In 1616, the Spaniard Francisco de Herrera Campuzano erected a small indigenous village (poblado) known as "Saint Lawrence of Aburrá" (San Lorenzo de Aburrá), located in the present-dayEl Poblado commune. On 2 November 1675, thequeen consortMariana of Austria founded the "Town ofOur Lady of Candelaria of Medellín" (Villa de Nuestra Señora de la Candelaria de Medellín) in the Aná region, which today corresponds to the center of the city (east-central zone) and first describes the region as "Medellín". In 1826, the city was named the capital of theDepartment of Antioquia by the National Congress of the nascentRepublic of Gran Colombia, comprising present-day Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador, and Panama. After Colombia won its independence from Spain, Medellín became the capital of the Federal State of Antioquia until 1888, with the proclamation of theColombian Constitution of 1886. During the 19th century, Medellín was a dynamic commercial center, first exporting gold, then producing and exporting coffee.[citation needed]
In February 2013, theUrban Land Institute chose Medellín as the most innovative city in the world due to its recent advances in politics, education, and social development.[9] In the same year, Medellín won theVeronica Rudge Urbanism Award conferred byHarvard University to the Urban Development Enterprise, mainly due to the North-Western Integral Development Project in the city.[10] Medellín hosted UN-Habitat's 7thWorld Urban Forum in 2014.[11][12] In 2016, the city won the Lee Kuan Yew World City Prize. The award seeks to recognize and celebrate efforts in furthering innovation in urban solutions and sustainable urban development.[13][14]
The valley and its Spanish settlement have gone by several names over the years, includingAburrá de los Yamesíes, "Valley of Saint Bartholomew", "Saint Lawrence of Aburrá", "Saint Lawrence of Aná",Villa de la Candelaria de Medellín, and finally "Medellín".[15]
Some of the Conquistadors, such asGaspar de Rodas, the first governor of Antioquia, came from Badajoz Province. Count Pedro Portocarrero y Luna, President of the Council for the West Indies (Consejo de Indias), asked theMonarchy of Spain to give the name of his town to the new settlement in America. His request was accepted on November 22, 1674, whenqueen regentMariana of Austria proclaimed the city's name to beVilla de Nuestra Señora de Medellín. Miguel Aguinaga y Mendiogoitia, Governor, made the name official on November 2, 1675. The Crown granted a coat of arms to the city on June 24, 1676.[16]
In August 1541,Marshal Jorge Robledo was in the place known today asHeliconia when he saw in the distance what he thought was a valley. He sent Jerónimo Luis Tejelo to explore the territory, and during the night of August 23, Tejelo reached the plain of what is now Aburrá Valley. The Spaniards gave it the name of "Valley ofSaint Bartholomew", but this was soon changed for the native nameAburrá "Painters" because of the textile decorations of the local rulers.[17]
In 1574, Gaspar de Rodas asked the Antioquia'scabildo for 10 square kilometers (4 sq mi) of land to establish herds and a ranch in the valley. The Cabildo granted him 8 square kilometers (3 sq mi) of land.[17]
In 1616, the colonial visitor Francisco de Herrera y Campuzano founded a settlement with 80 Amerindians, naming itPoblado de San Lorenzo, nowEl Poblado. In 1646, a colonial law oncasta ordered the separation of Indigenous peoples (indios) frommestizos andmulattos. The colonial administration began the construction of a new town in Aná, todayBerrío Park, where the church ofNuestra Señora de la Candelaria de Aná ("Our Lady of Candelaria of Aná") was built. Three years later, the Spaniards started the construction of theBasilica of Our Lady of Candelaria, which was rebuilt at the end of the 18th century.[17]
After 1574, with Gaspar de Rodas settled in the valley, the population started to grow. According to the church records of the San Lorenzo Church, six couples married between 1646 and 1650, and 41 between 1671 and 1675.[17] Gold mines were developed northeast of Antioquia, thus they needed food supply from nearby agriculture. The Aburrá Valley was in a strategic position between the gold mines and the first provincial capital of Antioquia,Santa Fe de Antioquia.[17]
The provincial capital, Santa Fe, started to lose importance and gradually became poor, as trade and prominent personalities of the region came to the Aburrá Valley, where rich families started to buy land. Soon, the first settlers asked for the creation of aCabildo (council) in the valley, thus getting a separate government from Santa Fe.[17] The Santa Fe government fought this, but Mariana of Austria signed the edict creating the Cabildo on November 22, 1674. The governor Miguel de Aguinaga proclaimed the royal edict on 2 November 1675. The new city was given the title ofVilla de Nuestra Señora de la Candelaria.[17]
Before the creation of the town, the inhabitants were scattered throughout the valley, with only a few families concentrated at the confluence of the Aná (today called theSanta Elena) and theMedellín rivers; others lived in El Poblado San Lorenzo. After the royal edict, the settlers chose the Aná site as the heart of the future city, with the Candelaria Church at its center.[citation needed]
San Ignacio Church, an example of colonial architecture in Colombia
Their first buildings were simple, withthatched roofs. The houses of the most important people were two stories tall, and the church and the Cabildo were unimpressive. It was only during the 18th century that the church was improved. Only one story, the Cabildo was located at the western part of the plaza. It had a thatched roof until 1742 when tiles were put on. In 1682, traders and foreigners started the construction of theVeracruz Hermitage, which was consecrated as a church by the Bishop ofPopayán in 1712.[17]
In 1675, the first census during colonial times was taken: there were 3,000 people and 280 families. Another census was not taken until the colonial Visitador (royal inspector)Antonio Mon y Velardees ordered one between 1786 and 1787: there were then 14,507 people and 241 families. In 1808, two years before Colombia won independence, the city had 15,347 people and 360 families.[17]
In 1803, the Royal College of the Franciscans was founded in the Central Plaza, which isBerrío Park today, with the initial departments of Grammar, Philosophy, and Theology.[18] Soon after, the college moved to a new building in the small San Ignacio square. In 1821 it was renamed Colegio de Antioquia, and it became theUniversity of Antioquia in 1901. The university also had the first vocational training school, the first cultural radio station in Latin America, and the first regionalbotanical garden.
In the first half of the twentieth century, the population of Medellín increased sixfold, from 59,815 inhabitants in 1905 to 358,189 in 1951. TheThousand Days War (1899–1902) stopped the industrial development of the city, although the civil war did not affect the region directly. Under reforms by PresidentRafael Reyes after the conflict, the city continued its industrial development[17] and founded aChamber of commerce. The Chamber developed a regional transport project that connected Medellín to other Colombian regions and other nations.
