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Santutxu

Santutxu

FieldValue
nameSantutxu
settlement_typeNeighbourhood
image_skylineSantutxu1.jpg
image_captionView of Santutxu from Zamakola
image_size280px
population_total32,881
population_demonymSantutxutarra
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameSpain Spain
subdivision_type1Autonomous community
subdivision_name1Basque Country
subdivision_type2Province
subdivision_name2Biscay
subdivision_type3City
subdivision_name3Bilbao
subdivision_type4District
subdivision_name4[[Image:Escudo de Bilbao-Begoña.svg15px]] Begoña
timezoneCET
utc_offset+1
timezone_DSTCEST
utc_offset_DST+2
postal_code_typePostal code
postal_code48001 – 48015
area_code_typeDialing code
area_code+34 94
blank_name_sec1Official language(s)
blank_info_sec1Basque
Spanish

Spanish Santutxu is a neighbourhood of the Spanish city of Bilbao. It belongs to the 4th urban district, named Begoña. It is a popular residential neighbourhood which has a significant number of small businesses and has received some waves of immigration in the last years, particularly Romanians. The Begoña district consists of three neighbourhoods: Santutxu, Begoña and Bolueta.

According to research on population density, and data from the Bilbao City Council, Santutxu has the third most densely populated sq/km in Europe, with about 41.378 residents per sq/km, when considering districts of a certain size coming in third place after L'Hospitalet de Llobregat in Greater Barcelona and La Goutte d’or in Paris, neighbourhoods which have slightly more than 50.000 residents per sq/km. However, there is a popular myth among locals that Santutxu is the most densely populated neighbourhood in Europe.

History

Santutxu (meaning little Saint in Basque), owes its name to a hermitage which was dedicated to Francisco de Paula. This hermitage was founded in 1737 by Francisco Fernando de Barrenechea among others, and was built with the sole purpose of enabling its colonists to hear masses without moving to Begoña church. Since both the hermitage and the Saint figure inside were small sized, it was popularly given the name Santutxu, Santuchu in Spanish. Moreover, the word Santutxu is the result of the union of two basque words, santu which means holy in basque and txu which is a diminutive suffix, also in basque.

In those first years, every second of April was celebrated in honor of San Francisco de Paula with a Major Mass of great solemnity. Representatives of the Hall of the República de Begoña would attend this event, as well as members of the clergy that would take part in every religious event back in those days, where rockets, drumming and of course, a typical homemade Basque wine named txakoli or chacolí in Spanish, were the order of the day.

In 1925, the church of Begoña was annexed (and with it, the neighbourhood of Santutxu) to Bilbao. In the 20th century it went from being a semi-rural zone with great sandlots, to a highly populated neighbourhood, especially after the building and demographic growth of the 1960s.

Luis Briñas Public school is a detached building in Santutxu, located on Iturriaga street, near the Campa de Basarrate. It is monumentally protected and was designed by the architect Pedro Ispizua Susunaga (Bermeo, 1895 - Bilbao, 1976), who also designed the del Tigre, the Mercado de la Ribera, the pergola of Parque Casilda Iturrizar or the Kiosco del Arenal.

In Santutxu, according to the Bilbao Hall census data of 2008, there are 33,346 inhabitants.

Famous people from Santutxu

  • Javier Salgado, player for Bilbao Basket, formerly of CB Estudiantes and Lagun Aro Bruesa Gipuzkoa Basket
  • Ibai Gómez, footballer, player for Deportivo Alavés.
  • Najwa Nimri, actress, musical artist.

Events in Santutxu

  • "Santutxu pintxotan" is a gastronomic event and contest for catering professionals from Santutxu which takes place once a year in some bars of the neighbourhood.{{cite web | access-date =22 May 2016

  • "Premios Santutxu y más" is an event created by the journal of the neighbourhood to give awards to those relevant people, organisations or entities that have appeared in its pages during the last year.

Transports

Santutxu metro station elevator

Bilbobus

LineItineraryFrequency (minutes)
13San Ignacio - Txurdinaga15'
34Otxarkoaga - Santutxu30´
40La Peña - Plaza Biribila20´
43Garaizar - Santutxu30´
48Santutxu - Lezeaga20´
77El Peñascal - Mina del Morro12´

Bilbao Underground

There are two underground stations (Metro Bilbao):

  • Santutxu station, which has two exits, one in Karmelo Street and another one in Zabalbide Street.
  • Basarrate station which exits to Basarrate Square.

References

References

  1. (28 March 2018). "The Shared History of Europe's Densest Neighborhoods". Bloomberg.com.
  2. (2008). "BILBAO zenbatekoetan".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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