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Wikipedia

San Salvador

San Salvador (Spanish pronunciation: [san salβaˈðoɾ];) is the capital and the largest city of El Salvador and its eponymous department.[5] It is the country's political, cultural, educational and financial center.[6] The Metropolitan Area of San Salvador, which comprises the capital itself and 13 of its municipalities, has a population of 2,404,097. The urban area of San Salvador has a population of 1,600,000 inhabitants.[7]

San Salvador
National capital
San Salvador City
Images, from top, left to right: Plaza Morazán, Plaza Libertad, Plaza Gerardo Barrios, Torre Roble Metrocentro, National Palace, Estadio Cuscatlan
Motto: 
Nuestra Capital – 2011 Ibero-American Capital of Culture
Interactive map outlining San Salvador
San Salvador
Location within El Salvador
San Salvador
Location within Central America
San Salvador
Location within North America
Coordinates: 13°41′56″N 89°11′29″W / 13.69889°N 89.19139°W / 13.69889; -89.19139Coordinates: 13°41′56″N 89°11′29″W / 13.69889°N 89.19139°W / 13.69889; -89.19139
CountryEl Salvador
DepartmentSan Salvador
MetroSan Salvador Metropolitan Area
Founded1525
Founded byPedro de Alvarado
Named forDivine Savior placed on the Monument
Government
 • TypeDemocratic Republic
 • MayorMario Durán
Area
 • National capital72.25 km2 (27.90 sq mi)
 • Metro
651.31 km2 (251.47 sq mi)
Elevation
658 m (2,159 ft)
Population
 (2018)[2]
 • National capital2,406,709
 • Estimate 
(2019)[3]
570,459
 • Rank1st, El Salvador
 • Density72.25/km2 (187.1/sq mi)
 • Metro
2,177,432[1]
 • Metro density3,343.16/km2 (8,658.7/sq mi)
Demonym(s)Sansalvadoran
Sansalvadoreño/a
Capitalino/a
Time zoneUTC−6 (Central Standard Time)
SV-SS
CP 1101
Area code+ 503
HDI (2018)0.704 − high[4]
Websitesansalvador.gob.sv

The city is home to the Consejo de Ministros de El Salvador (Council of Ministries of El Salvador), the Legislative Assembly of El Salvador, the Supreme Court of El Salvador, and other governmental institutions, as well as the official residence of the President of El Salvador. San Salvador is located in the Salvadoran highlands, surrounded by volcanoes and prone to earthquakes. The city is also home to the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of San Salvador, as well as many Protestant branches of Christianity, including Evangelicals, Latter-day Saints, Baptists, and Pentecostals. San Salvador has the second largest Jewish community in Central America[8] and a small Muslim community.

San Salvador has been the host city for various regional and international sporting, political, and social events. It hosted the Central American and Caribbean Games in 1935 and 2002, and the Central American Games in 1977 and 1994, as well as the Miss Universe 1975 pageant. San Salvador was also the host city of the 18th Ibero-American Summit in 2008, the most important sociopolitical event in the Spanish and Portuguese sphere.[9] The Central American Integration System has its headquarters in San Salvador.[10]

History

Before the Spanish conquest, the Pipil people established their capital, Cuzcatlan, near the current location of San Salvador. Not much is known about Cuzcatlan, as it was abandoned by its inhabitants in an effort to avoid Spanish rule. Under the orders of conquistador Pedro de Alvarado, his associates Gonzalo de Alvarado and Diego de Holguín occupied the empty settlement and began to develop it. Diego de Holguín became the first mayor of San Salvador after the town was founded on 1 April 1525. The town changed location twice, in 1528 and 1545. Originally established in what is now the archeological site of Ciudad Vieja, north of the present-day city, it was moved to the Valle de Las Hamacas, so named for the intense seismic activity that characterizes it. The new site was chosen because it had more space and more fertile land, thanks to the Acelhuate river. The population of the city remained relatively small until the early 20th century.

In January 1885, during the presidency of Rafael Zaldívar, a group of businessmen and the president's family contributed funds for building the Sara Zaldivar Asylum for Indigents and the Elderly. In 1902, the Hospital Rosales was built, named after its benefactor, Jose Rosales, a banker who gave his fortune to the hospital and to the orphanage. The hospital's construction was begun by president Carlos Ezeta and finished during the presidency of Tomás Regalado. In 1905, president Pedro José Escalón initiated construction of the National Palace funded by coffee exportation taxes. The Monumento a los Próceres de 1811 (Monument to the Heroes of 1811), located in the Plaza Libertad, and the Teatro Nacional de El Salvador were built in 1911 during Manuel Enrique Araujo's presidency.

In 1917, an earthquake during an eruption of the nearby San Salvador volcano damaged the city, but it escaped additional damage because the lava flowed down the back side of the volcano. On 2 December 1931, president Arturo Araujo was ousted by a military coup d'état and replaced by the military Civic Directory. The directory named vice-president Maximiliano Hernández Martínez as president and Araujo went into exile. The Hernández Martínez regime lasted from 4 December 1931 to 6 May 1944.

In 1964, the Christian Democratic Party candidate, José Napoleon Duarte, an engineer, was elected mayor; he served from 1964 to 1970. During his term he ordered construction of the Pancho Lara park in the Vista Hermosa neighborhood, renewed the electrical grid, and set up a system of schools for adult education. The 1960s to the 1980s were the golden age of San Salvador in all aspects of security, quality of life, and modernization.

Today the tallest building in the country has 28 floors and is 110 meters high. With the commencement of the Salvadoran Civil War in the 1980s, many modernization projects were halted. Examples of suspended projects include a 40-story government building approximately 160 meters in height, and the Sheraton Hotel Tower, a 26-story building with a rotating restaurant on top.

In 1969, celebrations in the Estadio Cuscatlán were held in honor of the returning troops from the Football War with Honduras. The Boulevard de los Héroes (Boulevard of the Heroes) was named after the Salvadoran soldiers who fought there. The 1986 San Salvador earthquake destroyed many government buildings and other important structures, injuring and killing hundreds. Thousands of people were displaced by the disaster and many struggled to find shelter in the ruins.

In 1986, Mayor Morales Ehrlich closed streets in the downtown of the city to create a large pedestrian mall, which has resulted in chronic traffic congestion.

The Chapultepec Peace Accords were signed on 16 January 1992, ending 12 years of civil war. The signing is celebrated as a national holiday with people flooding downtown San Salvador in the Plaza Gerardo Barrios and in La Libertad Park.

Since 2009, Mayor Norman Quijano has worked for the redevelopment of parks and historic buildings in the Rescate del Centro Histórico, which involves the removal of street vendors. This has led to several riots in the area, but he has managed to place the vendors in new markets where they can operate their own stalls.

Municipal government

 
San Salvador as darkness descends on the greater metropolitan area.

The cities in El Salvador, by constitutional provision (Article 203), are economically and administratively autonomous. San Salvador is governed by a council consisting of a mayor (elected by direct vote every three years, with an option to be re-elected), a trustee and two or more aldermen whose number varies in proportion to the population of the municipality. The functions and powers of this government are framed within the rules of the Municipal Code.

San Salvador's government is composed of various departments, including the departments of festivals, parks, cemeteries, and finance. To safeguard the interests of the municipality, there is a board of metropolitan agents. Each of the six city districts also has a government department. The mayor is a member of the Council of Mayors of the Metropolitan Area of San Salvador (COAMSS), composed of fourteen local councils that make up the area known as Greater San Salvador.

 
Satellite image of Greater San Salvador. East (right) of the city lies Lake Ilopango, and to the west (left) rises the San Salvador volcano. The beaches of the Central American Pacific coast (bottom) lie just south of the city.

City mayors since 1964

Municipal districts

The municipality is further subdivided into districts governed by the municipal mayor and by a District board. There are seven districts in San Salvador, Districts 1–6 and the Historic Downtown.

The six districts:

  • District One: Historic Downtown, Colonia Layco, Colonia La Rabida, Colonia Manzano. (Population: 118,325)
  • District Two: Colonia Centro América, Colonia Miralvalle, Colonia Flor Blanca, Colonia Miramonte. (Population: 110,475)
  • District Three: Colonia Escalón, Colonia San Benito, Colonia La Mascota, Colonia Maquilishuat. (Population: 51,325)
  • District Four: Colonia San Francisco, Colonia La Cima (I-IV), Colonia La Floresta. (Population: 68,465)
  • District Five: Colonia Monserrat, Colonia Modelo, Centro Urbano Candelaria. (Population: 126,290)
  • District Six: Barrio San Esteban. (Population: 92,908)

Total population in all six districts: 567,788

Geography

The city is located in the Boquerón Volcano Valley, a region of high seismic activity. The city's average elevation is 659 meters (2,162 feet) above sea level, but ranges from a highest point of 1,186 meters (3,891 feet) above sea level to a lowest point of 596 m (1,955 ft) above sea level.

The municipality is surrounded by these natural features of the landscape: the Acelhuate River on the east, the San Jacinto Hill on the south east, El Picacho Mountain and the Bicentennial Park on the West, North by the San Antonio River, southward by the Cordillera del Balsamo (Balsam Mountain Range); westward by the Boquerón Volcano and Cerro El Picacho, the highest point in the municipality at 1,929 m (6,329 ft).

El Boquerón Volcano was dormant since its last eruption in 1917, but has been active recently. East of the municipality lies the San Jacinto Hill and the caldera of Lake Ilopango, the largest natural body of water in the country with an area of 72 square kilometers (28 square miles). The caldera is seismically active, but has not erupted since 1880.