Despite the importance of gold production in the early development of Medellín, the export of coffee contributed the most impetus in the 20th century for the city's growth. Trade grew to international dimensions as the main export of Colombia becamecoffee. The industrial and commercial dynamism of Medellín also created a caste of traders and entrepreneurs, who founded the first nationwide industries in Colombia.[17]
Coltejer is one of the most important textile companies in Colombia. It was founded in Medellín by Alejandro Echavarría on October 22, 1907.[19] Its headquarters, theColtejer Building, is the tallest skyscraper in Medellín and the fourth tallest building in Colombia.
The discovery of coal inAmagá, a few kilometers south of the Aburrá Valley, and the building ofhydroelectric plants provided the new industries with energy, and this allowed the creation of many smaller companies. The Antioquia Railway (built in 1875) conquered the difficult geography of one of the most mountainous regions of South America, notably with theLa Quiebra Tunnel, which connected the industrial center to theMagdalena River, the most major navigable river in Colombia. In 1932 Medellín also built its first airport, theEnrique Olaya Herrera Airport.[17]
The study by Charles H. Savage on industrial production in Antioquia between 1960 and 1972 showed how important Medellín industries became to Colombia and South America. He studied social change produced by the introduction of new technology. Savage looked at three factories in Antioquia: two potteries inSantuario andLa Blanca, and a tailoring factory in Medellín. Savage studied the production of the Antioquian factories, and the relationship between the workers and their employers, an industrial efficiency which he called the "Culture of Work".[20] His conclusions were published by his colleagueGeorge F. Lombardi asSons of the Machine (1988).[21][22]
During the first part of the 20th century, the city was part of the literary transition fromromanticism to the modern art and literary movements of the new century.[citation needed] The writerTomás Carrasquilla (1858–1940) focused on the people of his native Antioquia, portraying their daily lives and customs. The writer and philosopherFernando González fromEnvigado (in the metropolitan area of Medellín), the cartoonistRicardo Rendón, and the poetLeón de Greiff were some of the founders ofLos Panidas, a Medellín literary movement. Other featured poets and writers werePorfirio Barba-Jacob andEfe Gómez. In painting, the most famous wereEladio Vélez andPedro Nel Gómez.Carlos Vieco Ortiz was a popular composer and musician. Medellín became the headquarters of record labels like Sonolux, Ondina, and Silver.[17]
Medellín clubs, many of them dating to the end of the 19th century, became a center for intellectual and industrialist movements, like Club Union (founded in 1894) and Club Campestre (founded in 1924). In 1909, the Circo España was created, and Bolívar Theater in 1919. Theart nouveauJunín Theater was demolished to build theColtejer Tower, now the tallest building in the city. Cine Colombia, the first movie distributor of the country, was founded in Medellín in 1927.[17]
El Poblado, a wealthy district located in the southern part of the city, is one of Colombia's most important urban and economic centers
Colombia entered a new era of political instability with the murder of presidential candidateJorge Eliecer Gaitán inBogotá in 1948. Political violence spread in the rural areas of Colombia, and farmers fled to the cities.[23] The Valley slopes became overpopulated with slums.
As the population of Medellín grew quickly during the 1950s, industrialists, traders and local government created the "Medellín Master Plan" (MMP) (Plan Piloto), a plan for the expansion of the city into the Aburrá Valley that would lead to the creation of the first metropolitan area in Colombia.Paul Lester Wiener andJosé Luis Sert were the architects who led the project. Among the main features of the MMP were the canalization of theMedellín River, the control of new settlements on valley slopes, the creation of an industrial zone in the Guayabal District, the planning of the city to be in harmony with the river, the construction of a city stadium, and an administrative center inLa Alpujarra.[17] Little of the plan was actually done.
In 1951 the city had 358,189 inhabitants, but 22 years later, in 1973, the population had tripled to 1,071,252.[24] The population explosion had several consequences for the MMP. The urban limits of the city grew to areas that were not contemplated in the MMP, so that Medellín now reached the urban areas of other cities of the Aburrá Valley, likeEnvigado,Bello andItagüí; the new Medellín settlers were poor families without enough credit to buy their own homes, so several neighborhoods were built beyond the MMP; several old downtown buildings were demolished to construct tall towers, offices, and avenues.
In 1968 the Second Conference of CELAM was held in Medellín expressing apreferential option for the poor. The traditional Junin Theatre along the Santa Elena was demolished to build the Coltejer Tower. The huge migration into Medellín provided workers for the expansion of textile factories, being modernized in this period,[17] but it also created new problems for the city: higher unemployment, lack of services for poor areas, urban violence in several districts, and collapse of any hope of a transport system.[citation needed]
The position of Medellín as an industrial city in Antioquia has been the main factor in overcoming its crisis of the 1980s and 1990s. TheMedellín Metro, a massive urban transport service, became the pride of the city. The construction of thePlaza Mayor of Medellín, an international center for congresses and expositions, was designed to showcase theglobalized economy of Colombia to the world.
Social exclusion has eased due to the development of a transport infrastructure; a new system of public buses called "Metroplus" opened in December 2011, and gondolas called "MetroCable", which help connect the poorest barrio communities in the hills to the city, have been in operation since 2004, with more routes being added in recent years.[6] Additionally, an electric escalator 1,260 feet long was inaugurated on December 26, 2011, inComuna 13, one of Medellín's poorest neighborhoods, making it one of the first of its kind in the world.[25] Today's Medellín includes spaces for art, poetry, drama, the construction of public libraries, the foundation of new ecological parks, and the inclusion of people of the city in its development.[26][27][28]
In 2012, Medellín was among 200 cities around the world, including New York and Tel Aviv, nominated for Most Innovative City of the Year due to a great advancement in public transportation, with more than 500,000 residents and visitors using its Metro train system each day; a public bike-share program; new facilities and landmarks, including the España Library and a cultural center in Moravia; a large outdoor escalator the size of a 28-story building, enabling residents of the city's elevated Comuna 13 neighborhood to safely ride down the steep hillside; and a Metro system which reduces Medellín's CO2 emissions by 175,000 tons each year.[29] Medellín has the biggest research-dedicated building in Colombia, called University Research Building (Spanish:Sede de Investigación Universitaria, SIU),[30] a facility that concentrates the top research groups of theUniversity of Antioquia.[31]
The weather in Medellín is warm year-round with few temperature extremes. As a municipality, Medellín has an area of 382 km2 (147 sq mi). Medellín features a trade-windtropical rainforest climate (Af), albeit a cooler version of this climate that borders closely on atropical monsoon climate (Am), as well as having characteristics of a tropical highland climate (Cfb). Since Medellín is located at 1,495 m (4,900 ft)above sea level, its climate is not as hot as other cities located at the same latitude near the equator. Because of its altitude above sea level and privileged location in the Andes Range, Medellín's weather at times is more characteristic of ahumid subtropical climate than that of atropical climate. The city's average annual temperature is 22 °C (72 °F), and because of its proximity to the equator, its temperature is constant year-round, with minimal temperature variations. Temperatures range from 17 to 28 °C (63 to 82 °F). Because of the former pleasant springlike climate all year, Medellín was known as "La Ciudad de la Eterna Primavera" or "City of the Eternal Spring". The city is located in a valley and many of its districts are on slopes; temperatures can be slightly cooler on the surrounding mountains.
