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Urca

Coordinates:22°56′56″S43°09′56″W / 22.94889°S 43.16556°W /-22.94889; -43.16556
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For theRomanian village, seeViişoara, Cluj. For the astrophysical cooling process, seeUrca process.
Neighborhood in Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Urca
Neighborhood
Urca is located in Rio de Janeiro
Urca
Urca
Location in Rio de Janeiro
Show map of Rio de Janeiro
Urca is located in Brazil
Urca
Urca
Urca (Brazil)
Show map of Brazil
Coordinates:22°56′56″S43°09′56″W / 22.94889°S 43.16556°W /-22.94889; -43.16556
CountryBrazil
StateRio de Janeiro (RJ)
Municipality/CityRio de Janeiro
ZoneSouth Zone

Urca is a residential neighborhood inRio de Janeiro,Brazil, with a population of nearly 7,000. Although most of the neighborhood dates from the 1920s, parts of it are much older. What is now called theForte São João, a military base at the foot of theSugarloaf Mountain, is where the firstPortuguese settlement in Rio was founded byEstácio de Sá on March 1, 1565.[1] The French had arrived 12 years earlier and founded a settlement, calledFrance Antarctique, close to what is now Flamengo and Gloria districts, in downtown Rio.[2] The French, riven by internal disputes between Catholics and Protestants,[3] were massacred by the Portuguese and their Indian allies in attacks organised from here, expelling them from the nearbyVillegagnon Island (named after the French commanderNicolas Durand de Villegaignon).[4] The street now called Rua São Sebastião, in Urca, which leads from behind the fort to theUrca casino, was originally a trail from the Portuguese fort skirting the edge of the sea to the mainland along the peninsula that houses the Sugar Loaf and a smaller hill, the Morro da Urca. Rua São Sebastião thus has some claim to be the oldest street in Rio.[5]

History

[edit]
Military School of Praia Vermelha in 1888.
Escola de Comando e Estado-Maior do Exército

Building space in Rio is restricted by the city's geography, which presents physical barriers to urban expansion. The notion of filling in part of the shallow bay around the Morro Vermelho and building a neighborhood on it was mooted periodically in the nineteenth century, and in the 1880s a development company was formed for the purpose, Urbanização Carioca. It has been suggested that the company's acronym, Urca, gave the neighbourhood its name. However, some historians contest this, identifying the name Urca already stamped in 18th century maps.[6] "Urca", in old Portuguese tradition, designates a small and large cargo ship.[citation needed] Legal wrangles over financing and land titles delayed work for a generation, but the landfill began shortly after the conclusion ofWorld War I and the first houses were built in 1922. The centrepiece of the new neighbourhood was a cassino, originally conceived as a competitor to the newly installed cassino in the luxury Copacabana Palace hotel, in those days a rather longer and more inconvenient haul from downtown Rio.

Military Institute of Engineering
Praia Vermelha beach seen from the Sugar Loaf
In the foreground, the Sugar Loaf cable car. In the background, commercial buildings.
Praia Vermelha (Red Beach) with view of Urca and Sugar Loaf hills

Photos of the area in the 1930s show lots divided up, a low sea wall, individual houses and the trees so characteristic of the area now as saplings. The developers of Urca divided up the neighbourhood into lots and sold them to small investors, many of them recent European immigrants, especially Portuguese, of relatively modest means – the richer middle class headed for the more glamorous neighbourhoods ofCopacabana andLeme, on the other side of Praia Vermelha. The heavy military presence around Urca in the coup-prone 1920s was also a disincentive for those with money to move into the area. Many of the present inhabitants of Urca are the descendants of families who bought houses or plots when the area was originally developed.

Most of Urca's residential houses date from the late 1920s to the late 1940s and are a portfolio of house styles popular at the time: art deco houses and apartment buildings, the faux Spanish colonial style (locally called Manuelino style after the 16th-century Portuguese kingManuel I) and mock Tudor houses. The seafront Avenida Luis Alves has a number of modest apartment buildings, most from the 1950s and 1960s, but to a far lesser extent than any other neighbourhood in theZona Sul. The commercial Rua Marechal Cantuária which leads traffic into the heart of Urca is the only street to have suffered significant redevelopment, but even then at a low level and very little since the 1960s. It is much used by filmmakers andnovela producers looking for period settings.[citation needed]

The casino flourished and was a fixture of Rio's social scene in the prewar and immediate postwar period. SingerCarmen Miranda was discovered by a Hollywood producer visiting the casino in 1938, where she was performing. She rented a small house on Rua São Sebastião, now indicated by a plaque on the wall which is the only one in Rio commemorating a famous person's house.[citation needed] The casino also played a minor role in the history ofastrophysics. Two scientists in the casino, discussing a model explaining neutrino emission patterns in the cooling of stars, named it after the casino when they noticed how rapidly money, like energy pulsing from a dying star, disappeared from the roulette table.

In 1946 a federal ban on casinos put the Cassino da Urca out of business. The building was later acquired by TV Tupí, a television station owned byAssis Chateaubriand, the first Brazilian media mogul. TV Tupi built a new frontage for the building onto the beach, increasing its internal space and turning the curved 1930s exterior into a plain right-angled building. The TV Tupi studio was used forChacrinha, a variety program which ran on weekend afternoons from the 1960s to the 1980s, with an enormous national audience. A slot onChacrinha was highly sought after for upcoming musicians, dancers and actors. The studios closed in the late 1980s, and the casino was left abandoned until 2008. It is currently being renovated to serve as a design institute.[citation needed]

Forte São João is a typical early seventeenth-century Portuguese fort, like many others around the country, with several original cannons. A number ofArt Deco buildings are nearby, including a gymnasium built in 1932. A football field next to the gymnasium was used as a training ground by the England squad in the 2014 World Cup.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Pombo, R. (2000).História do Brasil. Benjamin de Aguila.
  2. ^Tasso Fragoso, A. (2004).Os franceses no Brasil. Bibliex.
  3. ^LERY, J. (1994).Histoire d'un voyage fait en la terre de Brésil. Livre de Poche. but also, THEVET, A. (1992).Les singularités de la France Antarctique.
  4. ^GAFFAREL, P. (1992).Histoire du Brésil Français au XVIème siècle. Klinsieck.
  5. ^Gerson, B. (2000).História das ruas do Rio. Lacerda.
  6. ^Thiesen, I. (1998).Urca, fragmentos discursivos. UniRio.
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