Climate

 
View of Lake Ilopango and the eastern San Salvador Valley

San Salvador has a tropical wet and dry climate under the Köppen climate classification, and enjoys very warm to hot weather all year round, with daily mean temperatures of 27 °C or 80.6 °F. Its average elevation of 658 meters (2,159 feet) causes the city to experience slightly cooler temperatures in the mornings, higher solar radiation, and greater diurnal air temperature variation (particularly during the dry season) than nearby cities at sea level such as Acajutla. Its weather cools from the months of November through February due to seasonal winds of the dry season. During these months one can expect a daily mean of 22.2 °C (72.0 °F). The hottest months of the year are April and May, during the transition from the dry season (November to April), to the rainy season (May to October). In April and May average maximum temperatures reach 32.2 °C (90.0 °F). The highest reading ever recorded was 38.5 °C (101.3 °F), the lowest was 8.2 °C (46.8 °F). The highest dew point was 27 °C (81 °F) and the lowest −10 °C (14 °F). Thunderstorms occur almost daily during the rainy season, mostly in the afternoon and through the night—by morning the sky clears and the days are usually sunny until the afternoon storms.

Climate data for San Salvador (Ilopango International Airport) 1981-2010, extremes 1957-present
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 36.0
(96.8)
36.1
(97.0)
37.2
(99.0)
38.4
(101.1)
36.7
(98.1)
34.6
(94.3)
34.5
(94.1)
35.1
(95.2)
33.3
(91.9)
35.6
(96.1)
35.3
(95.5)
35.7
(96.3)
38.4
(101.1)
Average high °C (°F) 30.8
(87.4)
32.0
(89.6)
32.7
(90.9)
32.7
(90.9)
31.1
(88.0)
30.1
(86.2)
30.3
(86.5)
30.5
(86.9)
29.5
(85.1)
29.5
(85.1)
29.9
(85.8)
30.2
(86.4)
30.8
(87.4)
Daily mean °C (°F) 22.8
(73.0)
23.6
(74.5)
24.2
(75.6)
25.0
(77.0)
24.6
(76.3)
23.9
(75.0)
23.9
(75.0)
23.9
(75.0)
23.3
(73.9)
23.3
(73.9)
23.0
(73.4)
22.8
(73.0)
23.7
(74.7)
Average low °C (°F) 16.9
(62.4)
17.6
(63.7)
18.4
(65.1)
19.8
(67.6)
20.4
(68.7)
20.0
(68.0)
19.5
(67.1)
19.7
(67.5)
19.6
(67.3)
19.3
(66.7)
18.4
(65.1)
17.5
(63.5)
18.9
(66.0)
Record low °C (°F) 11.9
(53.4)
12.0
(53.6)
13.0
(55.4)
12.0
(53.6)
12.0
(53.6)
15.5
(59.9)
13.5
(56.3)
12.2
(54.0)
15.0
(59.0)
12.5
(54.5)
11.1
(52.0)
12.0
(53.6)
11.1
(52.0)
Average rainfall mm (inches) 1
(0.0)
2
(0.1)
10
(0.4)
36
(1.4)
176
(6.9)
279
(11.0)
355
(14.0)
319
(12.6)
338
(13.3)
208
(8.2)
53
(2.1)
9
(0.4)
1,786
(70.4)
Average rainy days (≥ 0.1 mm) 1 1 1 5 13 20 20 20 20 16 4 2 123
Average relative humidity (%) 67 66 67 72 80 83 82 83 86 83 76 72 77
Mean monthly sunshine hours 301 277 294 243 220 174 239 257 180 211 267 294 2,957
Source 1: Ministerio de Medio Ambiente y Recursos Naturales[11]
Source 2: Danish Meteorological Institute (precipitation days and sun 1931–1960),[12] Meteo Climat (record highs and lows)[13]

Topography

 
San Salvador City lies at the foot of San Salvador volcano.
 
El Boquerón crater, San Salvador.

San Salvador has a very hilly terrain; there are few parts of the municipality where the elevation is consistent. The city shares many topographic features with neighboring municipalities in the San Salvador and the La Libertad departments.

The most notable topographical feature visible in San Salvador and its metropolitan area is the Boquerón Volcano, which looms over this region in its foothills at a height of 1,893 meters (6,211 feet) above sea level.

San Salvador shares Cerro El Picacho, 1,931 meters (6,335 feet) above sea level, with the neighboring municipality of Mejicanos.

 
Flora found in the volcanic region of El Boquerón.

The portion of the Cordillera del Bálsamo (Balsam Mountain Range) that sits in the Municipality has an average elevation of 1,030 meters (3,379 feet) above sea level. The Cordillera del Bálsamo is named after the Myroxylon balsamum tree, one of two species of Central American and South American trees in the family Fabaceae (Leguminosae). The tree, often called Quina or Bálsamo, is well known in the western world as the source of Balsam of Peru and Tolu balsam. El Salvador is the main exporter of these resins, which are still extracted manually.

El Cerro de San Jacinto (San Jacinto Hill), is located on the eastern border of the municipality and is shared with Soyapango, Santo Tomás and San Marcos. The summit is located at 1,153 meters (3,783 feet) above sea level. The hill was once famous for the San Jacinto Cable Car and Park located at its summit, but the facilities were eventually abandoned. Soil types include regosol, latosol, and andosol, as well as soils derived from andesitic and basaltic rocks.

Bodies of water

 
Aerial view of Lake Ilopango caldera.

The river nearest San Salvador is the Acelhuate, which is 2.2 km (1.4 mi) long. Although not within the municipality, it forms a natural boundary between San Salvador and Soyapango. The Acelhuate served as a water source for San Salvador during the late 1800s and early 1900s, but due to urbanization is now polluted. There are small streams running down from Lake Ilopango, and a few old aqueduct systems, but the municipality itself has no major bodies of water.

Lake Ilopango, although not located in the municipality, is the closest large body of water, being only minutes away from the San Salvador historic center. The lake is also the largest natural body of water in the country, with an area of 72 km2 (28 sq mi). The Cerrón Grande Reservoir, 78 km (48 mi) north of San Salvador, was formed by damming the Lempa River in the municipalities of Potonico, (Chalatenango) and Jutiapa (Cabañas). The Cerrón Grande Dam provides a substantial portion of the region's electricity.

Demographics

Spanish is the language spoken by virtually all inhabitants. English is spoken more widely than in the past, due mainly to cultural influences from the United States, especially in entertainment, and the large number of Salvadoran emigrants returned from the United States. According to the 2007 Census, 72.3% of the population of San Salvador is mestiza/castiza, 25.8% is white, having mostly Spanish ancestry, and a few of French or German descents.[14] Other smaller ethnic groups in the white population are descendants of Swiss, Italians, Syrians, Jews (mostly Sephardic), and Christian Palestinians.

In 2015, San Salvador was projected to have a population of 257,754 inhabitants, accounting for about 3.99% of the country's population, while the metropolitan area had 1,767,102 inhabitants, comprising 27.4% of the country's total population.[15]

Religion

Religious background San Salvador
Religion Percent
Roman Catholic
56.6%
Protestant
28.3%
None
11.4%
Mormon
2.5%
Other
1%
Jewish
0.2%

The population of San Salvador is predominantly Roman Catholic, with a significant minority of Protestants. There is more diversity of religion than in most Latin American countries. The Protestant population is mostly Evangelical. One of the largest Protestant churches in the city is the Iglesia Cristiana Josue (from the Assemblies of God), another is the Tabernaculo Biblico Bautista, Amigos de Israel (Bible Baptist Tabernacle, Friends of Israel). There are also members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, which opened the San Salvador El Salvador Temple in 2011. There are also smaller Latter-day Saints chapels in Districts 1 and 3.

As in most of the country, Roman Catholicism plays a prominent role in the celebration of holidays, including Las Fiestas Agostinas (The August Festivals) in honor of Jesus Christ, the Patron saint of El Salvador, referred to as El Salvador del Mundo (The Savior of the World). These events are becoming less prominent with a sharp decline in the Roman Catholic population during the past decade. San Salvador is also home to about 3,500 Jews; the Jewish community is still robust, but less so since the 1980s, as a large number of them left with the start of the Salvadoran Civil War. Many Jews had migrated to El Salvador during World War II due to the work of José Castellanos Contreras, the Salvadoran diplomatic Consul General in Geneva, Switzerland, who helped a Jewish-Hungarian businessman named Gyorgy Mandl save up to 40,000 Jews in Central Europe from the Nazi persecution by giving them Salvadoran nationality papers. The city has a small community of Palestinians, mostly descendants of Palestinian Christian families who immigrated from Palestine in the late 19th and early 20th century, with the highest rate of immigration between 1910 and 1925.[16] The city also has Korean Evangelical Churches that hold services in Korean for a growing Korean population.

Culture

San Salvador is rich in Spanish heritage, and its historical center contains architecture of a kind not found elsewhere in Latin America.[citation needed] The Metropolitan Cathedral was built in the 1950s combining Baroque and eclectic styles of architecture. The National palace, built in 1905, is a mix of Gothic, Neoclassical, and Renaissance Revival architecture.[citation needed] The National Theater is the oldest theater in Central America, being built in 1917 in the French Renaissance Revival style with details in the Rococo, Romantic and Art Nouveau architectural styles. The building contains three levels of seats, including a Presidential box at the center of the second level, and has seating for 650 people. The structure is surmounted by an ellipsoidal dome, the interior of which is adorned with a mural painted by Carlos Cañas and a crystal chandelier.

San Salvador is also home to the museum Museo de Arte de El Salvador (MARTE), whose collection includes artworks dating from the mid-19th century to the contemporary era.[citation needed] The museum has held temporary exhibitions of works by internationally renowned artists like Picasso, Rembrandt, Salvador Dalí and Joan Miró. The Museo Nacional de Antropología (MUNA) or National Museum of Anthropology, founded in 1883 by David Joaquín Guzmán, has exhibits on human settlements, agriculture, artisans, commerce and trade, religion, arts and communication. The museum aims to foster cultural awareness for Salvadorans through exhibitions, research, publications and educational programs.

In 2011, the Union of Ibero-American Capital Cities selected San Salvador as a "Latin American capital of culture", recognizing San Salvador's cultural diversity.

The city government is restoring the downtown area, with the goal of celebrating the city's past and promoting cultural diversity.

City symbols

The symbols of the city are the Monumento al Divino Salvador del Mundo, shield, flag, anthem, and staff of office. The first three were created as a result of a contest launched in 1943. The shield (designed by the painter José Mejía Vides) is divided into four quadrants: the two quadrants at the top right and bottom left have blue and white fields symbolizing the national flag; the top left quadrant displays a symbolic emerald necklace; and the lower right contains the bell of the Church of La Merced, representing the 1811 Independence Movement, when José Matías Delgado rang the bells.

