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Tatuapé (district of São Paulo)

Tatuapé
Location in the city of São Paulo
Location in the city of São Paulo
Skyline of Tatuapé
Skyline of Tatuapé
Country Brazil
State São Paulo
City São Paulo
Government
 • Type Subprefecture
 • Subprefect Rubens Casado
Population (2001)
 • Total 81.840
HDI 0.956 –high
Website Subprefecture of Mooca

Tatuapé (Portuguese pronunciation: [tatwaˈpɛ], from Tupi "path of the armadillo", or "short way") is a district in the subprefecture of Mooca, in São Paulo, Brazil. It is divided by a railway and the eight lane Radial Leste highway cutting the district into two, northern and southern, parts.

Southern Tatuapé is the most developed side, and it was one of the first regions in Brazil where viticulture was established. Vines were first placed on these north-facing slopes in 1550 and production was widespread by the end of the 19th century, with the establishment of farms owned by Italian families arriving the district.

In the mid 20th century the district became heavily industrialized and polluted but the closure of clothing and ceramics factories in the 1980s left brownfield sites used for developing luxury apartment buildings. Gentrification has brought high per capita incomes. Residents of the district have a life expectancy of 80 years, the highest within the entire city, and the Human Development Index of 0.936.

Many of the inhabitants of the district have Italian, Spanish, Portuguese ancestry as well as a number with Japanese and Polish heritage. This southern part of Tatuapé is a middle-to-upper class area of São Paulo regarded as a home for the "new rich" paulistanos. It has also two shopping malls, including the first in São Paulo directly connected to a metro station. It also has two international standard hotels (Meliá Tryp and Blue Tree), because the district is placed between the city center and Guarulhos International Airport. In 2007, the city government took over the Analia Franco Park on the southern edge of the district, which boasts extensive sporting facilities and the largest swimming pool in Latin America with a capacity of 5.5 million litres of water.


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