- Colonia San Simón Tolnahuac
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Colonia San Simón Tolnahuac is a colonia in the Cuauhtémoc borough of Mexico City, just north of the city’s historic center. The colonia’s borders are marked by the following streets: Eje 1 Poniente to the south, Avenida Rio Consulado to the north, Lerdo Street and Calzada Vallejo to the east and Avenida de los Insurgentes Norte to the west.[1]
This area originally was part of the Tlatelolco dominion and functioned as communal farmland through most of the pre-Hispanic and colonial periods. Its center was the village of San Simon Tolnahuac. “Tolnahuac” comes from Nahuatl and means “in reeds.” Around 1873, some of the farmland around here began to be subdivided and this subdivision called Cuitlahuac Ferrocarrilera. This subdivision was mostly populated by railroad workers who worked at the nearby Nonoalco station. This station was located at what is now the corner of Manuel Gonzalez and Lerdo Street and belonged to the Monte Alto rail company. The main tracks were where San Simon Atlampa Street is now and at that time, divided the zone in half. By 1928, it was still the last independent village just north of the Mexico City’s historic center, when it was finally incorporated.[1]
In 2008, the borough sponsored the twelfth “Rescue of the Urban Image of the Habitational Units in San Simon Tolnahuac. The goal of the program is to maintain and repair aspects of large apartment units such as repairs of walls, courtyards, facades, railings and fences as well as maintenance work on lighting and sewer and other projects. That year, the focus was on several units on Jupiter Street. This program is a spinoff of the Rescue of the Urban Image of Green and Recreation Areas.[2] In 2009, the borough announced the construction of a cultural center for the colonia.[3]
Schools in the colonia include the Centro de Integracion Infantil Carrusel preschool (private), Francisco Diaz Covarrubias primary school (public), Kinder las Rositas preschool (private), Mi Arco Iris preschool (private), Profesor Luis de la Brina primary school (public) and the Tres Culturas primary school (private) .[4]References
- ^ a b "Colonia San Simón Tolnahuac" (in Spanish). Borough of Cuauhtémoc. http://www.cuauhtemoc.df.gob.mx/delegacion/mapa/colonias.html. Retrieved October 13, 2010.
- ^ "REF.: SCS /168/2008 12ª JORNADA DE RESCATE A UNIDADES HABITACIONALES EN LA COLONIA SAN SIMON TOLNAHUAC" (in Spanish). Borough of Cuauhtemoc. September 6, 2008. http://www.cuauhtemoc.df.gob.mx/comunicacion/galeria/septiembre/simon.html. Retrieved October 13, 2010.
- ^ "GRAN INAUGURACIÓN DE LA CASA DE CULTURA “PACO IGNACIO TAIBO I, II” EN LA SAN RAFAEL" (in Spanish). Borough of Cuauhtemoc. January 2, 2009. http://www.cuauhtemoc.df.gob.mx/comunicacion/galeria/febrero2009/sanrafa.html. Retrieved October 13, 2010.
- ^ "Escuelas en San Simón Tolnahuac, Cuauhtemoc, Distrito Federal" (in Spanish). EduPortal. http://eduportal.com.mx/escuelas/en/distrito-federal/cuauhtemoc/san-simon-tolnahuac. Retrieved October 13, 2010.
19°27′32.49″N 99°8′34.9″W / 19.459025°N 99.143028°WCoordinates: 19°27′32.49″N 99°8′34.9″W / 19.459025°N 99.143028°W
Colonias and Neighborhoods of Cuauhtémoc, D.F. Colonias Colonia Centro • Colonia Doctores • Colonia Obrera • Colonia Roma • Tepito • Colonia Algarín • Colonia Ampliación Asturias • Colonia Asturias • Colonia Atlampa • Colonia Buenavista • Colonia Buenos Aires • Centro Urbano Benito Juárez • Colonia Condesa • Colonia Cuauhtémoc • Colonia Esperanza • Colonia Exhipódromo de Peralvillo • Colonia Felipe Pescador • Colonia Guerrero • Colonia Hipódromo • Colonia Hipódromo Condesa • Colonia Juárez • Colonia Maza • Colonia Morelos • Colonia Paulino Navarro • Colonia Peralvillo • Colonia San Rafael • Colonia San Simón Tolnahuac • Colonia Santa María Insurgentes • Colonia Santa María la Ribera • Unidad Habitacional Nonoalco-Tlatelolco • Colonia Tabacalera • Colonia Tránsito • Colonia Valle Gómez • Colonia Vista Alegra • Zona Rosa
Categories:- Neighborhoods in Mexico City
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