Climate data for Medellín (Olaya Herrera Airport), elevation 1,490 m (4,890 ft), (1991–2020)
Medellín is a city governed by arepublican democratic system as stated in theColombian Constitution of 1991, with decentralized government. Administration is shared by theMayor of Medellín and the Municipal Council, both elected by popular vote.
The municipality is made up of official departments (secretarías) including departments for social mobility, urban culture, social development, education, evaluation and control, government, resources, public works, administrative services, environment, women, and transportation. There are also many departments with a certain autonomy: theOlaya Herrera Airport, the Public Library (Biblioteca Pública Piloto), the College of Antioquia (Colegio Mayor), the Urban Development Enterprise (EDU), the Public Service Enterprise (EPM), the Sport and Recreation Institute (INDER), the General Enterprises of Medellín (EEVVM), the Medellín Bus stations, the General Hospital of Medellín, the health service enterprise "Metrosalud", the Metropolitan Institute of Technology (ITM), theMetro de Medellín, the department for the Administration of the Medellín parks (Metroparques) and Metroseguridad.
The municipality is divided into six zones: The urban zone, which is subdivided into 16comunas (communes). The communes are further divided into 249 statistical neighborhoods. The remaining zones outside the urban zones comprise fivecorregimientos (townships).
Further, the municipality belongs to theMedellín Metropolitan Area, which is made up of ten neighboring municipalities.
The government of the city of Medellín is divided into executive andlegislative branches. Themayor of the city (Alcalde) is publicly elected for a term of four years (just like the president and the governor of any other department in Colombia).
La Alpujarra offices of the mayor of the city and the governor of theAntioquia department
Low tax rates mean Medellín's city administration's social and economic development policies have been funded by the city's ownership of the main energy supplier, Empresas Publicas de Medellín (EPM); 30% of its profits go directly to the city's administrative budget.[6] In addition to infrastructure projects, the city administration has developed a program of cash grants called 'the Medellín Solidaria' program that is very similar toBrazil's highly successfulBolsa Familia and also the city runs the Cultura E program.[6]
According to the city administration, Medellín Solidaria represents an improvement on Colombia's national program, 'Familias en Accion' (Families in Action).[6] The city administration is further responsible for coordinating more than 100 other social programs.[6] Under the Cultura E program, the city administration has established a network of 14 publicly funded business support centers known as CEDEZO, Centros de Desarrollo Empresarial Zonal).[6] The CEDEZOs are found in the poorest areas of Medellín and support the poor in developing business by providing free-of-charge business support services and technical advice.[6]
Also, as part of Cultura E, there is Banco de las Opportunidades that providesmicroloans (up to $2,500 at a cheap interest rate of 0.91% monthly).[6] This has helped create more equal opportunities for all and overcome the barriers to entry to business for poor entrepreneurs with good ideas, but lacking capital, skills and connections.[6] It has also helped develop the local economy with new micro-enterprises.[6]
However, several mayoral candidates for the October 2011 elections have argued the Banco de las Opportunidades's interest rates are too high, loan maturity is too short and it should havegrace periods.[6] They, therefore, suggest a newsmall and medium-sized enterprise (SME) development bank to complement the Banco de las Opportunidades.
Medellín used to be considered one of the most dangerous cities in the world,[36][37] a result of an urban war set off by the drug cartels at the end of the 1980s. However, its homicide rate has decreased by 95% and extreme poverty by 66%, thanks in part to a string of innovative mayors who laid out plans to integrate the poorest and most violent hillside neighborhoods into the city center in the valley below. Medellín is now considered safer than the U.S. cities ofBaltimore,Memphis,St. Louis,Detroit, andNew Orleans, which appear in theCCSPJP's top 50 list.[38]
As the home of theMedellín Cartel funded byPablo Escobar, the city was a victim of the terror caused by the war between the organization headed by Escobar, and competing organizations such as "El Cartel del Valle". However, after the death of Escobar in December 1993, crime rates in the city have decreased dramatically.[39]
Throughout the rest of the 1990s crime rates remained relatively high, although gradually declining from the worst years. In October 2002, PresidentÁlvaro Uribe ordered the military to carry out "Operation Orion", the objective of which was to disband the urban militias of theFARC and theAUC.[39] Between 2003 and 2006 the demobilization of the remaining urban militias of the AUC was completed, with more than 3,000 armed men giving up their weapons.[40]
After the disbanding of the main paramilitary groups, some members briefly reorganized into criminal bands known commonly asAguilas Negras ("Black Eagles"). These groups gained notoriety in Medellín for having called for curfews for the underage population, and having distributed fliers announcing the social cleansing of prostitutes,drug addicts, andalcoholics.[41] In 2008 the extradition of paramilitary leaderDon Berna caused a brief spark in crime wave and increase in killings.[42]
There is a significant disparity in crime rates by neighborhoods, with virtually no homicides inEl Poblado and Conquistadores and higher crime rates in the south west, around the airport and the north of the city. Generally, crime rates increase the further the neighborhood is from the center.[43] From 2010 and 2011, homicides have declined as with crime in general, but there remains a high crime rate in the poorest communities.
3.2 percent of street addresses account for 97 percent of homicides.[44] More than half of the violent deaths are attributed to clashes between criminal gangs in certain parts of the city. In 1991 there were 7,273 murders at a rate of 266 per 100,000 people; in 2017 had suffered 577 murders at a rate of 23 per 100,000 inhabitants. In the city there are more than 1,100 security cameras and more than 7,000 policemen.[45][46]
Headquarters ofBancolombia, the largest commercial bank in Colombia and one of the largest in Latin America, in Medellín
Medellín is Colombia's second most important economic center, afterBogotá. Its economy is led by a powerful group of people from theprivate sector known as theGrupo Empresarial Antioqueño (Antioquian Enterprises Group). The group was formerly known as theSindicato Antioqueño (Antioquian Union) but after being mistaken abroad for a labor union, which hampered its international growth for many years, a new formal name was chosen. It is represented by David Bojanini, head of Grupo Suramericana (a banking, asset management and insurance conglomerate); Carlos Ignacio Gallego ofGrupo Nutresa (food industry); José Alberto Velez ofCementos Argos (a multinational cement company); and Carlos Raúl Yepes, head ofBancolombia. This group has an aggregate market capitalization of approximately US$17 billion and employs more than 80,000 Colombians.[47]
This group also participates in other sectors of the city industry and is an active trader in the Colombian stock exchange. Medellín serves as headquarters for many national and multinational companies.
