- New Orleans neighborhoods
In 1980 the New Orleans City Planning Commission divided the city into 13 planning districts and 72 distinct
neighborhood s.While most of these assigned boundaries match with traditional local designations, some others differ from common traditional use. This is a result of the City Planning Commission's wish to divide the city into sections for governmental planning and zoning purposes without crossing
U.S. Census tract boundaries. While most of the listed names have been in common use by New Orleanians for generations, some designated names are rarely heard outside of the Planning Commission usage.East Bank
French Quarter / CBD (District 1)
*
Vieux Carré , also called theFrench Quarter
*Central Business DistrictCentral City / Garden District Area (District 2)
*Central City
*East Riverside
*Garden District
*Irish Channel
*Lower Garden District
*Milan
*St. Thomas
*TouroUptown / Carrollton Area (District 3)
*Audubon, also known as University
*Black Pearl
*Broadmoor
*Dixon
*East Carrollton
*Freret
*Hollygrove
*Leonidas, also called West Carrollton
*Fontainebleau, also called Marlyville
*Uptown
*West RiversideMid-City Area (District 4)
*Bayou St. John
*B.W. Cooper, formerlyCalliope Projects
*Fairgrounds
*Gert Town, also called Zion City
*Iberville Development (Note: This area was built on the site of the infamousStoryville neighborhood.)
*Mid-City
*St. Bernard Projects
*Seventh Ward
*Treme/Lafitte
*Tulane/GravierLakeview Area (District 5)
*City Park
*Lakeshore/Lake Vista
*Lakeview
*Lakewood
**Country Club Gardens
*Navarre
*West EndGentilly Area (District 6)
*Dillard
*Filmore
*Gentilly Terrace
*Gentilly Woods
*Lake Terrace / Lake Terrace
*Milneburg
*Pontchartrain Park
*St. AnthonyBywater Area (District 7)
*Bywater
*Desire Area
*Desire Development
*Florida Area
*Florida Development
*Marigny
*St. Claude
**Musicians' Village
*St. RochLower Ninth Ward Area (District 8)
*Holy Cross
*Lower Ninth WardNew Orleans East
New Orleans East Area (District 9)
*Little Woods, also called Edge Lake
*Pines Village
*Plum Orchard
*Read Boulevard East
*Read Boulevard West
*West Lake ForestVillage de L'Est (District 10)
*Village de L'Est
Venetian Isles / Lake Catherine (District 11)
*Viavant / Venetian Isles
*Lake CatherineWest Bank
Algiers Area (District 12)
*
Algiers Point
*Algiers Naval Station
*Aurora, also called Old Aurora; includes Walnut Bend and Huntlee Village
*Behrman, New Orleans
*Fischer Development
*McDonogh, formerly called McDonoghville
*Tall Timbers / BrechtelEnglish Turn Area (District 13)
*English Turn
*New Aurora (Includes River Park, Cut Off, and Lower Coast)Other divisions and designations
There have been a number of traditional and historic divisions of New Orleans, some of which are still used in common local conversation, but which do not correspond with City Planning Commission designations.
The 19th-century division of the city along the axis of Canal Street into "Downtown" and "Uptown" is a prime example. Various areas of the modern city which were separate towns or cities in the 19th century, such as Algiers and Carrollton continue to be spoken of as neighborhoods. The large area of the city to east of the
Industrial Canal and north of theMississippi River-Gulf Outlet Canal , little developed until the last third of the 20th century, is often designated asEastern New Orleans (or sometimes "New Orleans East", although that term sometimes is confined to a smaller subset of that area).References
*cite book
last = Data Analysis Unit, Economic Development Division, City of New Orleans
year = 1985
title = An overview of New Orleansee also
*
Wards of New Orleans
*Housing Projects of New Orleans External links
* [http://www.gnocdc.org/ Greater New Orleans Community Data Center] This site produces New Orleans profiles based on the City Planning Commission's New Orleans neighborhood breakdown.
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