularly in the fields ofcomputing and biotechnology. Because of both governmental and private funding in the diversification of its economy, the city has become an international reference in Information Technology andBiotechnology, and is also cited because of the advanced corporate and university research inBiodiesel fuel. The number of jobs in the Information sector has been growing at annual rates above 50%. The Belo Horizonte Metropolitan Area, composed of 33 cities under the capital's direct influence, is home to 16% of the country's biotechnology companies, with annual sales of over R$550 million.[47]

Projects in these fields are likely to expand because of integration between universities, the oil companyPetrobras and theBrazilian Government. One of the largest events that ever took place in the city, theInter-American Development Bank meeting, occurred in 2005 and attracted people from all over the world.

For a long time it was marked by the predominance of itsindustrial sector, but from the 1990s there has been a constant expansion of theservice sector economy, particularly incomputer science,biotechnology,business tourism, fashion and the jewelry-making. The city is considered to be a strategic leader in theBrazilian economy. The move towardsbusiness tourism transformed the capital into a national hub for this segment of thetourist industry.

Government and politics

[edit]
See also:List of mayors of Belo Horizonte

Education

[edit]
Main article:Education in Brazil
Pontifical Catholic University of Minas Gerais.
Federal University of Minas Gerais.

Educational institutions

[edit]

Several higher education institutions are located in Belo Horizonte, including:

Transport

[edit]
Tancredo Neves/Confins International Airport.
BRT.
Belo Horizonte Metro.
Afonso Pena Avenue.

Airports

[edit]

Belo Horizonte is served by two airports:

Highways

[edit]
BR-356 in front of Ponteio Lar Shopping.

The city is connected to the rest of Minas Gerais state and the country by a number of roadways.Minas Gerais has the country's largest federal highway network.[52]

The city is also served by other minor roads such as state highways MG-020, MG-050, MG-030, and MG-433. There is also an East-West Express Way, which goes from the city to the nearby industrial centres ofContagem andBetim (together having a population of ca. 900,000), and Anel Rodoviário, a kind of "beltway" – indeed it is not circumferential, but connects many highways, such as the federal (BR-ones) so it is not necessary for a large number of cars and trucks to pass through the city centre. Many of these roads are in poor condition, but in the last years many revitalization and rebuilding projects have been started.

Bus system

[edit]

The bus system has a large number of bus lines going through all parts in the city, and is administered byBHTRANS. Among the upcoming projects are the expansion of the integration between bus lines and themetro, with integrated stations, many already in use. And the construction of bus corridors, with lanes and bus stops exclusively for the bus lines. Keeping buses from traffic congestions, making the trips more viable for commuters.

Railways

[edit]

Belo Horizonte Metro or MetroBH started operating at the end of the 1970s. There is one line, with 19 stations, from Vilarinho to Eldorado Station, inContagem, transporting over 160,000 people daily. The current projects of expansion include Line 2, linking the existing Calafate Station to the region of Barreiro. And Line 3, from the city's main bus terminal to São Inácio de Loyola,Savassi economical district. Line 2 is planned to be overground (similar to the current line) and Line 3 is planned to be underground, passing through the city's financial centre, Praça Sete and Afonso Pena Avenue. Also, Line 1 is planned to be extended to Novo Eldorado Station.[54]

For long distance, Belo Horizonte is served by theVitória-Minas Railway. There are daily passenger trips connecting Belo Horizonte toCariacica, in the metropolitan region ofVitória, Espírito Santo. On its route, the railway also connects Belo Horizonte to several locations on Eastern Minas Gerais, such asGovernador Valadares,João Monlevade and the cities of theVale do Aço Metropolitan Region.