The flag was designed at the request of the city government. The anthem was written by Carlos Bustamante (lyrics) and Ciriaco de Jesús Alas (music).

The municipal staff shows a series of figures and symbols relating to local history. From top to bottom these images are: a native Amerindian, first mayor Diego de Olguín, Carlos V of Spain, the Royal Decree which gave San Salvador its name, Mayor Antonio Gutiérrez, the priest José Matías Delgado, the seal of liberation of 1811, the 1821 independence seal, the shield of the Municipal Freedom Union, the national emblem, and God.

On 5 May 2015, Mayor Nayib Bukele presented the redesigned city shield and flag. The new city coat of arms is silver as a symbol of purity; it has the flag of El Salvador in the center, and a ribbon on the bottom with the date 1834, the year San Salvador was declared capital of Central America. On the sides it has two swords: to the left the sword of Francisco Morazán, and to the right, the sword of Gerardo Barrios, representing his past victories. A crown of laurels encircles the coat of arms, which is also surrounded by 6 stars, representing the 6 districts that form the city.

Economy

San Salvador disproportionately concentrates economic activity in the country. The metropolitan area accounts for 3% of the national territory but 70% of public and private investment is made there. The economy of San Salvador, Antiguo Cuscatlán, and Santa Tecla is a mixed one composed mainly of services, private education, banking, business headquartering, and industrial manufacturing. Other municipalities in the metropolitan area depend either on industry, like Soyapango and Ilopango, on public services, like Mejicanos, or on power generation, as in Nejapa and Apopa. The other municipalities have not developed their own economies, however, they have provided the workforce required for industry in neighboring municipalities.

San Salvador, as well as the rest of the country, has used the U.S. dollar as its currency of exchange since 2001. Under the Monetary Integration Law, El Salvador adopted the U.S. dollar as a legal tender alongside the colón.[17] This decision came about as an attempt to encourage foreign investors to launch new companies in El Salvador, saving them the inconvenience of conversion to other currencies. San Salvador's economy is mostly based on remittances, followed by service and retail sector, rather by industry or manufacturing.

Financial sector

San Salvador is home to the great majority of corporations in the country, and supports many commercial activities, including food and beverage production; the pharmaceutical and chemical industries; the sale of automobiles, handicrafts, and construction materials; as well as appliance repair. Most national companies have their headquarters in San Salvador, which is also home to regional offices for various transnational entities. Unicomer Group, Almacenes Simán, Grupo Roble, Grupo Real, Excel Automotríz, and Grupo Q all have their central offices in San Salvador. Since the early 2010s there has been a boom in the construction of call centers providing services to national and international companies alike.

San Salvador lacks a consolidated financial district; this is mainly due to the lack of urban planning that has plagued the city since the aftermath of the Salvadoran Civil War in 1992. Some clusters have formed, however, in an organic manner; today most of the banking and telecommunications are concentrated along the Alameda Manuel Enrique Araujo in District Two. Various business complexes and towers have sprouted in the commercial districts of Colonia Escalón and Colonia San Benito, both in District Three of the Salvadoran capital.

World Trade Center San Salvador

 
Torre Futura

The World Trade Center San Salvador is located in District 3 (Colonia Escalón) at Avenida Norte and Calle del Mirador. The World Trade Center is interconnected to two hotels (one of which is the Crowne Plaza Hotel), a convention center and a commercial center containing retail shops and restaurants. As of October 2012, the center consists of two towers of 8 levels each, with a total of 13,000 m2 (139,931 sq ft) of office space. Since their completion, the first two towers have maintained a 100% occupancy rate with multinational companies, embassies, and firms such as Banco Multisectorial de Inversiones (BMI), Ericsson, Continental Airlines, Microsoft, Inter-American Development Bank, and Banco Promérica maintaining offices there.

Centro Financiero Gigante

 
Centro Financiero Gigante

Centro Financiero Gigante is a complex of office buildings consisting of five towers, the highest of which is 77 meters (253 feet) tall and has 19 floors. It is a phased project which began with the construction of the two towers. After several years the number of buildings has increased, and it has become one of the most significant business complexes in San Salvador. The tallest tower is occupied by the Telefónica phone company, the next tallest tower is used by RED Business Communication Systems. The complex also includes the Banco Azteca center, Stream Global Services representing Dell in Central America, The Israeli Embassy of San Salvador, Tigo, call centers, and other small offices and banks. The project started in 1997 with Phase I, the construction of the two tallest towers. In Phase II a seven-story-high tower for the old Dell company in Central America was built, and in Phase III a 12-story-high tower for Tigo and a 10-story-high tower for Telemovil. The final phase was remodeling of the Telemovil building to convert it into the Banco Azteca Center.

Alameda Manuel Enrique Araujo and Zona Rosa

 
Barcelo Hotel

Along Alameda Manuel Enrique Araujo and Zona Rosa there are many businesses, banks, and financial centers, government institutions and museums. These include AFP Confia, the Superior Council of Public Health, the HSBC Central Office, AFP Crecer, the Ministry of Public Works, the Centro Internacional de Feria y Convenciones (International Center of Fairs and Conventions), the Presidential Palace, the Museo Nacional de Antropología David J. Guzman (National Museum of Anthropology), the Banco Promerica Financial Center, the Ministry of Tourism, the Channel 2 & 4 Studio Center, the Channel 6 Studio Center, and the Centro de Compañía de Alumbrado Eléctrico de San Salvador (CAESS-Centro) or Central Electric Lighting Company of San Salvador.

Communications

A relatively large proportion of residents have telephones, televisions, and access to the internet, and several communications companies have their headquarters in San Salvador. The largest are Tigo, Claro-Telecom, Movistar-Telefónica, and Digicel.

Services and retail shopping

San Salvador's economy is based mostly on the service sector. The city has many restaurants and shopping malls, including Metrocentro, the largest shopping mall in Central America, as well as retail stores such as Wal-Mart, Office Max, and a Pricesmart warehouse club. The tallest shopping mall in the region, Centro Comercial Galerias, was built around and over an old mansion, La Casona, dating from the late 1950s, which was home to a family of Spanish origin, the Guirolas.

Industry

San Salvador has small industrial zones scattered throughout the municipality, although most of them are concentrated in the eastern section near the border with Soyapango. Much of the industry is related to food processing, beverage manufacturing, and sugar refining. Construction materials ranging from ceramic tiles to concrete blocks and concrete are produced in large quantities; plastics extrusion, including the production of piping, is also an important industry.

Industrias La Constancia, El Salvador's largest brewer and bottler of purified water, dominates the Salvadoran export market of beers and bottled water. The company became part of the second largest brewer in the world, SABMiller, in 2005. Its flagship brand is Pilsener, a pilsner style lager beer, the national beer of El Salvador. In 2011, La Constancia centralized its operations and opened its new headquarters in San Salvador, where it moved in 1928 from the Santa Ana Department. The company produces the Agua Cristal brand of bottled water, the best selling in El Salvador and in the Central American region. The Coca-Cola company uses the La Constancia installations to manufacture its beverage brands sold in El Salvador and the rest of Central America.

Unilever has a plant in San Salvador. Its products include foods, beverages, cleaning agents and personal care products. Unilever manufactures all its products sold in Central America in San Salvador.

Urban development

Early colonial development could not anticipate the extensive growth of the city in the following centuries. Thus, the city contains many narrow streets which create traffic problems, and sidewalks are often overcrowded. As the expansion of San Salvador continues, the need for infrastructure improvements becomes more acute.

During the 1960s, urban expansion was most prevalent in the northern and southern parts of the city, while the 1970s saw growth continue further south, north and west. The housing developments of Colonia Miravalle, Montebello, Satellite, Maquilishuat, San Mateo Lomas de San Francisco, Alta Mira, Loma Linda, La Floresta, and Jardines de la Libertad were built during this period.

The expansion of San Salvador, while occurring in all directions, was primarily in the direction of the volcano of San Salvador. The increased demand for housing was due to an increase in the numbers of middle class workers, members of the military, and professionals.

Around 2000, the city expansion westward slowed. There was an expansion of middle-class neighborhoods such as Merliot, Santa Elena and the Tier, but internal migration and the cessation of armed conflict created a high demand for urban public housing. This gave rise to large urban development projects mostly in the east and north, to the phenomenon of "bedroom communities", and to a disorderly growth pattern.

Notable residents

Architecture

San Salvador's colonial structures, especially its colonial cathedrals, have been destroyed over time by historic earthquakes, consequently Modernist and Gothic style cathedrals have taken their place. During the Salvadoran civil war, large building construction projects were halted and eventually cancelled due to the collapse of the economy; the remainder of early Modernist office and hotel buildings collapsed during the 1986 San Salvador earthquake and the January 2001 and February 2001 El Salvador earthquakes, while the few remaining old buildings were left uninhabitable. Only a few large structures have survived the earthquakes, including the Sheraton Presidente San Salvador Hotel and the Hilton Princess San Salvador Hotel. The seismic nature of the San Salvador area has until recently hindered the construction of high rise buildings and skyscrapers in the city; however, with new technological advances and the advent of earthquake-resistant structures, high rise buildings have begun rising over San Salvador. Today the city has monuments, plazas, stadiums, high rise buildings, large malls and cathedrals built in Neo-Gothic, Modernist, Populuxe, Googie, Streamline Moderne, Art Deco and Futurist style architecture.

Churches

Modern structures

Populux, Googie, Streamline Moderne and Art Deco structures

 
Control tower at the El Jabalí international Autodromo

Futurist structures

 
Dr. Prudencio Llach Observatory

Tourism and sites of interest

Historic Downtown

 
San Salvador Historic Downtown

The historic downtown of San Salvador includes the area where the capital city of El Salvador has been located since the 16th century. The original buildings of the Spanish colony have been mostly destroyed by natural disasters over the years. The few notable surviving buildings were erected in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Mayor Norman Quijano started several large projects with the goal of restoring the former grandeur of the buildings in the center. One such project is to reroute the public transportation routes so they no longer pass through the historic downtown. Another project is the relocation of unauthorised street vendors to a designated public market.