Medellín's main economic products are steel, textiles,confections, food and beverage, agriculture (from its rural area),public services, chemical products, pharmaceuticals, refined oil, and flowers. Fashion is a major part of the economy and culture of the city. Medellín hosts Latin America's biggest fashion show,Colombiamoda [es].
Former headquarters of Argos Company, the first cement industrial group of Colombia[51]
TheMetropolitan Area of Medellín contributes about 70% of the total GDP of the Department of Antioquia and a bit more than 10% of theeconomy of Colombia.[8] Antioquia is the second-greatest economic region of Colombia. By 2005, Antioquia's GDP was more than US$20,600,000,000 and the top exporting province in Colombia.[52] The Aburrá Valley is the top economy in the department ofAntioquia, and its GDP was US$14,500 million.[8] Medellín is the second-largest economic region in Colombia, afterBogotá.
The 2005 Report of the Economic Colombian Review of Proexport and the International Cooperation Agency of Medellín concluded that Medellín was at the same level of GDP contribution to the national economy as cities likePanama City in Panama, andSan José de Costa Rica.
Medellín created the first Colombianbusiness cluster. The city is the top exporting region of the country, with 1,750 export businesses based in Medellín.[52] The Cluster was created with the support of the Chamber of Commerce of Medellín and the City Administration for an actual total of 21,000 companies that share 40% of total exports, 25% of the regional GDP, and 40% of Metro Area employment.[52] The main economic activities of the Medellín Cluster (MC) are inelectricity generation, textile, fashion design, construction, tourism and business.[53] One goal of the Medellín Cluster is to include health services, an important sector in the local economy.
Ruta N is a non-profit in Medellín which helps foreign companies set up office in Medellín.
According to data released by the Measuring Monetary Poverty and Inequality Mission (Spanish:Misión para el Empalme de las Series de Empleo, Pobreza y Desigualdad, MESEP), in November 2009, the poverty rate in Medellín and its metropolitan area was reduced by 22.5%, from 49.7% to 38.5% during the period from 2002 to 2008. Similarly, the extreme poverty rate decreased by 25.2%, from 12.3% to 9.2%. These results are in line with the increased coverage of basic services such as health, education, and public services in the city. In 2014, the poverty rate decreased to 14.7% and extreme poverty to 2.8%.[54]
The unemployment rate in Medellín and its metropolitan area, as has been the case in Colombia as a whole, has decreased in the past decade. According to data from the National Statistics Department (Spanish: Departamento Administrativo Nacional de Estadística, DANE) unemployment for Medellín and its Metropolitan Area was reduced by 25%, from 14.1%,[55] just above the national average of 13.9% in 2005 to 10.6%,[56] above the national average of 9.9%, in 2015. However, according to DANE, in 2014 Medellín stood out as one of the most unequal cities of Colombia, with a GINI coefficient of 0.506.[54]
There are signs of heavy urban development within the city of Medellín, particularly with the construction of new skyscrapers. Medellín is outpacing all other major Colombian cities, including Bogotá, in the construction and proposed development of new high-rises. As of October 2016, there were 10 skyscrapers, 410 high-rises, 119 buildings under construction in Medellín, including 48 being planned.[57] Other projects that the city has planned are extensions of the city's metro system to nearby suburbs such as Sabaneta. Under construction, the new project is set to open to the public soon.
Medellín was awarded 2013 "Innovative City of the Year" by the Wall Street Journal[58] on March 1 after beating out New York City andTel Aviv.[59]
A "library park" (Spanish:parque biblioteca) is a term first used in Medellín for an urban complex formed by a combination of a library building with ample surrounding green space for public use. These library parks are strategically located in the periphery of the city to address the need for more cultural and education space and public services in less affluent neighborhoods.[60] The development of library complexes and schools is part of an effort at cultural transformation.[61] This project also aims to create centralities inside the intervened areas that help consolidate and give a clearer identity to the communities. They are meant to provide a network of activity centers for the promotion of education, culture, sport, and recreation.
After the initial 2009 program another five libraries were added to the plan for 2011. These libraries are theDoce de Octubre Library Park for Comunas 5 and 6, Noroccidente;Las Estancias Library Park for Comunas 8, 9, and Centroriental;Parque Biblioteca Guayabal for Comuna 15 and Suroccidente; Parque Biblioteca San Cristóbal] for Corregimiento and Occidente; and Parque Biblioteca San Antonio de Prado for Corregimiento and Sur.[64]
The idea of "library parks" has served as a model for library spaces in other countries, most notably theManguinhos Library Park in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
The Medellín Metropolitan Area Library Network is a set of libraries linked together to share resources, efforts, knowledge and experience to improve the educational and cultural conditions of the community. The network consists of over 100 libraries, 29 of which reside in Medellín.[65] The Library Network includes all of Medellín's library parks, as well as other regional libraries, such as the Public Pilot Library and the EPM Library.
The Library Network was a program created as a metropolitan agreement in 2005 thanks to an alliance ofEmpresas Públicas de Medellín, its EPM Foundation, the Mayor of Medellín, and the Pilot Public Library. In 2009, the Library Network was awarded the "Access to Learning Award" by theBill & Melinda Gates Foundation, consisting of one million dollars to the EPM Foundation and the Library Network.[66]
Additional libraries outside of this network include several other private, public, and university libraries.
4 South Bridge, connects the south with the city's downtown.Former Villanueva Sector where the El Prado neighborhood is currently.
Medellín in 2013 won theVeronica Rudge Green Prize in Urban Design, awarded byHarvard University, due to PUI Integral Urban Project Northeast area, designed and implemented by Development Corporation Urbano. Medellín retains very little colonial architecture from the nineteenth century. Although the Aburrá Valley was a hotspot in agriculture and livestock throughout the colonial period, their relative wealth is not expressed in an outstanding and Cartagena, Tunja, Popayán and Bogotá civil and religious architecture. This can be explained by the fact that the population of Medellín was not political and administrative center and a place geographically isolated whose elite invested little in the development of monumental architecture. From the end of the colony remain, but with many transformations, the Candelaria Church and the Church of the Veracruz.