Belo Horizonte Public Transportation statistics

[edit]

The average amount of time people spend commuting with public transit in Belo Horizonte, for example to and from work, on a weekday is 85 min. 26% of public transit riders, ride for more than 2 hours every day. The average amount of time people wait at a stop or station for public transit is 23 min, while 50% of riders wait for over 20 minutes on average every day. The average distance people usually ride in a single trip with public transit is 8.7 km, while 19% travel for over 12 km in a single direction.[55]

Culture

[edit]
See also:Culture of Brazil

Music

[edit]
Sala Minas Gerais, at theCentro de Cultura Presidente Itamar Franco, is the house of the Minas Gerais Philharmonic Orchestra.

Clube da Esquina is one of the most important musical movements in the musical history of Brazil. It originated in the mid-1960s, and since then its members have been hugely influential in Brazilian and even international music, some like Milton Nascimento and Toninho Horta achieving worldwide acclaim. Other people involved in the movement include musicians, songwriters, composers, conductors and lyricists, such as Tavinho Moura,Wagner Tiso,Andersen Viana,Milton Nascimento,Lô Borges,Beto Guedes, Flávio Venturini,Toninho Horta,Márcio Borges andFernando Brant, among others.

The bandUakti, known for performing with self-builtmusical instruments, originated in Belo Horizonte under the influence of Walter Smetak and the Composition School from Bahia. Also, several nationally famous rock groups have been founded in Belo Horizonte, includingJota Quest,Pato Fu,Skank,14 Bis and Tianastácia. In later years, Belo Horizonte has been more frequently included in Brazilian tours of foreign mainstream and independent acts.

Belo Horizonte is also known as the Brazilian Capital ofMetal music, hence the huge number of heavy metal bands (and the likes) founded there, especially in the 1980s. Most importantly, Overdose, the first metal band from BH and one of the first to gain prominence in Brazil;Sepultura, the world's best known Brazilian metal band; andSarcófago, one of the founders of modernblack metal. Thecontemporary Christian music bandDiante do Trono, is also of Belo Horizonte. A short instrumental song by American bandEarth, Wind & Fire is named after the city on their albumNow, Then & Forever.

Museums

[edit]
Pampulha Art Museum

Belo Horizonte features a number of museums including the Mineiro Museum, the Abílio Barreto Historic Museum, Arts and Workmanship Museum, a Natural History Museum and the UFMGBotanic Gardens, a telephone museum, the Pampulha Art Museum, the Professor Taylor Gramke Mineralogy Museum, and the UFMG Conservatory. The puppet theatre group Giramundo was established here in 1970, and continues to maintain a puppetry museum hosting a collection of their creations.

Kubitschek Residence Museum
Minas Gerais Vale Memorial

The Circuito Cultural Praça da Liberdade, located in the central region of Belo Horizonte, is the largest cultural circuit in Brazil. In all, there are eleven functioning museums and cultural spaces: Arquivo Público Mineiro (Minas Gerais Public Archive), Biblioteca Pública Estadual Luiz de Bessa (Luiz de Bessa State Public Library), Cefar Liberdade, Centro de Arte Popular Cemig (Cemig Center of Popular Art), Centro Cultural Banco do Brasil (Culture Center Bank of Brazil), Espaço do Conhecimento UFMG (UFMG Knowledge Space), Horizonte Sebrae – Casa da Economia Criativa (Sebrae Horizon – The House of Creative Economy), Memorial Minas Gerais Vale (Minas Gerais Memorial), Museu das Minas e do Metal (Mines and Metal Museum), Museu Mineiro (Minas Gerais Museum) andPalácio da Liberdade (Liberty Palace). Besides these, another three spaces are already in the process of being implemented: the Casa Fiat de Cultura (Fiat Culture House), CENA and Oi Futuro. The proposal, according to the Circuit manager, Cristiana Kumaira, is to strengthen the circuit in the world cultural context. "We are already on this path and are being careful to ensure that the activities, services and assistance fulfill the needs and expectations of both the local population and the tourists who come to Belo Horizonte from around the world. The Circuit is establishing itself as one more source of pride for the people of Minas Gerais," she stresses.

