Jump to content

Cúcuta

Coordinates: 7°53′39″N 72°30′14″W / 7.89417°N 72.50389°W / 7.89417; -72.50389
From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cúcuta
City
Official seal of Cúcuta
Nickname: 
City without borders
Motto: 
More progress!
Map of Cúcuta in the Norte de Santander Department. Urban in red, municipality in dark gray
Map of Cúcuta in the Norte de Santander Department. Urban in red, municipality in dark gray
Coordinates: 7°53′39″N 72°30′14″W / 7.89417°N 72.50389°W / 7.89417; -72.50389
CountryColombia
DepartmentNorte de Santander
FoundationJune 17, 1733[1]
Government
 • MayorMaria Eugenia Riascos
Area
 • City1,176 km2 (454 sq mi)
Elevation
325 m (1,066 ft)
Population
 (2005-2006 Census)[2]
 • City1,158,672
 • Density990/km2 (2,600/sq mi)
 • Metro
1,698,176
Time zoneUTC-05 (Eastern Time Zone)
Websitewww.alcaldiadecucuta.gov.co

Cúcuta (pron. IPA koo`koo-tä), or San Jose de Cúcuta, is the capital of the Norte de Santander Department, in Colombia. Cúcuta is an important city in northeastern Colombia because of where it is; on the border with Venezuela. People from Cúcuta are called cucuteños.

The area has grown fast since the 1960s, especially the suburbs of Villa del Rosario and Los Patios.

The city has developed with the building of six overpasses, a convention center, a new bus terminal, a new Integrated Massive Transportation System called Metrobus, the modernization of state owned schools, the recovery of Cucuta's downtown, and the duplication of the capacity of the General Santander Stadium. New industries are expected to come from Venezuela and to place their factories in Cucuta aiming at exporting through the Colombia Trade Promotion Agreement between Colombia and the United States.[3]

Simón Bolívar captured Cúcuta in 1813 and set out from there on his march to Caracas. At Cúcuta the constituent congress of 1821 met to draft the constitution of Greater Colombia (present day Venezuela, Ecuador and Colombia).

The city was largely destroyed by an earthquake on 18 May 1875, but was soon rebuilt.

In 1939, Cúcuta had 59,323 people. In 1990, it had 532,564. In 2005, the metropolitan area had 950,000 people.

Battle of Cúcuta

[change | change source]

The Battle of Cúcuta was important for the moral importance that gave Bolivar advantages to release to Venezuela. The battle began at 9:00 AM of the 28 of February 1813 and finished at noon. There were 400 men in the control of Simón Bolivar and 800 under Spanish General Ramon Correa. Two died and 14 were hurt in the liberating troops and 20 dead and 40 hurt in the Spanish troops.

Earthquake of Cúcuta

[change | change source]

Also known as the Earthquake of the Andes happened the May 18 of 1875 at 11:15 AM. It completely destroyed Cúcuta, Villa del Rosario, San Antonio del Tachira and Capacho also causing serious damage to the Venezuelan people in San Cristóbal, La Mulata, Rubio, Michelena, La Grita, and Colón, among others. It was felt in Bogota and Caracas.

Geography

[change | change source]
Satellite photo of Cúcuta, Colombia.

Cúcuta is on a plateau in the Cordillera Oriental of the Colombian Andes.[4] The official metropolitan area includes the municipalities of Villa del Rosario, Los Patios, El Zulia, and Puerto Santander. All four neighboring municipalities contain extensive rural areas despite recent urbanization.

Cúcuta and Norte de Santander have many rivers, none of them with pollution problems, being the Pamplonita River, the Guaramito River, the San Miguel River and the Zulia River the most important.[5]

Cúcuta has a municipal area of 1176 km² and is at 302 feet above sea level. The average temperature of 28 °C (82.4 °F) with an average humidity of 65%. Its medium annual precipitation is of 1,041mm. There are two rain seasons, between March-May and September-November. The dry months of the year are December and January with a medium precipitation of 58mm.[6]

Cúcuta has an agroindustry that mainly produces milk products and liquors. The border with Venezuela means the major Colombian commercial centers, banks, and warehouses have offices in the city.[7]