National Palace

 
National Palace of El Salvador

The current National Palace building replaced the old National Palace built in 1866–1870, which was destroyed by fire on 19 December 1889. The construction, done between 1905 and 1911, was the work of engineer José Emilio Alcaine, under the direction of the foreman Pascasio González Erazo. To finish the project, legislation was passed that collected one colon for every quintal of coffee exported. The materials used were imported from several European countries including Germany, Italy and Belgium. The Palace's facilities were occupied by government offices until 1974.

The building contains four main rooms and 101 secondary rooms; each of the four main rooms has a distinctive color. The Red Room (Salon Rojo) is used for receptions held by the Salvadoran Foreign Ministry, and the ceremonial presentation of ambassadors' credentials. It has been used for ceremonial purposes since the administration of General Maximiliano Hernández Martínez. The Yellow Room (Salon Amarillo) is used as an office for the President of the Republic, while the Pink Room (Salon Rosado) housed the Supreme Court and later the Ministry of Defense. The Blue Room (Salon Azul) was the meeting place of the Legislature of El Salvador from 1906, and its classical architecture with Ionian, Corinthian and Roman elements is notable. The room is now called the Salvadoran Parliament in commemoration of its former purpose, and was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1974.

Metropolitan Cathedral

 
San Salvador Cathedral, facing Plaza Barrios in the city center

The Metropolitan Cathedral of the Holy Savior (Catedral Metropolitana de San Salvador) is the principal church of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of San Salvador and the seat of the Archbishop of San Salvador. The church was twice visited by Pope John Paul II, who said that the cathedral was "intimately allied with the joys and hopes of the Salvadoran people." During his visits in 1983 and 1996, the Pope knelt and prayed before the Tomb of Archbishop Óscar Romero, assassinated in 1980, whose tomb here is a major draw for pilgrims. The cathedral's site is the location of the old Temple of Santo Domingo (St. Dominic).

Forty four people died on Palm Sunday, 31 March 1980, during the funeral of Archbishop Romero, as a result of a stampede after some gunmen, allegedly members of security forces (although it has never been corroborated), fired on mourners and on Romero's funeral cortege. The gunmen were never identified. The square in front of the cathedral was the site of celebrations after the signing of the Chapultepec Peace Accords that ended the Salvadoran Civil War in 1992. The cathedral was finished off with a festive tiled ceramic mural façade by the Salvadoran master Fernando Llort and inaugurated on 19 March 1999. In late December 2012, the Archbishop of San Salvador, José Luis Escobar Alas, ordered the removal of the façade without consulting the national government or the artist himself. Workers chipped off and destroyed all the 2,700 tiles of the mural.[18]

National Theater

 
National Theater of El Salvador

The Teatro Nacional de El Salvador, or National Theater of El Salvador, is the oldest theater in Central America. It was designed by the French architect Daniel Beylard, with construction starting on 3 November 1911. The building was inaugurated on 1 March 1917. It is of French Renaissance style with modern touches, and was decorated by the Italian architect Lucio Cappellaro.

The National Theater is located on the southern side of Francisco Morazán Plaza on Calle Delgado. It was built in the French Renaissance style with details done in the Rococo, Romantic, and Art Nouveau styles, and can seat 650 spectators in the Grand Hall. It has balconies on three levels—the Presidential Balcony, located between the third and second Floor, has a direct view of center stage. The building features an ellipsoidal dome containing a mural by painter Carlos Cañas and a crystal chandelier; other impressive spaces include the Chamber Hall and the Grand Foyer. The theater is open to tourists, and after the Historic Downtown Restoration has been used for plays, shows, operas, song recitals, and modern dance performances. It is the largest and most luxurious theater in Central America, and was declared a National Monument in 1979.

Calle Arce

Calle Arce (named after Manuel José Arce, first president of the Federal Republic of Central America) is a major street in San Salvador. Mayor Norman Quijano inaugurated the first phase of its redevelopment near the Plaza de la Salud, which focuses on improvements to the sidewalks between 21st and 19th Avenida Norte. Twelve antique lights, originally from Spain and dating from 1900, will be installed, along with six benches and 40 trees.

At the same time, sidewalks will be renovated with ramps to provide access for people with disabilities and seniors. Calle Arce is monitored by 24 members of the Corps Metropolitan Agents (CAM), who specialize in the maintenance and protection of the new public space.

Parks and plazas

 
Plaza Gerardo Barrios
Plaza Gerardo Barrios

La Plaza Gerardo Barrios, also known as the Civic Plaza, is located in the heart of the city. The statue that dominates the site, designed by Francisco Durini Cáseres, is dedicated to President Gerardo Barrios and was unveiled in 1909. It was the work of the sculptors Antonio and Carlos Ezeta, who were brothers. The figure, made of bronze, is placed on a pedestal of granite and depicts battle scenes and the shield of El Salvador.

Plaza Gerardo Barrios is the site of many demonstrations and political rallies. Mass is celebrated there as well, and it is the destination of many parades. The plaza is also the focal point for celebrations accompanying the feast of San Salvador on 5 and 6 August. The religious procession called El Descenso ("The Descent"), dedicated to the Divine Savior of the World and representing the resurrection of Jesus and his descent from the tomb, terminates there.

Plaza Libertad
 
Plaza Libertad

Plaza Libertad is the location of the Monumento de los Héroes (Monument to the Heroes), a commemoration of the centenary of the "First Cry of Independence" in 1811. The monument, designed by Francisco Durini Cáseres, and installed in 1911, is crowned by an "angel of freedom" at its pinnacle holding a laurel wreath in both hands. As a consequence of increased commercial activity, the area around the plaza was enhanced with the construction of two ornate buildings, the Portal la Dalia in 1915–1916 and the Portal de Occidente in 1917.

Plaza Morazán
 
Plaza Morazan

During the administration of President Rafael Zaldivar, the Salvadoran government ordered the erection of a marble statue here to commemorate the fortieth anniversary (15 March 1882) of the death of Francisco Morazán, former president of the Federal Republic of Central America. The sculpture was created by the artist Francisco Durini Vasalli originally of Tremona, Italy. The government declared 15 March as a day of national civic celebration, and Morazan's son attended the inauguration as a representative of the Government of Honduras.

Casa Dueñas

 
Casa Dueñas

This important residential building was built in the 1920s by coffee farmer Miguel Dueñas. The government confiscated the house in 1922 to cover the owner's debts, and it then remained unoccupied for years. From 1930 to 1933, Mexico leased the house for use by its diplomatic delegation, and from 1935 to 1957 the United States legation rented the house for its ambassadors' residence. Six successive U.S. ambassadors resided there, and occasional guests such as former Presidents Richard Nixon and Lyndon B. Johnson, Senator Robert Kennedy, and movie stars Clark Gable and Tony Curtis stayed there. After 1957 it was the temporary headquarters of an advertizing agency, then was vacated again in 1960. In 1973 the Department of Vocational Training Ministry of Labor occupied the structure; in 1986 it was declared a Cultural Asset by an Executive Agreement of 8 May 1985. The Ministry of Labor transferred the property to the authorities of the Ministry of Education, with a directive to explore the possibility of its restoration and rehabilitation. The restoration work began in 2001 under the leadership of Dr. Alfredo Martínez Moreno, former director of the Salvadorean Language Academy and the Royal Spanish Academy.

Convention centers

 
Centro Internacional de Ferias y Convenciones (CIFCO)

The Centro Internacional de Ferias y Convenciones (CIFCO) is a multipurpose convention center in the Colonia San Benito-Zona Rosa (District 3), 5 miles (8.0 km) from the Historic Downtown of San Salvador (District 1), in a residential area with good transportation facilities and easy access to first class hotels. The center is affiliated with the Union of International Fairs (UFI) and the Association of International Fairs of America (AFIDA), and is regarded as the largest and most modern convention center in Central America.

The CIFCO amphitheater is one of the most important performance venues in San Salvador, hosting many concerts and international artists. It has a capacity of 15,000 persons. A renovation lasting from 2003 until 2010 added five pavilions, a three-level underground parking for 3,500 vehicles, and hotels. Goals of CIFCO include:

  • Support the international exchange of technological, commercial and industrial ideas
  • Plan and organize conventions for exhibitors from the realms of commerce, industry and tourism
  • Provide a pleasant environment for guests and visitors
  • Promoting the image of El Salvador both nationally and internationally

As of the beginning of 2021 a hospital to contain the COVID-19 pandemic has been built on the CIFCO grounds.

Museums

San Salvador has many museums, with the largest being the Museo Nacional de Antropología de El Salvador (MUNA) and Museo de Arte de El Salvador (MARTE). MUNA's mission is to help Salvadorans reflect on their cultural identity through exhibitions, research, publications and educational programs in the fields of archeology and anthropology. The museum's exhibits demonstrate social processes of the various human cultural groups that have inhabited El Salvador. MARTE's mission is to contribute to development of the country's education and culture through the conservation and dissemination of its artistic heritage, and by improving historical knowledge, reaffirming cultural values that shape the Salvadoran identity, and promoting new artistic idioms. MARTE is a private, nonprofit organization, opened on 22 May 2003. Since then the museum has become an essential element of the cultural life of Central America, with its representative view of art from the mid-19th century to contemporary times.[19][20]

A different sort of museum is the Tin Marín Museo de los Niños (Tin Marin Children's Museum), located between Gimnasio Nacional José Adolfo Pineda and Parque Cuscatlán.[21] Tin Marín seeks to contribute to children becoming integral and creative citizens through significant learning, cultural stimulation and entertaining experimentation.[22] The museum has more than 25 exhibits, including The Airplane, The Grocery Store, and the Planetarium.