Palace of Arts Museum

Inaugurated in 2010, the Circuito Cultural Praça da Liberdade was created with the goal of exploringcultural diversity, with interactive options open to the public, in an area of great symbolic, historical and architectural value for Belo Horizonte. The opportunity came with the transference of the Minas Gerais Government headquarters to the Cidade Administrativa (Administrative City), in Serra Verde. After they had been adapted, the old department buildings opened their doors and began to house museums andcultural spaces.The Circuito Cultural Praça da Liberdade is co-managed by the Instituto Sérgio Magnani (Institute) since June 2012, through a partnership signed with the Minas Gerais Government, and the museums/spaces are mostly run by private companies, which carry out investments in heritage recovery and building maintenance. According to Kumaira, this public-private partnership model allows large companies to participate and effectively contribute to the cultural advance of the city. "Beyond their fields of activities, the partners invest in the implantation and maintenance of museums, learning spaces, exhibition halls and shows, as well as memory centers that consolidate the history of Minas Gerais, presenting it either for free or at affordable prices," she adds.[56]

The Natural History Museum and Botanical Garden holds an important treasure offolk art, the Nativity of Pipiripau. Created during the 20th century, the craftsman Raimundo Machado, synchronizes 586 figures, distributed in 45 scenes, which tell the story of life and death of Jesus, mixed with its variety of arts andcrafts.[57] With 600,000 sq. m. of green area, theUFMG Museum of Natural History and Botanic Garden (MHN-JB) is a privileged ecological space that enables visitors to experience nature in a rich, multidisciplinary way. For 30 years, the mission of the MHN-JB has been to do research, to educate, and to meet the community's demand for service. It covers the areas ofanthropology,archeology, Environmental Education,Natural History,Mineralogy, andPaleontology. It has an Ecological Amphitheater, a Free Art atelier, agreenhouse, and an Interactive Room. One of its traditional exhibitions is the Pipiripau Nativity Crèche.

Palácio das Artes, inaugurated in 1970, comprises three theaters, threeart galleries, a movie theater, a bookstore, a coffee shop and photography exhibition space. The building was designed by Oscar Niemeyer and it also houses the Minas Gerais Handcraft Center. The Pampulha Art Museum is located at the Pampulha Lake in Belo Horizonte in a building that originally housed the Pampulha Casino. The building was designed by Oscar Niemeyer, commissioned by the then-mayor and future president of Brazil Juscelino Kubitschek in the early 1940s, with external grounds by landscaperRoberto Burle Marx. The building was the first project of Oscar Niemeyer, opened as a casino, and closed in 1946. In 1957, it was re-opened as the Art Museum. His design was influenced by the principles of Le Corbusier. The gardens ofBurle Marx are a tribute to the tropical green. There are three sculptures, by Ceschiatti, Zamoiski and José Pedrosa. In 1996, it won new multimedia rooms, library, café bar, a souvenir shop and technical infrastructure. The MAP has an impressive collection of 1,600 works.[58]

Architecture

[edit]
São Francisco de Assis Church in Pampulha Park

Belo Horizonte has several significant cultural landmarks, many of them situated in thePampulha district, where there are notable examples of Braziliancontemporary architecture.[59] Under the leadership of the then mayor of city,Juscelino Kubitschek, architects and artists such asOscar Niemeyer, landscaperBurle Marx, and painterCandido Portinari, started a type of modern architecture and art here that was greatly developed later with the construction of Brazil's new capital,Brasília, also led by the now president Juscelino (aka JK). It is at thePampulha complex that one can see the routes of this new architecture movement. The modern and protomodern architecture can also be seen all over Belo Horizonte, either in emblematic 1950s buildings such as Edificio Acaiaca, Conjunto JK, Hotel Amazonas[60] and former Hotel Excelsior,[61] all reflecting the modernity culture of the first planned capital of Brazil.