US - Colombia Free Trade Agreement implications for Cúcuta

Colombia signed a Free Trade Agreement with the United States. There was opposition from Venezuela. Despite its opposition, industries from that country are constructing their infrastructure in Cúcuta to export their products to the United States, registering their products as if they were Colombian, an strategy that would allow them to export without paying certain tariffs. For that reason, Cúcuta is expected to become an industrial city.[3]

Shopping Malls

  • Shopping Mall Unicentro
  • Shopping Mall VENTURA Plaza (En construcción)
  • Shopping Mall VIVERO
  • Shopping Mall OITI
  • Shopping Mall Plaza de Los Andes
  • Shopping Mall Gran Boulevard
  • Shopping Mall Bolívar

Cúcuta is also known as the "Ciudad sin fronteras" (City without borders), "La ciudad de los arboles" (The city of the trees), "La hermosa villa" (The beautiful ville), y "Ciudad verde" (Green city)

The city is served by one transportation terminal and the Camilo Daza Airport, which is north of the city. In general, the more prosperous areas are along and above west (Caobos, La Riviera and some places of the center) and to the east.[source?]

The state owned university, the Francisco de Paula Santander University (UFPS), is in the northeastern part of the city. There are several private universities of varying quality.

Main monuments

  • The monument of the Battle of Cúcuta
  • The monument of Juana Rangel de Cuellar, the founder of Cúcuta
  • The monument of Camilo Daza, in the Camilo Daza International Airport.

Main parks

  • Santander Park is the main park of the city and is in front of the city hall.
  • Colón Park Constructed to honor to Christopher Columbus.
  • Simón Bolivar Park constructed to honor Simón Bolivar and donated by the Consulate of Venezuela in Cúcuta.

Green City

[change | change source]

The generation of cucuteños (people from Cúcuta) and the legion of foreigners who reconstructed the city after the 1875 earthquake planted trees which grew fruits called clemones that had acid and bitter fruits with which the boys played. Soon they were replaced by acacias, peracos and almond trees. In Cúcuta the love for the trees is preached and applied, and cucuteño (people from Cúcuta) respect someone who has planted one in front of his house. For this reason Cúcuta is well-known as the city forest of Colombia.

Education

[change | change source]

The basic education and the high school education are in Colombian "Calendary A" for schools (from February to November).

Schools

  • Colegio Salesiano
  • Colegio Calasanz
  • Colegio La Salle
  • Colegio Santo Angel de la Guarda
  • Colegio Santa Teresa
  • Colegio Gimnasio Domingo Savio
  • Gimnasio Los Almendros
  • Colegio Carmen Teresiano.

Universities

  • Universidad de Santander
  • Universidad Libre de Colombia
  • Universidad de Pamplona
  • Universidad Simón Bolivar
  • Universidad Antonio Nariño
  • Universidad Francisco de Paula Santander

Many important personalities from Colombia are from Cúcuta such as the first President of Colombia, Francisco de Paula Santander, known as the man of the laws and Fabiola Zuluaga, tennis player,[8] Virgilio Barco, a former president of Colombia, Marino Vargas Villalta, businessman; his grandson, Juan Jose Germán Vargas, tennis player and the musician Elias M. Soto.

References

[change | change source]
  1. "Cities and towns foundations". Luis Ángel Arango Library. Archived from the original on 2019-01-07. Retrieved 2008-01-07.
  2. http://www.dane.gov.co/files/investigaciones/poblacion/series_proyecciones/Dptos/norte_sant.xls
  3. 3.0 3.1 Comite Empresarial: TLC Archived 2006-10-09 at the Wayback Machine (in Spanish) comiteempresarial.org Accessed 15 October 2006.
  4. Biblioteca Luis Angel Arango: Geografia Cucuta Archived 2010-08-18 at the Wayback Machine (in Spanish) lablaa.org Accessed 15 October 2006.
  5. Ministerio del Medio Ambiente: Colombia; Rio de Cucuta Archived 2003-05-11 at Archive.today (in Spanish) minambiente.gov.co Accessed 15 October 2006.
  6. Instituto de Estudios Ambientales IDEAM: Temperatura Cucuta Archived 2007-10-14 at the Wayback Machine (in Spanish) ideam.gov.co Accessed 15 October 2006.
  7. Greatest Cities: Cucuta (in Spanish) greatestcicites.com Accessed 15 October 2006.
  8. Azapedia: Fabiola Zuluaga (in Spanish) asapedia.com Accessed 15 October 2006.

Other websites

[change | change source]