The Church of the Veracruz remains, but with many transformations, from the end of the colonial period.San Antonio Church
The architecture produced in Colombia between 1850 and 1930 is called "Republican". The use of brick and implementation of European historical styles were the main novelty. Enrique Haeusler designed the Guayaquil Bridge in 1879. But it was the French architect Carlos Carré who headlined Republican nineteenth century architecture in Medellín. Carré came to town in 1889 and was hired to design and build the new Episcopal Cathedral and several commercial and residential buildings for different parts of the city, especially in the new neighborhood of Guayaquil. The Metropolitan Cathedral was completed in 1931; also are of authorship Vásquez and Carré buildings, which are located next toPlaza Cisneros. The Medellín Antioquia Railway Station was the work of Enrique Olarte, a work that allowed the definitive urban consolidation in Guayaquil sector. In the twenties Republican architecture reached its peak phase. In this period stand the old Municipal Palace (now the Museum of Antioquia) in 1928, the National Palace and the Palace of Departmental Government (now the Palace of Culture) between 1925 and 1928. The latter two works were designed by the Belgian architectAgustín Goovaerts, both inspired by the Belgian modernist, it applied the Romanesque and Gothic styles respectively. Other works of Goovaerts were the Church of the Sacred Heart (sector Guayaquil), the Church of San Ignacio, among others. The thirties highlighted such constructions of the Prado neighborhood as the Egyptian house and the current Teatro Prado.
The main parks of the city includeBerrío Park in the center of the city;Bolívar Park, a little further north and framed by the Metropolitan Cathedral; and others in more residential areas like Bethlehem Park, El Poblado Park, and Laureles Park. Several modern parks are interactive and have had a positive reception from the people because they are not only places of recreation but also of education. These include Barefoot Park, Wishes Park,Explora Park, and Bicentennial Park (which was recently opened to mark the bicentenary of Colombia).
One of the most visited sites is theArví Ecotourism Park, which has an area of about 20,000 hectares located between the towns of Medellín,Bello,Copacabana, andEnvigado. In its trails, lakes, forests and streams, one can practice various sports and activities like trekking, kayaking, biking, camping, fishing, swimming, sailing rowing, horseback riding, bike tours and picnics. Its promontory position over Medellín offers natural landscapes overlooking over the entire city.[citation needed]
The city is surrounded from above by seven hills, which serve as natural viewpoints of the city and are sites for healthy leisure, recreation, enjoyment, research, sport, culture, education and ecotourism. The hills are El Volador, La Asomadera,Nutibara, Pan de Azúcar, El Salvador, El Picacho and Santo Domingo. In these natural public spaces one can find viewpoints, pre-Hispanic roads, religious icons, culture and Antioquian traditions, bird watching, the most complete herbal living ofAburrá Valley and the very few, if any, remains of early settlers native of Medellín, among other attractions.
Other parks in the city include North Park and Juan Pablo II Park. The Santa Fe Zoo, founded in 1960, has about 1,000 animals from Asia, Africa, and the Americas.
Plaza Cisneros: Located between the EPM Library and the Vásquez and Carre Buildings. It has a forest of light poles, 24 meters (79 feet) high. There are 300 posts with 2100 reflectors (seven per tower) and 170 lamps floor. These elements are mixed in turn with bamboo and water sources. It is a kind of artificial forest, with open spaces for encounters and large crowds.
Botero Plaza: Launched in 2002, is located in front of the main façade of the Museum of Antioquia. It has 7,000 m2 (75,347 sq ft), in which are exhibited permanently in the public space, 23 monumental sculptures byFernando Botero. Attila addition to receiving the prize, awarded the magazine Documents National and American Architecture (Dana), of Argentina, and gave as winners of its 2003 Award Attila Medellín Mayor Luis Perez and former director of Heritage of the Ministry of Culture, Konrad Brunner, considering that they were directly responsible for the demolition of Pasaje Sucre, in Medellín.
Zea Plazuela: Dates from the late nineteenth century and still has some houses with original architecture, also called the Square of Francisco Antonio Zea. In 1932, when the sculptor Marco Tobon Mejia developed sculpture Francisco Antonio Zea. Not until the early 1950s would the place acquire modern features.
Freedom Square: Located in the La Alpujarra, it is under construction and will have an area of 70,000 m2 (753,474 sq ft) and will include government and private agencies. It is designed as a public plaza open to recreation. It will be a center of convergence and coordination of the main activities and pedestrian flows that develop in the administrative and cultural sector of the city.
Plazuela Nutibara: historical and representative of the city site. Its surroundings are located traditional buildings that have been listed as heritage of the city: the Palace of Culture, one of the most valuable architectural buildings; ancient seat of the government of Antioquia; and Nutibara Hotel. It is also located there Cacique Nutibara source, the work of Master Pedro Nel Gómez. It is adjacent to Plaza Botero.
Plazuela San Ignacio: Traditional place of the city, on its eastern flank three historical buildings, the San Ignacio historic headquarters building of the University of Antioquia are located; the San Ignacio Church a jewel of baroque and neoclassical Cloister San Ignacio or Republican style and abroad with Gothic elements in the interior. In the square are the statue of General Francisco de Paula Santander, the bust of Marceliano Vélez and the monument to the centenary of the University of Antioquia.
Plazuela de La Veracruz: Here is located the Church of La Veracruz which gives its name to the Plazuela. It has a bronze fountain and marble monument, a tribute to the hero of independence Atanasio Girardot.
Medellín is considered a top research city in medicine in Colombia, being an exponent of advanced surgical operations in the country and Latin America. Health clinics and dental centers in Medellín have become pioneers in offering high quality services in several medical areas. The University Hospital San Vicente de Paul, thePablo Tobon Uribe Hospital, and Clinical Cardiovascular Santa Maria have received national and international recognition as pioneers in organ transplantation.[67]
América Economía magazine ranked Medellín as having eight of the top 100 hospitals and clinics in Latin America. Its highest ranked hospital was Pablo Tobon Uribe Hospital, which ranked in seventh place in 2014.[68] The Pablo Tobon Uribe Hospital is non-profit and private.
Specialized health centers such as San Vicente Foundation hospitals were recognized with the Silver Category ofLEED certification. This is the only hospital outside of the United States of America to obtain this certification.[69]
Among the most recognized universities with notable research work in medicine are the University of Antioquia, CES University,[70] and UPB University.
Air pollution caused more than 7,000 deaths in 2016 in the city and represents a significant financial cost due to the treatment ofrespiratory diseases.[71]
There are also important technological centers such as the Metropolitan Institute of Technology (ITM), Jaime Isaza Cadavid's Politecnico, andAntioquia Institute of Technology.
During the last decade, the administration of the city has emphasized public education, building schools and libraries in poor quarters. Private schools and colleges have a long tradition in the city, many run by the Catholic Church, private organizations, and foreign institutions. Among them are Gimnasio Internacional de Medellín, The Columbus School (the only SACS-approved school in the city), Theodoro Hertzl School,St. Ignatius Loyola College, Colegio Calasanz, Colegio Colombo Britanico, El Corazonista School, Marymount School, Montemayor Sagrado Corazon, Montessori School, Colegio Fontán, Gimnasio Los Pinares, Gimnasio Los Alcázares,San Jose de la Salle, Instituto Jorge Robledo, theSalesian Technical SchoolPedro Justo Berrío, Colegio Cumbres, Colegio San Marcos, Lycee Français Medellín, Liceo Salazar y Herrera, and 'El Sufragio'Salesian School.