The Pampulha Park area includes one of the largestsoccer stadiums in the world, theMineirão stadium, and theSão Francisco de Assis Church, widely known as Igreja da Pampulha, designed by BrazilianModernist architectOscar Niemeyer. In Pampulha there is also theUniversidade Federal de Minas Gerais campus, whose buildings themselves are important contributions to the city's architecture. Other notable buildings include the Mesbla and Niemeyer buildings.

Niemeyer Building atLiberty Square

In the downtown area, landmarks include theSão José Church, the Praça da Estação (Station Square), which is an old train station that now is also the Museum of Arts and Workmanship, the Municipal Park, the famous Sete de Setembro Square, where an obelisk built in 1922 marks the one hundred years ofBrazilian independence from Portugal.[62] Near Central the area, in the Lourdes neighborhood, the Lourdes Basilica, is an example ofGothic Revival style. The Nossa Senhora de Fátima Church, in Santo Agostinho neighborhood, is situated inCarlos Chagas Square. Both churches are referred to as the Assembléia Church and the Assembléia Square because of their proximity to the state's legislative assembly.

TheAureliano Chaves building, currently the tallest in Belo Horizonte.

Next to the downtown region is the Savassi district, known for fine restaurants and as a centre of cultural events as well as the best of the city'snightlife. Many landmarks are located there, such as the Praça da Liberdade (Liberty Square), and its surrounding buildings, including the former Executive Offices of the governor called the Palácio da Liberdade (Liberty Palace), the first building to be finished during the city's planned development in the late 1890s.

The government offices moved to the "Cidade Administrativa" in 2010. This complex is made by a few massive buildings just outside the city. Nowadays, the "palaces" are being turned into museums. Still on Savassi, the meeting point of many social groups, especially the youth, is "Praça da Savassi" (Savassi Square), which is not exactly a square, and more a crossing between two major avenues (Getúlio Vargas and Cristóvão Colombo), and gathers some of the busiest bars and pubs (called locally "botecos" or "botequins") in town.

Another important landmark is Praça do Papa (Pope's Square), located at a high point south of the downtown area, with its great view of the entire city. It is named for July 1, 1980, visit byJohn Paul II, who held a youth mass there. The nearby Parque das Mangabeiras (Mangabeiras Park) features extensive wildlife, and-owing to its considerable size-has its own bus service, which operates solely within the confines of the park. On Sundays, Afonso Pena Avenue hosts Latin America's biggest open-air market. This is the Market of Arts and Handicrafts, most commonly known as Feira Hippie (hippie fair). Every Sunday morning 70,000 visitors find food, drinks, clothes, furniture, earrings, shoes and almost anything else.[63]

Pão de queijo with coffee is a traditional light meal of Minas Gerais

Food and drink

[edit]

The regional Minas Gerais' food and the now internationally known drink ofcachaça are very popular and highly rated in the capital.[67]

Belo Horizonte is internationally known as the "capital of neighborhood bars."[68]

Every year since 1999, the city hosts the Comida di Buteco festival ("Pub Foods", in an approximate translation), in which a panel selects 41 bars to be visited, and then elects the one with the best appetizers using the theme ingredient of each year.

The Festival is so successful that its brand was already sold to other 21 regions in Brazil (Belém, Belo Horizonte, Brasília, Campinas, Curitiba, Florianópolis, Fortaleza, Goiás, Juiz de Fora, Manaus, Montes Claros, Poços de Caldas, Porto Alegre, Recife, Ribeirão Preto, Rio de Janeiro, Salvador, São José do Rio Preto, São Paulo, Uberlândia e Vale do Aço).

The neighborhoods and areas of Savassi, Lourdes, Mercado Central, Santa Tereza and Pampulha concentrate most of the city's restaurants and bars.[69]

Sport

[edit]
See also:Sport in Brazil

Football

[edit]
Mineirão
Arena Independência
See also:Football in Brazil,Campeonato Brasileiro Série A, andCampeonato Mineiro

As in the rest of Brazil,football is the most popular sport. The city's major teams areAtlético Mineiro,Cruzeiro andAmérica Mineiro.