Sports

Estadio Cuscatlán, with a capacity of over 45,000, is the largest soccer venue in Central America and the Caribbean.[citation needed] It was announced on 16 November 2007, that Estadio Cuscatlán would become the first soccer stadium in Central America and the Caribbean to have a large LED screen,[citation needed] on which spectators can view the action. The screen is 40 meters in height and width and was completed in March 2008. The stadium was built in the early 1970s just before the beginning of the civil war, intended to jump-start an era of modernization in San Salvador, but development in the country ground to a halt during the 12 years of war.

Another major stadium is the Estadio Jorge "Mágico" González, with a capacity of 35,000. This stadium hosted the Central American and Caribbean Games in 2002, in which El Salvador came in 6th place among 37 countries.

San Salvador is the home of three major soccer teams in the Primera División de Fútbol de El Salvador: Alianza F.C., C.D. Atlético Marte and C.D. Universidad de El Salvador. Alianza F.C. and Atlético Marte play their home games at Estadio Cuscatlán, and C.D. Universidad de El Salvador plays theirs at Estadio Universitario UES. Alianza is well known throughout El Salvador for its loyal supporters and for the exuberant atmosphere created during games.

Major tourist attractions

Education

San Salvador has numerous private high schools, including Protestant and Catholic high schools, as well as secular ones; the city also has numerous private bilingual schools.

Transportation

San Salvador is a major regional transportation hub, served by a comprehensive public transport network. Major routes of the national transportation network run through the city.

Airport

The country's primary airport is Monseñor Óscar Arnulfo Romero International Airport, which handles all international flights. It replaced Ilopango International Airport as the country's main airport on 31 January 1980. Ilopango airport is located within the city limits and could not be expanded due to the lack of land and the proximity of the surrounding population, so the new airport was built outside the city in the neighboring department of La Paz.

Monseñor Óscar Arnulfo Romero International Airport lies on flat terrain, and it is not surrounded by populated areas, so it can be expanded in the future. It is located in the municipality of San Luis Talpa, 40 km (25 miles) from San Salvador. With 2,076,258 passengers in 2008, it was the third busiest airport by passenger traffic in Central America

 
Ilopango International Airport

Ilopango International Airport is used for military and charter aviation. It recently underwent renovation, and re-opened in 2009. Ilopango is the host of an annual air show.

Tamarindo Regional: There are plans to rehabilitate the airport on the Eastern Salvadoran coast of El Tamarindo, La Unión.

Roads

 
Construction of the first expressway/freeway in El Salvador, RN-21 (Boulevard Diego Holguin)

San Salvador has excellent transportation connectivity, due to its extensive road network and its street maintenance system. San Salvador's metropolitan road system handles approximately 400,000 vehicles per day.[citation needed]

The main highway passing through San Salvador is the CA-1 (Pan-American highway), which at one point becomes Bulevar Arturo Castellanos. The RN-21 (Bulevar Monseñor Romero) is a major east–west road connecting the cities of Santa Tecla and Antiguo Cuscatlán, finally merging in San Salvador with the RN-5 East/West (also known as Bulevar los Próceres), that later turns into the North/South RN-5 heading towards the International Airport. Another major roadway is the RN-4 (Carretera Este Oeste) which runs from San Salvador through Apopa, and subsequently merges with the CA-1 Panamericana.

 
RN-5 Los Próceres East/West
 
El Salvador International Airport

Roads in the capital are called "street" if they run east–west, and "avenue" if they run north–south. Road numbering starts at the downtown intersection of Avenida Espana/Avenida Cuscatlán and Delgado Arce street. Avenues to the west of this intersection have odd-number names, and to the east they have even-number names. Streets have odd-number names if they are to the north of the intersection, and even-number names if to the south.

One particularly heavily traveled road is 49a Avenida Norte, which connects with the RN-5 highway to the airport. An important historical street is Calle Arce, which was closed in order to create a pedestrian-only mall in the historic downtown of San Salvador. Some streets in the city are very narrow with little room for cars to pass, although many streets are wide. Speed limits are 90 km/h (56 mph) on highways, 60 km/h (37 mph) on main roads, and 40 km/h (25 mph) on secondary streets and avenues.

SITRAMSS

The San Salvador Metropolitan Area Integrated System of Transportation (SITRAMSS) is a proposed high-volume bus transportation system. The first route of the SITRAMSS will make a round trip from San Martin, through Ilopango, Soyapango, San Salvador, and Antiguo Cuscatlan to Santa Tecla. It is projected that between 40 and 60 busses capable of carrying 160 passengers per trip will start operating in the second half of 2013.[23] The departure interval will be approximately eight to ten minutes.[24] By the time the buses have reached the San Salvador historic downtown they will have already transported 20,000 passengers. SITRAMSS is a public-private partnership involving the current passenger transport operators, who must purchase the buses. To pay for the infrastructure development, a loan of $50 million has been provided by the Inter-American Development Bank (BID). The system will work with a prepaid card system which is expected to reduce the time required for passengers to enter the busses. An estimated 200,000 passengers will be transported daily, or about 5,600,000 every month.[24]

Bus and taxi

 
SITRAMSS bus system

Approximately 200,000 people use the city's public bus system daily. Some of the bus transportation system is operated by the city government, but most of it is operated by the private sector. This mixture of ownership has contributed to safety and traffic problems. In 2013, when the SITRAMS commences operation, it will resolve many of these problems.[25] Bus rides typically cost between $0.20 and $0.25, depending on the route. The city government operates a free bus system for use by handicapped, elderly, and pregnant women; this is the only such system in Central America.

A taxi system operates throughout the entire city; fares depend on the route, as taxi drivers charge based on the location of the destination, rather than on elapsed time. Taxis in San Salvador are yellow, and the fleet is composed primarily of Toyota Corollas.

Railway

Railway service was absent during the 1990s, but beginning on 1 October 2007, the National Railways of El Salvador (FENADESAL) resumed service. Tickets cost $0.10. Trains depart from near the East Bus Station and travel to the town of Apopa (service suspended from 2013). There are plans to start operation of another route, connecting the northern side of San Salvador, Cuscatancingo, to Apopa and from Apopa, to the city of Nejapa.

There is also a historic railroad consisting of railroad cars from the 1960s which were refurbished and put into operation by the ministry of tourism. Once a month, visitors can board the antique train and experience the way San Salvadorans transported themselves in the 1960s.

Disasters

 
Salvador del Mundo fallen from its pedestal
 
The Gran Hotel

The city has suffered from many severe earthquakes, the most disastrous of which occurred in 1854. The San Salvador volcano erupted again in 1917,[26] resulting in three major earthquakes that damaged the city so extensively the government was forced to temporarily move the capital to the city of Santa Tecla (known at the time as Nueva San Salvador). The 1986 San Salvador earthquake struck on 10 October 1986, causing considerable damage to the city and surrounding areas. Between 1,000 and 1,500 people are believed to have been killed, and over 10,000 people were injured. 200,000 people were left homeless after the earthquake and a week of minor aftershocks.[27][28]

 
landslide caused by the 2001 earthquake

The 2001 El Salvador earthquakes struck El Salvador on 13 January and 13 February, 2001, resulting in considerable damage to the city, especially in Las Colinas suburb, where a landslide destroyed homes and killed many people.

During the 1980s, when political conflicts in El Salvador exploded into Salvadoran civil war, many people fled to the capital, since most of the fighting occurred elsewhere (San Salvador itself was not directly affected by the war until the final offensive of 1989).

Hurricanes, tsunamis, and landslides also pose a threat. In November 2009, Hurricane Ida hit the departments of San Salvador, San Vicente and Cuscatlán. In San Vicente, the municipalities of Verapaz and Guadalupe were totally destroyed by rainfall accompanying the hurricane, and the resultant landslide. The Army and the Red Cross were able to rescue most of the victims, but many thousands of people were left homeless. The government opened public schools to be used as temporary shelters for three months. The Hurricane destroyed some bridges, and some towns lost communications. The people of El Salvador raised money for the homeless and international aid came from countries such as the United States, Mexico, Nicaragua, Guatemala, and the European Union.

Tropical Storm Agatha

 
Tropical Storm Agatha

Tropical storm Agatha hit the Central American coast on Thursday, 27 May 2010. About 3 feet (0.91 m) of rainfall was recorded over a period of five days in the Metropolitan Area of San Salvador, producing sinkholes, flash floods, and mudslides. Districts particularly hard hit included downtown, El Picacho, and Montebello.

Tropical Storm Amanda

 
Tropical Storm Amanda making landfall in Central America on 31 May

Tropical storm Amanda caused torrential rainfall across El Salvador, which was heavily impacted by the storm. In El Salvador, torrential rainfall caused significant damage along coastal cities in the country as rivers overflowed and swept away buildings. In the capital, San Salvador, 50 houses were destroyed and 23 vehicles fell into a sinkhole rivers overflowed and swept away buildings, damaging 900 homes and displacing over 1,200 people. Movement restrictions in place for the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic in El Salvador were temporarily lifted to allow people to purchase medicines, while hardware stores were allowed to open with limited capacity so people could purchase equipment for repairs. El Salvador President Nayib Bukele declared a 15-day national state of emergency due to the storm. Amanda was considered the worst weather disaster to effect El Salvador in 22 years since Hurricane Mitch, in which Amanda caused rainfall accumulations of at least 600 mm (23.62 in) in many parts of the country and Mitch only caused at least 400 mm (15.74 in) in other areas in a longer period of time.

Security and crime

Concerns about public safety in San Salvador increased in the late 1980s due to the civil war. Although it was fought primarily in the countryside, during the latter years of the war, guerrillas started attacking the capital city. San Salvador recovered quickly after the cessation of hostilities, but gang ("mara") violence became a problem.