Many non-governmental organizations and official organizations support the development of children and youth from poor communities.Ciudad Don Bosco cares forstreet children.[73] The pacification of the city brought organizations to the poorest quarters to work with youth involved in urban violence, in order to improve their opportunities. Medellín universities, public and private, also played a role, along with official institutions both local and national.
Medellín has two airports,Olaya Herrera Airport (EOH), andJosé María Córdova Airport (MDE), which is located in the city ofRionegro, 29 kilometers (18 miles) east of the city of Medellín. In 2012 the busiest domestic flight route was between Jose Maria Cordova Airport andBogotá while the busiest international route was between Jose Maria Cordova Airport andPanama City.
TheJose Maria Cordova Airport receives international flights from important carriers such asAeromexico,American Airlines,Avianca,Iberia,JetBlue,Spirit Airlines,Air Europa, andLATAM Airlines and cargo airlines such asFed Ex Express, which makes the city accessible from the many regions of America, both for passengers and cargo customers.Avianca, the flag air-carrier of Colombia, has also an important activity at this airport. This airport has direct flights to important international destinations such as Lima, Quito, Mexico City, Madrid, Miami, Houston, and New York City.
Medellín has two transportation terminals, the North Transportation Terminal and the South Transportation Terminal. The city's public transport system includes diesel buses, taxis, tram and an urban train referred to as theMedellín Metro, the only metro system in Colombia.
The Metro connects the city with most of its metropolitan area. It has five lines. Line A goes fromNiquía toLa Estrella (north to south), while Line B goes fromSan Antonio toSan Javier (downtown to west). In addition, Line K and Line J, an air cable car, locally known asMetrocable, serve a depressed and geographically difficult area. Line K begins at Acevedo Station on Metro Line A, and continues uphill, ending at Santo Domingo Savio. Line J begins at San Javier Station on Metro Line B, and continues uphill to La Aurora. Line L does not serve communal areas, rather, it is a tourist-oriented line which is connected toArví Park and is part of a social project to bring retreats and nature to the masses.[74] Colombia has become Latin America's largest user of such complementary transportation service throughout the country.
Western Tunnel, the longest tunnel in Latin America
In 2006, construction began on Metroplús, abus rapid transit service with a dedicated road, much like Bogotá'sTransMilenio, to allow faster transit for the service's buses. The first line opened two years later than planned in 2011 and a second in 2013.[75] The first leg is theTroncal Medellín, which goes from the Universidad de Medellín in the west to Aranjuez in the northeast part of the city. Metroplus will help lessen the city's pollution and traffic, as many old buses will be taken out of service, while the new buses will work with natural gas.[76]
Because of its projects on sustainable transport, the city obtained, along with San Francisco, the 2012 Sustainable Transport Award, given by the Institute for Transport and Development Policy.[77] According to EMBARQ Director Holger Dalkmann, "Medellín pioneered the use of cable cars as a transit alternative in low-income informal settlements in hilly areas, moving 3,000 passengers per hour per direction; a real breakthrough now being replicated in Caracas and Rio de Janeiro,"
Trams returned to Medellín in 2015 after an absence of 64 years.
The Colombia and Latin America's second-largest and most modern tunnel, the Western Tunnel, officially named the Fernando Gomez Martinez Tunnel, is located between Medellín and Santa Fe de Antioquia. It is 4.6 km (3 mi) in length and offers security and service technologies for the users. It was inaugurated on January 20, 2006.[78][79]
Originally,trams in Medellín were the most important transportation until 1950, but, after that, the rapidly increasing population and number of automobiles forcefully closed it in 1951. However, more than 60 years later, a newTranslohr system (rubber-tired "tram"), theAyacucho Tram, the first modern "tram" in Colombia, was opened on September 30, 2015. It is integrated with the metro system and the local bus network.
The average amount of time people spend commuting with public transit in Medellín, for example to and from work, on a weekday is 66 min. 12% 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 11 min, while 14% 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 5.9 km, while 5% travel for over 12 km in a single direction.[80]
The Aburrá Valley contains 58% of the population of theDepartment of Antioquia, and 67% of the Aburrá Valley population lives in the city of Medellín. Of the inhabitants of Medellín, 61.3% were born in the city, 38% in other parts of Colombia and 0.3% in another country.[82]
According to theNational Administrative Department of Statistics, Medellín had, by 2005, a population of 2,223,078 inhabitants, making it the second largest city in Colombia. The metropolitan area of Medellín in 2005 included 3,312,165 inhabitants. There are 5,820 people per square kilometer in the city. There were 130,031 people living in the city townships; 46.7% of the population are male and 53.3% are female. Illiteracy is 5.8% in people older than 5 years old. 98.8% of the households in Medellín have electricity, 97.3% have drinking water, and 91% have a land-line phone.[82]
According to the 2005 DANE census, in that year Medellín registered 33,307 births,[83] slightly fewer than in 2004 (33,615). In 2005 the number of deaths was 10,828, in 2004 11,512.
During the 17th and 18th centuries, Medellín received many immigrants from Spain.[85][86] Most Indigenous peoples died from the introduction of Asiatic diseases, and many of those who survived intermarried with early Spanish settlers, who were mostly men; later, Spanish women also began to immigrate. Thousands of Irish, Scottish and English who settled in Antioquia fought for the Colombian army during independence.[87][88] During the 19th and 20th centuries, immigrants arrived from Italy, Germany, United Kingdom, France, Portugal, Lebanon, Palestine and Syria.[89][90][91][92] Many people from Medellín are referred to asPaisas, people of mainly Spanish ancestry, a lot of them Basque. There is a small Afro-Colombian and Zambo-Colombian (people of Indigenous and African descent) population.
TheChocó Department is just west of Antioquia, and is home to many Afro-Colombian and Zambo-Colombian migrants to Medellín and its vicinity. Migration from the Colombian Caribbean coast has been important, especially that of young people who come to study in Medellín universities and remain to work in the city. The main foreign immigration is ofEcuadorians andVenezuelans in informal trade.
The culture in Medellín is strongly linked to a broader Paisa culture (see next section) whose unique attributes include their Spanish accent, cuisine, and hospitality. Today, Medellín has several cultural attractions for the public including approximately 40 museums, 21 public parks, 28 theaters, and several public libraries.[93] The city also contains several fixtures that have been designatedNational monuments of Colombia. The city is recognized as a "Design City" by UNESCO.