The oldest stadium in the city is theArena Independência, built for the1950 FIFA World Cup, and site of the so-calledMiracle Match, when an amateur United States national soccer team beat heavy favourites England inan unexpected 1–0 win.[70] It is currently the home ground of América Mineiro.

The city has one of the biggest football stadiums in the world, officially calledEstádio Governador Magalhães Pinto, but widely known asMineirão. It was built to provide the city of Belo Horizonte with a larger alternative for the Arena Independência, then the prime venue of the city. The stadium was meant to become the most modern stadium of Brazil and the new home of Atlético Mineiro and Cruzeiro. Construction took almost five years, and officially opened on September 5, 1965. Mineirão hardly changed in the following decades, and by the 1990s still had its original capacity. When Brazilwon their bid to host the 2014 FIFA World Cup, it was clear that Mineirão needed to undergo a large redevelopment.

Arena MRV

The project included the complete reconstruction of the bottom tier, an extension of the roof, and further refurbishments to upgrade the stadium toFIFA standards. Building works took a total of three years and were completed in December 2012. The first match at the reopened Mineirão was played on February 3, 2013, with a state championship match between Cruzeiro and Atlético. Mineirão hosted a total of six matches during the2014 FIFA World Cup. The stadium also was one of the playing venues of the2013 FIFA Confederations Cup and theOlympic football tournament in 2016.[71]

While Cruzeiro agreed on a lease to play the next 25 years at Mineirão, Atlético decided to build its own arena in the Califórnia neighbourhood, in the northeast region of the city. The original project intended to build one of the most modern football grounds in Latin America, and the second largest sports arena in the state of Minas Gerais, with a capacity of over 46,000 people. Construction kicked off in 2017, broke ground on April 20, 2020, after delays due to theCOVID-19 pandemic, and works were completed in 2023. The stadium was inaugurated on April 15, 2023, and saw its first official match on August 27, 2023, with Atlético Mineiro hostingSantos for the2023 Campeonato Brasileiro Série A. The naming rights for the stadium were sold to Belo Horizonte-based home building and real estate company MRV, and the location became known asArena MRV.

Football/soccer teams
ClubLeagueVenueEstablished (team)
Atlético MineiroSérie AArena MRV

46.000 (44.048 record)

1908
CruzeiroSérie AMineirão

61.846 (132,834 record)

1921
América MineiroSérie BArena Independência

23,018 (32,721 record)

1912

In addition to football, Belo Horizonte has one of the largest attendances at volleyball matches in the entire country. They are played either atMineirinho, home ofBrazil's national volleyball team, or atMinas Tênis Clube.

Other sports

[edit]

Belo Horizonte is home to2015 French Open men's doubles champion and former World no. 1 doubles playerMarcelo Melo as well as2016 Australian Open men's doubles andmixed doubles championBruno Soares.

TheMinas Tênis Clube is a multi-sport club that plays in theNovo Basquete Brasil,Liga Nacional de Futsal,Brazilian Men's Volleyball Superliga andBrazilian Women's Volleyball Superliga.

Consular representations

[edit]

The following countries have consular representations in Belo Horizonte:

  • Consulate-General of Italy
    Consulate-General of Italy

International relations

[edit]
See also:List of twin towns and sister cities in Brazil

Belo Horizonte istwinned with:[79]

Notable people

[edit]
See also:Category:People from Belo Horizonte

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^UK:/ˈbɛlˌɒrɪˈzɒnti/BEL-ohORR-iz-ON-tee,US:/ˈblˌhɒr-/BAY-lohHORR-,Brazilian Portuguese:[ˈbɛl(w)oɾiˈzõtʃi];lit.'Beautiful Horizon'.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
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External links

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