The 18th Street gang, originating in Los Angeles, California, United States, has proliferated in San Salvador. The Mara Salvatrucha is a rival gang. In 2002 crime rates skyrocketed and the municipal government was unable to combat the rise. Recent efforts by mayor Norman Quijano to restore public safety have been somewhat successful. Security measures in San Salvador's most troubled Districts (5 and 6, which border Soyapango, and are home to many gangs) included safety campaigns and recreational activities to keep youth from joining gangs. The mayor also initiated a security camera program so the police can monitor the most heavily trafficked areas of the city. The project was launched in the historic downtown and will expand throughout the entire city.[29]

As of 2011 San Salvador had managed to reduce its crime rate, and reduce its murder rate to a level lower than that of Haiti, Venezuela,[30] Mexico, Guatemala, or Honduras,[31] although at over 90 murders per 100,000 residents, the per capita rate was more than 10 times higher than major cities such as New York or London.[32] Also according to a UN Development report, San Salvador has a relatively low robbery rate of 90 per 100,000,[33] compared to San José, the capital of Costa Rica, which has 524 robberies per 100,000.[34]

Districts 3 and 4 are the wealthiest in the country and in theory the safest but in reality, even Colonia Escalón is surrounded by marginal communities and there are countless cases of robbery and criminal activities in or around the area. Districts 1 and 2 have a slightly higher crime rate than 3 or 4, while District 5, bordering San Marcos, and District 6, bordering Soyapango, have the highest crime rates.

Photo gallery of sites in San Salvador

Twin towns and sister cities

San Salvador is twinned with:

See also

References

  1. ^ "Global BR Data". BRT+ CoE. Retrieved 12 July 2019.
  2. ^ United Nations Data: El Salvador→ Capital city Population
  3. ^ Major Agglomerations Of The World, City Population. Accessed 12 Jul 2019.
  4. ^ "Sub-national HDI - Subnational HDI - Global Data Lab". GlobalDataLab.
  5. ^ "Biggest Cities El Salvador". Geonames.org. Retrieved 24 February 2012.
  6. ^ [1] 27 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ Demographia World Urban Areas 17th Annual Edition: 202106
  8. ^ History of the Jews in El Salvador
  9. ^ Ibero-American Summit
  10. ^ Central American Bank for Economic Integration
  11. ^ (in Spanish). Ministerio de Medio Ambiente y Recursos Naturales. Archived from the original on 14 September 2019. Retrieved 14 September 2019.
  12. ^ Cappelen, John; Jensen, Jens. (PDF). Climate Data for Selected Stations (1931–1960) (in Danish). Danish Meteorological Institute. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 April 2013. Retrieved 18 December 2012.
  13. ^ "Station San Salvador" (in French). Meteo Climat. Retrieved 2 May 2017.
  14. ^ "Census 2007". Retrieved 31 January 2022.
  15. ^ El Salvador: Estimaciones y Proyecciones de Población Municipal 2005–2025 (Revisión 2014) (Report). Dirección General de Estadística y Censos. September 2014. Retrieved 25 April 2016.
  16. ^ Roberto Marín Guzmán (2000). A Century of Palestinian Immigration into Central America. Editorial Universidad de Costa Rica. pp. 42–49. ISBN 9789977675879.
  17. ^ [What is Money?] (in Spanish). Banco Central de Reserva de El Salvador. 2000. Archived from the original on 13 June 2007.
  18. ^ Heidenry, Rachel (6 January 2012). "Archbishop Orders Destruction of Salvadoran Mural". Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting. Retrieved 3 February 2013.
  19. ^ Marte, Museo de Arte de El Salvador
  20. ^ "สุภาษิตหรือคำพังเพยไทยและต่างประเทศ". www.munaelsalvador.com.
  21. ^ . Explore-beautiful-el-salvador.com. Archived from the original on March 8, 2012. Retrieved February 24, 2012.
  22. ^ [2] 31 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  23. ^ . Laprensagrafica.com. Archived from the original on April 7, 2012. Retrieved February 24, 2012.
  24. ^ a b . Laprensagrafica.com. Archived from the original on April 7, 2012. Retrieved February 24, 2012.
  25. ^ "elsalvador.com, Los buseros quieren invertir en el Sitramss". Elsalvador.com. Retrieved 24 February 2012.
  26. ^ "San Salvador". Global Volcanism Program. Smithsonian Institution.
  27. ^ Harlow, David H. (e.a.) (August 1993). "The San Salvador earthquake of 10 October 1986 and its historical context". Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America. 83 (4): 1143–1154. Bibcode:1993BuSSA..83.1143H. doi:10.1785/BSSA0830041143. S2CID 130882786. Retrieved 28 May 2009.
  28. ^ . Archived from the original on February 27, 2009.
  29. ^ [3] 26 December 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  30. ^ . Hdrstats.undp.org. Archived from the original on January 26, 2012. Retrieved February 24, 2012.
  31. ^ . Hdrstats.undp.org. Archived from the original on January 21, 2012. Retrieved February 24, 2012.
  32. ^ Dailey, Kate (29 November 2012). "Who, What, Why: What happened to crime in New York City?". BBC News. BBC News Magazine. Retrieved 29 November 2012.
  33. ^ . Hdrstats.undp.org. Archived from the original on March 4, 2012. Retrieved February 24, 2012.
  34. ^ "International Human Development Indicators – UNDP". Hdrstats.undp.org. 29 January 2010. Retrieved 24 February 2012.
  35. ^ . Guadalajara municipal government. Archived from the original on 2 March 2012. Retrieved 12 March 2013.

Further reading

External links

  • Municipality of the city of San Salvador
  • The Tramways of San Salvador, 1876–1929

