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San Antonio de Padua

San Antonio de Padua
The Church of San Antonio de Padua during the July 9, 2007 snowstorm, the first in the Buenos Aires area since 1918.
The Church of San Antonio de Padua during the July 9, 2007 snowstorm, the first in the Buenos Aires area since 1918.
Coat of arms of San Antonio de Padua
Coat of arms
San Antonio de Padua is located in Greater Buenos Aires
San Antonio de Padua
San Antonio de Padua
Location in Greater Buenos Aires
Coordinates: 34°40′S 58°42′W / 34.667°S 58.700°W / -34.667; -58.700Coordinates: 34°40′S 58°42′W / 34.667°S 58.700°W / -34.667; -58.700
Country  Argentina
Province Buenos Aires province flag.png Buenos Aires
Partido Merlo
Elevation 20 m (70 ft)
Population (2001 census [INDEC])
 • Total 37,775
 • Density 6,039.2/km2 (15,641/sq mi)
CPA Base B 1718
Area code(s) +54 220

San Antonio de Padua, or plainly Padua, is a city in the Greater Buenos Aires, in Argentina. It is located in Merlo Partido. The city has an area of 6.25 km2 (2 sq mi) and a population of around 38,000.

The name commemorates the village founded by Francisco de Merlo, Villa San Antonio del Camino in 1755, named for the Portuguese saint Anthony of Padua. The city is on one of the major rail and road arteries and is well connected to the most important cities of the western Greater Buenos Aires.

Padua is bordered by the partido of Ituzaingó (north and east), other localidades of Merlo (west and southwest) and Libertad (south).

Padua is basically a flat, low-rise city, with few buildings over two stories, so the skyline is still dominated by the spire of the Church of San Antonio de Padua. The building emerges in the center of a peaceful middle-class neighborhood of white-painted and red-barrel-tiles-roofed houses. The church was inaugurated in 1931 and few years later a Franciscan monastery and a catholic school were erected at its side. The church was built in a Romanesque style and is one of the Padua’s landmark buildings.

The commercial center is around the main avenue, Avenida Noguera, stretching six blocks from the railroad station, Estación San Antonio de Padua to the east.

The city status was conferred on September 11, 1974 by the Buenos Aires (Province) Legislature.

The present-day territory of Padua was pasture until the 1920s. This area —between the towns of Ituzaingó and Merlo— was filled with many farms when members of the British community founded the Ituzaingó Golf Club in 1919.


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