Most people in Medellín areCatholic, as reflected by Medellín's several churches and religious activities. Among the most representative churches are theMetropolitan Cathedral, the largest cathedral in the world built entirely in baked brick. There is also theBasilica of Our Lady of Candelaria, which was the official cathedral until 1931; theChurch of San Ignacio, Baroque on the outside and Colonial on inside; theChurch of San José; theChurch of San Antonio, which has one of the biggest domes in Colombia; theChurch of San José del Poblado, located in the Parque del Poblado where the first European settlement in theAburrá Valley was founded in 1616; and theChurch of Nuestra Señora de Belén. All of these churches have religious art and are located in the center of the city, which facilitates journeys among them.
In December, the city is covered with thousands of fairy lights, creating the famousAlumbrados (Christmas lights), which are considered by theNational Geographic as one of the ten most beautiful in the world,[94] and which can be seen mainly onLa Playa Avenue and the Medellín River.
Plaza Mayor is the epicenter of large events and business. By a decree of the municipal government, between 1980 and 1990 all developments or tall buildings necessarily included a sculpture of a famous artist. That is one reason why Medellín has the largest number of sculptures per square kilometer in Colombia.[citation needed]
Furthermore, the city has several festivals and exhibitions year-round. Thesilletero tradition is also closely tied to the region and is considered a part of Colombiancultural heritage. Since 1957, this tradition has continued in the Silleta Parade that takes place during the annualFestival of the Flowers, where silletas designed with flower arrangements are carried.
Works of many prominent artists, both local and foreign, can be seen on the streets of the city. Some artists who stand out are the mastersRodrigo Arenas Betancur andFernando Botero.
The inhabitants of Medellín are often calledAntioqueños (people of Antioquia) after their province, rather thanMedellínenses (people of Medellín) after their city. They are also often known asPaisas, a name which some suggest comes from the coffee growers. The termPaisa comes from the wordpaisano, meaning "fellow countryman".Paisas make up one of the five different regional cultures within Colombia. In addition to Antioquia, thePaisa region includes the departments ofCaldas,Risaralda,Quindio and some towns ofValle del Cauca andTolima. Although Paisa culture is dominant in Medellín, the so-called "Paisa Capital", the city is becoming more cosmopolitan, now offering music from other regions of Colombia (Vallenato andChocó), and a variety of restaurants including Chinese, Cuban, and Argentinian.
The Paisa culture has a Spanish background, and is traditionally Catholic, and entrepreneurial.[citation needed] Paisas are said to speak softly and slowly, to smile easily, and to love music, poetry, soccer, bargaining in the markets, and parties. They are proud of their city, and work hard to keep it clean, stemming from the campaign begun in the 1980s, "Depende tambien de ti, darle amor a Medellín" (It depends on you too to give love to Medellín). The Medellín weekend nightlife, in discos, pubs, parks, and certain dedicated streets, is traditionally calledrumba.[95]
Festival of the Flowers is held late July to early August. The Festival, plus many other activities and festivities, is the main axis theDesfile de Silleteros, a colorful and artistic parade of flowers filled saddles on the back for their own grower and already well known internationally.
Christmas lighting in Medellín is a traditional seasonal event where the city hangs millions of Christmas lights and holds light shows and other cultural events. National Geographic ranked Medellín Christmas lights display as one of the top 10 places to see Christmas lights in the world.
International Poetry Festival is an annual congregation of poets, who give at public their poems and readings of a peculiar way mass in parks, auditoriums, neighborhoods and towns near Medellín. This event has been awarded theRight Livelihood Award, the prelude to the Nobel Peace Prize by the Right Livelihood Foundation of Sweden, and its aim is to strive for peace through poetry.[96] The XVII International Poetry Festival of Medellín was performed between July 14 and 22, 2007, with the participation of over 80 poets from around 55 nations.[citation needed]
International Tango Festival is an expression of the tango culture that Medellín adopted as their own. This is a legacy of the bardCarlos Gardel, who died in this city in a plane crash in 1935. Among the activities of the Festival highlights the Tangovía, where people took to the streets to dance, listen totango,milonga and obviously having fun at the behest of culture.
Book and Culture Festival is one of the most important cultural events in Medellín, named itself Festival, rather than Fair, due to its magical atmosphere that revolves around art, books and culture.[97] The Festival is hosted for 10 days at the Botanical Garden in the month of September, and it is held with the participation of both national and international participants and exhibitors from all genres. The Book and Culture Festival is free entry, and aims to promote reading through different workshops. This event is sponsored by the Mayor of Medellín.
Feria internacional del caballo Since 2009 was added to the horse paisa culture the Feria internacional del caballo, held in October, an exhibition with participants from several countries and involving varied horse races.[98]
Museum of Antioquia was the second museum founded in Colombia and the first in the department ofAntioquia. It is located at the heart of the old city hall next toBotero Plaza.
Museum of Modern Art of Medellín (MAMM), founded in 1978, has a valuable collection of contemporary art comprising sculptures, assemblages, paintings, photographs, and prints by local and foreign artists. One of its major attractions is the collection of almost all the works of the Antioquian painterDébora Arango. Another of its main attractions is the projection of cinema-art. It is also headquarters of the International Biennale of Video in September.
University Museum, University of Antioquia, was created in 1942, is located in University City. The area ofanthropology exhibits a collection of 18 000 pieces of pre-Columbianpottery,stone,shell, metal and textiles, the second richest in the country, and a complete ethnographic collection. The area of visual arts includes contemporary painting and sculpture, and includes 1200 pieces of contemporary artists. The area of History at the university collects in a thousand pieces and documents the 200 years of existence of the university, and the natural sciences section displays 5400 pieces, including native and exotic stuffed animals, skins for study, minerals and fossils.
Museum El Castillo, built in 1930 in medieval Gothic and open to the public in 1971, has French-style gardens, explosions room, library and concert hall for 250 people. It has permanent exhibits of porcelain and glass, stained glass, music, sculpture, piano and ballet.
Interactive Museum EPM environment is part ofBarefoot Park. Receives 1000 visit a day, mostly students. This is an educational tour of 22 rooms spread over four buildings in which, with technological resources and entertaining way, is explained and interacts with the physical principles of water, energy, gas and telecommunications. It is funded and managed byEmpresas Públicas de Medellín.
Mineralogy Museum is located in the School of Mines of theNational University of Colombia. It has a permanent exhibition of a total of 2778 specimens; its collections are recognized by mineralogists and experts among the best museums in South America.
San Pedro Cemetery Museum was built in 1842, became a museum in 1998 and declared anational monument in 1999. This place is an integral part of cultural and architectural heritage of Medellín. Although it falls under the category of sculpture and architecture works representing the funerary art, the space has begun to emerge as a new venue for artistic dissemination. It has preserved collections of local and national art and, on full moon nights, there are concerts, shows, storytelling, theater and dance. Undoubtedly the most significant are the funerary monuments in memory of prominent figures in national history.
House Museum Master Pedro Nel Gómez was the home of the masterPedro Nel Gómez; it became a museum in 1975 with the donation by the artist and his family of the works in it. It has 1500 works, 200 square meters (2,200square feet) of fresco painting and an art library with over 500 volumes.