salvador, other, uses, disambiguation, spanish, pronunciation, salβaˈðoɾ, capital, largest, city, salvador, eponymous, department, country, political, cultural, educational, financial, center, metropolitan, area, which, comprises, capital, itself, municipaliti. For other uses see San Salvador disambiguation San Salvador Spanish pronunciation san salbaˈdoɾ is the capital and the largest city of El Salvador and its eponymous department 5 It is the country s political cultural educational and financial center 6 The Metropolitan Area of San Salvador which comprises the capital itself and 13 of its municipalities has a population of 2 404 097 The urban area of San Salvador has a population of 1 600 000 inhabitants 7 San SalvadorNational capitalSan Salvador CityImages from top left to right Plaza Morazan Plaza Libertad Plaza Gerardo Barrios Torre Roble Metrocentro National Palace Estadio CuscatlanFlagCoat of armsMotto Nuestra Capital 2011 Ibero American Capital of CultureInteractive map outlining San SalvadorSan SalvadorLocation within El SalvadorShow map of El SalvadorSan SalvadorLocation within Central AmericaShow map of Central AmericaSan SalvadorLocation within North AmericaShow map of North AmericaCoordinates 13 41 56 N 89 11 29 W 13 69889 N 89 19139 W 13 69889 89 19139 Coordinates 13 41 56 N 89 11 29 W 13 69889 N 89 19139 W 13 69889 89 19139CountryEl SalvadorDepartmentSan SalvadorMetroSan Salvador Metropolitan AreaFounded1525Founded byPedro de AlvaradoNamed forDivine Savior placed on the MonumentGovernment TypeDemocratic Republic MayorMario DuranArea National capital72 25 km2 27 90 sq mi Metro651 31 km2 251 47 sq mi Elevation658 m 2 159 ft Population 2018 2 National capital2 406 709 Estimate 2019 3 570 459 Rank1st El Salvador Density72 25 km2 187 1 sq mi Metro2 177 432 1 Metro density3 343 16 km2 8 658 7 sq mi Demonym s SansalvadoranSansalvadoreno aCapitalino aTime zoneUTC 6 Central Standard Time SV SSCP 1101Area code 503HDI 2018 0 704 high 4 Websitesansalvador gob svThe city is home to the Consejo de Ministros de El Salvador Council of Ministries of El Salvador the Legislative Assembly of El Salvador the Supreme Court of El Salvador and other governmental institutions as well as the official residence of the President of El Salvador San Salvador is located in the Salvadoran highlands surrounded by volcanoes and prone to earthquakes The city is also home to the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of San Salvador as well as many Protestant branches of Christianity including Evangelicals Latter day Saints Baptists and Pentecostals San Salvador has the second largest Jewish community in Central America 8 and a small Muslim community San Salvador has been the host city for various regional and international sporting political and social events It hosted the Central American and Caribbean Games in 1935 and 2002 and the Central American Games in 1977 and 1994 as well as the Miss Universe 1975 pageant San Salvador was also the host city of the 18th Ibero American Summit in 2008 the most important sociopolitical event in the Spanish and Portuguese sphere 9 The Central American Integration System has its headquarters in San Salvador 10 Contents 1 History 2 Municipal government 2 1 City mayors since 1964 2 2 Municipal districts 3 Geography 3 1 Climate 3 2 Topography 3 3 Bodies of water 4 Demographics 4 1 Religion 4 2 Culture 4 3 City symbols 5 Economy 5 1 Financial sector 5 1 1 World Trade Center San Salvador 5 1 2 Centro Financiero Gigante 5 1 3 Alameda Manuel Enrique Araujo and Zona Rosa 5 2 Communications 5 3 Services and retail shopping 5 4 Industry 6 Urban development 7 Notable residents 8 Architecture 8 1 Churches 8 2 Modern structures 8 3 Populux Googie Streamline Moderne and Art Deco structures 8 4 Futurist structures 9 Tourism and sites of interest 9 1 Historic Downtown 9 1 1 National Palace 9 1 2 Metropolitan Cathedral 9 1 3 National Theater 9 1 4 Calle Arce 9 1 5 Parks and plazas 9 1 5 1 Plaza Gerardo Barrios 9 1 5 2 Plaza Libertad 9 1 5 3 Plaza Morazan 9 1 6 Casa Duenas 9 1 7 Convention centers 9 2 Museums 9 3 Sports 9 4 Major tourist attractions 10 Education 11 Transportation 11 1 Airport 11 2 Roads 11 3 SITRAMSS 11 4 Bus and taxi 11 5 Railway 12 Disasters 12 1 Tropical Storm Agatha 12 2 Tropical Storm Amanda 13 Security and crime 14 Photo gallery of sites in San Salvador 15 Twin towns and sister cities 16 See also 17 References 18 Further reading 19 External linksHistory EditFor a chronological guide see Timeline of San Salvador This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section contains an unencyclopedic or excessive gallery of images Please help improve the section by removing excessive or indiscriminate images or by moving relevant images beside adjacent text in accordance with the Manual of Style on use of images Learn how and when to remove this template message San Salvador Cathedral Monumento al Divino Salvador del Mundo Torre Cuscatlan Torre Futura World Trade Center San Salvador Legislative Assembly of El Salvador Basilica Sagrado Corazon de Jesus Iglesia El Carmen Parroquia Maria Auxiliadora Don Rua Iglesia El CalvarioBefore the Spanish conquest the Pipil people established their capital Cuzcatlan near the current location of San Salvador Not much is known about Cuzcatlan as it was abandoned by its inhabitants in an effort to avoid Spanish rule Under the orders of conquistador Pedro de Alvarado his associates Gonzalo de Alvarado and Diego de Holguin occupied the empty settlement and began to develop it Diego de Holguin became the first mayor of San Salvador after the town was founded on 1 April 1525 The town changed location twice in 1528 and 1545 Originally established in what is now the archeological site of Ciudad Vieja north of the present day city it was moved to the Valle de Las Hamacas so named for the intense seismic activity that characterizes it The new site was chosen because it had more space and more fertile land thanks to the Acelhuate river The population of the city remained relatively small until the early 20th century In January 1885 during the presidency of Rafael Zaldivar a group of businessmen and the president s family contributed funds for building the Sara Zaldivar Asylum for Indigents and the Elderly In 1902 the Hospital Rosales was built named after its benefactor Jose Rosales a banker who gave his fortune to the hospital and to the orphanage The hospital s construction was begun by president Carlos Ezeta and finished during the presidency of Tomas Regalado In 1905 president Pedro Jose Escalon initiated construction of the National Palace funded by coffee exportation taxes The Monumento a los Proceres de 1811 Monument to the Heroes of 1811 located in the Plaza Libertad and the Teatro Nacional de El Salvador were built in 1911 during Manuel Enrique Araujo s presidency In 1917 an earthquake during an eruption of the nearby San Salvador volcano damaged the city but it escaped additional damage because the lava flowed down the back side of the volcano On 2 December 1931 president Arturo Araujo was ousted by a military coup d etat and replaced by the military Civic Directory The directory named vice president Maximiliano Hernandez Martinez as president and Araujo went into exile The Hernandez Martinez regime lasted from 4 December 1931 to 6 May 1944 In 1964 the Christian Democratic Party candidate Jose Napoleon Duarte an engineer was elected mayor he served from 1964 to 1970 During his term he ordered construction of the Pancho Lara park in the Vista Hermosa neighborhood renewed the electrical grid and set up a system of schools for adult education The 1960s to the 1980s were the golden age of San Salvador in all aspects of security quality of life and modernization Today the tallest building in the country has 28 floors and is 110 meters high With the commencement of the Salvadoran Civil War in the 1980s many modernization projects were halted Examples of suspended projects include a 40 story government building approximately 160 meters in height and the Sheraton Hotel Tower a 26 story building with a rotating restaurant on top In 1969 celebrations in the Estadio Cuscatlan were held in honor of the returning troops from the Football War with Honduras The Boulevard de los Heroes Boulevard of the Heroes was named after the Salvadoran soldiers who fought there The 1986 San Salvador earthquake destroyed many government buildings and other important structures injuring and killing hundreds Thousands of people were displaced by the disaster and many struggled to find shelter in the ruins In 1986 Mayor Morales Ehrlich closed streets in the downtown of the city to create a large pedestrian mall which has resulted in chronic traffic congestion The Chapultepec Peace Accords were signed on 16 January 1992 ending 12 years of civil war The signing is celebrated as a national holiday with people flooding downtown San Salvador in the Plaza Gerardo Barrios and in La Libertad Park Since 2009 Mayor Norman Quijano has worked for the redevelopment of parks and historic buildings in the Rescate del Centro Historico which involves the removal of street vendors This has led to several riots in the area but he has managed to place the vendors in new markets where they can operate their own stalls Municipal government EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message San Salvador as darkness descends on the greater metropolitan area The cities in El Salvador by constitutional provision Article 203 are economically and administratively autonomous San Salvador is governed by a council consisting of a mayor elected by direct vote every three years with an option to be re elected a trustee and two or more aldermen whose number varies in proportion to the population of the municipality The functions and powers of this government are framed within the rules of the Municipal Code San Salvador s government is composed of various departments including the departments of festivals parks cemeteries and finance To safeguard the interests of the municipality there is a board of metropolitan agents Each of the six city districts also has a government department The mayor is a member of the Council of Mayors of the Metropolitan Area of San Salvador COAMSS composed of fourteen local councils that make up the area known as Greater San Salvador Satellite image of Greater San Salvador East right of the city lies Lake Ilopango and to the west left rises the San Salvador volcano The beaches of the Central American Pacific coast bottom lie just south of the city City mayors since 1964 Edit Further information Mayor of San Salvador Jose Napoleon Duarte PDC 1964 1970 Carlos Antonio Herrera Rebollo PDC 1970 1974 Jose Antonio Morales Ehrlich PDC 1974 1976 Jose Napoleon Gomez Independent 1976 1978 Norman Duarte Independent 1982 1985 Jose Antonio Morales Ehrlich PDC 1985 1988 Armando Calderon Sol ARENA 1988 1994 Mario Valiente ARENA 1994 1997 Hector Silva Arguello FMLN 1997 2003 Carlos Rivas Zamora FMLN 2003 2006 Violeta Menjivar FMLN 2006 2009 Norman Quijano ARENA 2009 2015 Nayib Bukele GANA 2015 2018 Ernesto Muyshondt 2018 2021 Mario Duran NI 2021 present Municipal districts Edit Main article Municipal districts of San Salvador The municipality is further subdivided into districts governed by the municipal mayor and by a District board There are seven districts in San Salvador Districts 1 6 and the Historic Downtown The six districts District One Historic Downtown Colonia Layco Colonia La Rabida Colonia Manzano Population 118 325 District Two Colonia Centro America Colonia Miralvalle Colonia Flor Blanca Colonia Miramonte Population 110 475 District Three Colonia Escalon Colonia San Benito Colonia La Mascota Colonia Maquilishuat Population 51 325 District Four Colonia San Francisco Colonia La Cima I IV Colonia La Floresta Population 68 465 District Five Colonia Monserrat Colonia Modelo Centro Urbano Candelaria Population 126 290 District Six Barrio San Esteban Population 92 908 Total population in all six districts 567 788Geography EditThe city is located in the Boqueron Volcano Valley a region of high seismic activity The city s average elevation is 659 meters 2 162 feet above sea level but ranges from a highest point of 1 186 meters 3 891 feet above sea level to a lowest point of 596 m 1 955 ft above sea level The municipality is surrounded by these natural features of the landscape the Acelhuate River on the east the San Jacinto Hill on the south east El Picacho Mountain and the Bicentennial Park on the West North by the San Antonio River southward by the Cordillera del Balsamo Balsam Mountain Range westward by the Boqueron Volcano and Cerro El Picacho the highest point in the municipality at 1 929 m 6 329 ft El Boqueron Volcano was dormant since its last eruption in 1917 but has been active recently East of the municipality lies the San Jacinto Hill and the caldera of Lake Ilopango the largest natural body of water in the country with an area of 72 square kilometers 28 square miles The caldera is seismically active but has not erupted since 1880 Climate Edit View of Lake Ilopango and the eastern San Salvador Valley San Salvador has a tropical wet and dry climate under the Koppen climate classification and enjoys very warm to hot weather all year round with daily mean temperatures of 27 C or 80 6 F Its average elevation of 658 meters 2 159 feet causes the city to experience slightly cooler temperatures in the mornings higher solar radiation and greater diurnal air temperature variation particularly during the dry season than nearby cities at sea level such as Acajutla Its weather cools from the months of November through February due to seasonal winds of the dry season During these months one can expect a daily mean of 22 2 C 72 0 F The hottest months of the year are April and May during the transition from the dry season November to April to the rainy season May to October