
Ciudad Guayana from space, 2005
'Ciudad Guayana' is a
city in
Bolívar State,
Venezuela. It lies south of the
Orinoco, where the river is joined by the
Caroní River. The city, officially founded in
1961, is actually composed of the old town of San Félix and the new town of
Puerto Ordaz, which lie either side of the Caroní and are connected by three bridges. The city stretches 40 kilometers along the south bank of the Orinoco. With approximately 800,000 people, it is a large city by Venezuelan standards. It is also the country's fastest-growing city, due to its important iron industry.
It's one of Venezuela's five most important ports, since most goods produced in Bolívar are shipped through it into the Atlantic Ocean, via the Orinoco river. Ciudad Guayana is also the location of the
Second Orinoco crossing.
History
Ciudad Guayana was founded in 1961 as a project by the
Corporación Venezolana de Guayana, merging two towns on both of the riversides of the Caroni, San Félix and Puerto Ordaz as a single city. Since then, many industries have settled in it, since its geographical position gives it many advantages, it's a centerpiece between cities such as
Upata and
Ciudad Bolívar, two of
Bolívar State's most important cities.
Since its foundation it has grown from two fledgling towns into the Guayana region's most important industrial center, and a hub of growth in an otherwise typically underpopulated region of
Venezuela.
Much critique has been made about its design, which was created by a number of planners from MIT and Harvard in the early 1960s. Lisa Peattie's "A View From the Barrio" is a good discussion of the adverse social effects that occur when a modernist city is placed without regard for context (social, economic, cultural, or climatological) in the middle of nowhere.
External links
★
"Guayana City, (Puerto Ordaz & San Felix)" VenezuelaTuya, photographs of the city
★
BBC article in a Puerto Ordaz
aluminium plant
Lisa Peattie "A View From the Barrio"