Casa Museo Gardeliana disseminates the culture and history of thetango. It was declared a Cultural Heritage and Historic Monument by the Council of Medellín in 2002. It was founded on February 14, 1973, by the Argentine Leonardo Nieto Jarbon in the neighborhood Manrique, in a simple, traditional house. The tango singerCarlos Gardel met his death in Medellín in accident airplane crash. There has long existed in the city a deep tango culture. Some plaques testify the visit to the house of personalities from politics, entertainment and literature, as the Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges.
Parque Explora is an interactive museum focused on science, technology and many other aspects of knowledge and creativity. It provides, among other attractions, the largest freshwater aquarium in South America that houses fish of the Amazon and Orinoco rivers.
Planetarium of Medellín is located in front of theParque de Los Deseos. The space includes telescopes and a projection room for 300 people, a dome 17.5 meters (57 feet) in diameter, and permanent exhibitions for all ages on Earth and space. Its services include an auditorium, library and a permanent exhibition on space history.
Medellín is well known for having great public art, and there are many buildings that have prominent sculptures outside them. In addition to the sculpture park of Fernando Botero, there are many other sculptural gems by a variety of contemporary and modernist artists scattered around the city. They include works by the artist Hugo Zapata amongst others.
The cuisine of Medellín is again tied to the larger culture of Antioquia. A typical regional dish is thebandeja paisa, meaning the "paisa platter", which usually includes beans, rice, pork cracklings (or "chicharrón"),chorizo, a fried egg,patacónes, salad and avocado. It is traditionally served on a tray slab or wood. It is traditional to consume meals with arepas, which are made with cooked, milled, and mixed corn without further ingredients.
For breakfast, it is common to accompany the food withhot chocolate and possibly a slice of cheese to dunk in the drink.Parva is a traditional component of the Antioquian gastronomy as well. This name is given to a wide variety of sweet and savory baked goods, includingpan de queso,pan de bono,buñuelos, and pastries.
Other foods that are typical in the region stem from Colombian food industries, such asPostobón's Colombian soft drinks, the regionalaguardiente known asAguardiente Antioqueño, and Jet chocolate bars.
Medellín has developed itsCultural Tourism through various activities such as cooking workshops, dancing classes or arts and craft. Medellín is an official Creative Tourism City[100] thanks to its cultural richness and its wide array of activities between tradition and innovation.
A popular sport in Medellín, and generally throughout Antioquia, ishorseback riding; therefore, it has encouraged trade and production of tools and equipments for this activity, such as chairs and horseshoes for export. During the Festival of the Flowers, thecavalcades achieved aGuinness World Record in 1996 and 1999.
The city also has two Colombian professional basketball teams: theArrieros of Antioquia and the Mountain Academy.
TheAtanasio Girardot Sports Complex is the main sports arena complex of the city. It covers an area of 280,000 m2 (3,013,895 sq ft) and encompasses fields and stadiums for practice and competition for 34 sports. This is the headquarters of most professional sports leagues in Medellín. The sports complex has hosted several events, including the2011 FIFA U-20 World Cup, the2010 South American Games, and the2001 Copa América.
In 2011, Medellín hosted the 15th IAAFPan American Race Walking Cup. Athletes and teams from the countries in North, South, and Central American as well as the Caribbean Islands participated. In 2013, Medellín hosted the IAAFPan American Junior Athletics Championships for track and field. Again, athletes and teams from the countries in North, South, and Central America as well as the Caribbean Islands participated. The junior athletes competed as a test trial for the2018 Summer Youth Olympics.
Another representative sport in the city iscycling. Its respective sport venue is the Martin Rodriguez Velodrome, named after Colombianroad racing cyclistMartín Emilio Rodríguez.BMX is also catered for, and its main venue is the BMX Track Antonio Roldán Betancur. The retired cycling three-timeTour de France stage winner and World Time-Trial ChampionSantiago Botero and the Olympic Gold Medalist and multiple BMX World ChampionMariana Pajón are both from Medellín.
EnCicla is the name of Medellín'sbicycle sharing system, the first bike sharing program in Latin America and the only one of its kind in Colombia. It was the shared winner of theSustainable Transport Award in 2012 along withSan Francisco. EnCicla is the result of an agreement between the metropolitan area of the Valley of Aburrá andEAFIT University. EnCicla is integrated within the city's existing infrastructure of cycle routes, mass transit, and public transport systems. It is available from Monday to Friday from 5:30 am to 8 pm from every EnCicla station.
The coat of arms, flag and anthem of the city, has the recognition of official symbols of the municipality of Medellín according to Decree No. 151 of February 20, 2002, and as emblems of the city are part of the corporate image of management municipal, and therefore are present in the acts, events and official media in which these should appear by its representative character.
TheMedellín coat of arms is the oldest emblem of the city, having its origins in a grant by KingCharles II of Spain by royal decree issued in Madrid on March 31 of 1678:
...On a blue field shield, a very thick and round tower, battlemented, an inescutcheon of fifteen parts – seven blue and eight gold, on each of the sides a smaller tower, and in between them an image of Our Lady on a cloud with her son in her arms...
Heraldic version
Versions of the municipality bodies
With the shape called modern French style
Version used by the Mayor
Version used by the Council
However, a more refined and structured in heraldic language, though not official, would be:
In anAzure field, a round tower of gold stands, masoned and clarified by sable, with a checkered escutcheon of 15 pieces – 7 blue and 8 gold (coat of arms ofHouse of Portocarrero) – stamped with an ancient crown of gold between its two towers, with a cloud upon which stands the image of Our Lady of Candelaria carrying the Child in her left arm, a candle in her right hand, radiant, she is flanked by forming clouds from each county.
First coat of arms of MedellínCoat of Arms of Medellín in 1678
The blazon has remained over time since it was granted, without further changes to the aesthetics, it is noteworthy that there are different stylistic versions between the Mayor and City Council also meets aesthetic not heraldic standards.
To strengthen the links with the region, the municipality adopted theflag of the Department of Antioquia, which was added to the coat of arms of the city, so that these could make difference. The flag consists of two horizontal stripes of equal proportions, the white top and green bottom, and in the middle between two strips is located the coat. The white color symbolizes purity, integrity, obedience, firmness and eloquence. The green represents hope, abundance, freedom and faith.
The anthem of the city of Medellín is "Anthem of Antioquia", according to Decree No. 151 of February 20, 2002, Article 10, which says: "Anthem of Medellín. To unify the ideals of the region the Antioquia anthem is adopted (lyrics byEpifanio Mejia and music by Gonzalo Vidal) as the Anthem of the Municipality of Medellín. It will be sung in all official functions where the Mayor of Medellín is present."
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