In April and May average maximum temperatures reach 32 2 C 90 0 F The highest reading ever recorded was 38 5 C 101 3 F the lowest was 8 2 C 46 8 F The highest dew point was 27 C 81 F and the lowest 10 C 14 F Thunderstorms occur almost daily during the rainy season mostly in the afternoon and through the night by morning the sky clears and the days are usually sunny until the afternoon storms Climate data for San Salvador Ilopango International Airport 1981 2010 extremes 1957 presentMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 36 0 96 8 36 1 97 0 37 2 99 0 38 4 101 1 36 7 98 1 34 6 94 3 34 5 94 1 35 1 95 2 33 3 91 9 35 6 96 1 35 3 95 5 35 7 96 3 38 4 101 1 Average high C F 30 8 87 4 32 0 89 6 32 7 90 9 32 7 90 9 31 1 88 0 30 1 86 2 30 3 86 5 30 5 86 9 29 5 85 1 29 5 85 1 29 9 85 8 30 2 86 4 30 8 87 4 Daily mean C F 22 8 73 0 23 6 74 5 24 2 75 6 25 0 77 0 24 6 76 3 23 9 75 0 23 9 75 0 23 9 75 0 23 3 73 9 23 3 73 9 23 0 73 4 22 8 73 0 23 7 74 7 Average low C F 16 9 62 4 17 6 63 7 18 4 65 1 19 8 67 6 20 4 68 7 20 0 68 0 19 5 67 1 19 7 67 5 19 6 67 3 19 3 66 7 18 4 65 1 17 5 63 5 18 9 66 0 Record low C F 11 9 53 4 12 0 53 6 13 0 55 4 12 0 53 6 12 0 53 6 15 5 59 9 13 5 56 3 12 2 54 0 15 0 59 0 12 5 54 5 11 1 52 0 12 0 53 6 11 1 52 0 Average rainfall mm inches 1 0 0 2 0 1 10 0 4 36 1 4 176 6 9 279 11 0 355 14 0 319 12 6 338 13 3 208 8 2 53 2 1 9 0 4 1 786 70 4 Average rainy days 0 1 mm 1 1 1 5 13 20 20 20 20 16 4 2 123Average relative humidity 67 66 67 72 80 83 82 83 86 83 76 72 77Mean monthly sunshine hours 301 277 294 243 220 174 239 257 180 211 267 294 2 957Source 1 Ministerio de Medio Ambiente y Recursos Naturales 11 Source 2 Danish Meteorological Institute precipitation days and sun 1931 1960 12 Meteo Climat record highs and lows 13 Topography Edit San Salvador City lies at the foot of San Salvador volcano El Boqueron crater San Salvador San Salvador has a very hilly terrain there are few parts of the municipality where the elevation is consistent The city shares many topographic features with neighboring municipalities in the San Salvador and the La Libertad departments The most notable topographical feature visible in San Salvador and its metropolitan area is the Boqueron Volcano which looms over this region in its foothills at a height of 1 893 meters 6 211 feet above sea level San Salvador shares Cerro El Picacho 1 931 meters 6 335 feet above sea level with the neighboring municipality of Mejicanos Flora found in the volcanic region of El Boqueron The portion of the Cordillera del Balsamo Balsam Mountain Range that sits in the Municipality has an average elevation of 1 030 meters 3 379 feet above sea level The Cordillera del Balsamo is named after the Myroxylon balsamum tree one of two species of Central American and South American trees in the family Fabaceae Leguminosae The tree often called Quina or Balsamo is well known in the western world as the source of Balsam of Peru and Tolu balsam El Salvador is the main exporter of these resins which are still extracted manually El Cerro de San Jacinto San Jacinto Hill is located on the eastern border of the municipality and is shared with Soyapango Santo Tomas and San Marcos The summit is located at 1 153 meters 3 783 feet above sea level The hill was once famous for the San Jacinto Cable Car and Park located at its summit but the facilities were eventually abandoned Soil types include regosol latosol and andosol as well as soils derived from andesitic and basaltic rocks Bodies of water Edit Aerial view of Lake Ilopango caldera The river nearest San Salvador is the Acelhuate which is 2 2 km 1 4 mi long Although not within the municipality it forms a natural boundary between San Salvador and Soyapango The Acelhuate served as a water source for San Salvador during the late 1800s and early 1900s but due to urbanization is now polluted There are small streams running down from Lake Ilopango and a few old aqueduct systems but the municipality itself has no major bodies of water Lake Ilopango although not located in the municipality is the closest large body of water being only minutes away from the San Salvador historic center The lake is also the largest natural body of water in the country with an area of 72 km2 28 sq mi The Cerron Grande Reservoir 78 km 48 mi north of San Salvador was formed by damming the Lempa River in the municipalities of Potonico Chalatenango and Jutiapa Cabanas The Cerron Grande Dam provides a substantial portion of the region s electricity Demographics EditSpanish is the language spoken by virtually all inhabitants English is spoken more widely than in the past due mainly to cultural influences from the United States especially in entertainment and the large number of Salvadoran emigrants returned from the United States According to the 2007 Census 72 3 of the population of San Salvador is mestiza castiza 25 8 is white having mostly Spanish ancestry and a few of French or German descents 14 Other smaller ethnic groups in the white population are descendants of Swiss Italians Syrians Jews mostly Sephardic and Christian Palestinians In 2015 San Salvador was projected to have a population of 257 754 inhabitants accounting for about 3 99 of the country s population while the metropolitan area had 1 767 102 inhabitants comprising 27 4 of the country s total population 15 Religion Edit Religious background San SalvadorReligion PercentRoman Catholic 56 6 Protestant 28 3 None 11 4 Mormon 2 5 Other 1 Jewish 0 2 The population of San Salvador is predominantly Roman Catholic with a significant minority of Protestants There is more diversity of religion than in most Latin American countries The Protestant population is mostly Evangelical One of the largest Protestant churches in the city is the Iglesia Cristiana Josue from the Assemblies of God another is the Tabernaculo Biblico Bautista Amigos de Israel Bible Baptist Tabernacle Friends of Israel There are also members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints which opened the San Salvador El Salvador Temple in 2011 There are also smaller Latter day Saints chapels in Districts 1 and 3 As in most of the country Roman Catholicism plays a prominent role in the celebration of holidays including Las Fiestas Agostinas The August Festivals in honor of Jesus Christ the Patron saint of El Salvador referred to as El Salvador del Mundo The Savior of the World These events are becoming less prominent with a sharp decline in the Roman Catholic population during the past decade San Salvador is also home to about 3 500 Jews the Jewish community is still robust but less so since the 1980s as a large number of them left with the start of the Salvadoran Civil War Many Jews had migrated to El Salvador during World War II due to the work of Jose Castellanos Contreras the Salvadoran diplomatic Consul General in Geneva Switzerland who helped a Jewish Hungarian businessman named Gyorgy Mandl save up to 40 000 Jews in Central Europe from the Nazi persecution by giving them Salvadoran nationality papers The city has a small community of Palestinians mostly descendants of Palestinian Christian families who immigrated from Palestine in the late 19th and early 20th century with the highest rate of immigration between 1910 and 1925 16 The city also has Korean Evangelical Churches that hold services in Korean for a growing Korean population Culture Edit San Salvador is rich in Spanish heritage and its historical center contains architecture of a kind not found elsewhere in Latin America citation needed The Metropolitan Cathedral was built in the 1950s combining Baroque and eclectic styles of architecture The National palace built in 1905 is a mix of Gothic Neoclassical and Renaissance Revival architecture citation needed The National Theater is the oldest theater in Central America being built in 1917 in the French Renaissance Revival style with details in the Rococo Romantic and Art Nouveau architectural styles The building contains three levels of seats including a Presidential box at the center of the second level and has seating for 650 people The structure is surmounted by an ellipsoidal dome the interior of which is adorned with a mural painted by Carlos Canas and a crystal chandelier San Salvador is also home to the museum Museo de Arte de El Salvador MARTE whose collection includes artworks dating from the mid 19th century to the contemporary era citation needed The museum has held temporary exhibitions of works by internationally renowned artists like Picasso Rembrandt Salvador Dali and Joan Miro The Museo Nacional de Antropologia MUNA or National Museum of Anthropology founded in 1883 by David Joaquin Guzman has exhibits on human settlements agriculture artisans commerce and trade religion arts and communication The museum aims to foster cultural awareness for Salvadorans through exhibitions research publications and educational programs In 2011 the Union of Ibero American Capital Cities selected San Salvador as a Latin American capital of culture recognizing San Salvador s cultural diversity The city government is restoring the downtown area with the goal of celebrating the city s past and promoting cultural diversity City symbols Edit The symbols of the city are the Monumento al Divino Salvador del Mundo shield flag anthem and staff of office The first three were created as a result of a contest launched in 1943 The shield designed by the painter Jose Mejia Vides is divided into four quadrants the two quadrants at the top right and bottom left have blue and white fields symbolizing the national flag the top left quadrant displays a symbolic emerald necklace and the lower right contains the bell of the Church of La Merced representing the 1811 Independence Movement when Jose Matias Delgado rang the bells The flag was designed at the request of the city government The anthem was written by Carlos Bustamante lyrics and Ciriaco de Jesus Alas music The municipal staff shows a series of figures and symbols relating to local history From top to bottom these images are a native Amerindian first mayor Diego de Olguin Carlos V of Spain the Royal Decree which gave San Salvador its name Mayor Antonio Gutierrez the priest Jose Matias Delgado the seal of liberation of 1811 the 1821 independence seal the shield of the Municipal Freedom Union the national emblem and God On 5 May 2015 Mayor Nayib Bukele presented the redesigned city shield and flag The new city coat of arms is silver as a symbol of purity it has the flag of El Salvador in the center and a ribbon on the bottom with the date 1834 the year San Salvador was declared capital of Central America On the sides it has two swords to the left the sword of Francisco Morazan and to the right the sword of Gerardo Barrios representing his past victories A crown of laurels encircles the coat of arms which is also surrounded by 6 stars representing the 6 districts that form the city Economy EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message San Salvador disproportionately concentrates economic activity in the country The metropolitan area accounts for 3 of the national territory but 70 of public and private investment is made there The economy of San Salvador Antiguo Cuscatlan and Santa Tecla is a mixed one composed mainly of services private education banking business headquartering and industrial manufacturing Other municipalities in the metropolitan area depend either on industry like Soyapango and Ilopango on public services like Mejicanos or on power generation as in Nejapa and Apopa The other municipalities have not developed their own economies however they have provided the workforce required for industry in neighboring municipalities San Salvador as well as the rest of the country has used the U S dollar as its currency of exchange since 2001 Under the Monetary Integration Law El Salvador adopted the U S dollar as a legal tender alongside the colon 17 This decision came about as an attempt to encourage foreign investors to launch new companies in El Salvador saving them the inconvenience of conversion to other currencies San Salvador s economy is mostly based on remittances followed by service and retail sector rather by industry or manufacturing Financial sector Edit San Salvador is home to the great majority of corporations in the country and supports many commercial activities including food and beverage production the pharmaceutical and chemical industries the sale of automobiles handicrafts and construction materials as well as appliance repair Most national companies have their headquarters in San Salvador which is also home to regional offices for various transnational entities Unicomer Group Almacenes Siman Grupo Roble Grupo Real Excel Automotriz and Grupo Q all have their central offices in San Salvador Since the early 2010s there has been a boom in the construction of call centers providing services to national and international companies alike San Salvador lacks a consolidated financial district this is mainly due to the lack of urban planning that has plagued the city since the aftermath of the Salvadoran Civil War in 1992 Some clusters have formed however in an organic manner today most of the banking and telecommunications are concentrated along the Alameda Manuel Enrique Araujo in District Two Various business complexes and towers have sprouted in the commercial districts of Colonia Escalon and Colonia San Benito both in District Three of the Salvadoran capital World Trade Center San Salvador Edit Torre Futura The World Trade Center San Salvador is located in District 3 Colonia Escalon at Avenida Norte and Calle del Mirador The World Trade Center is interconnected to two hotels one of which is the Crowne Plaza Hotel a convention center and a commercial center containing retail shops and restaurants As of October 2012 the center consists of two towers of 8 levels each with a total of 13 000 m2 139 931 sq ft of office space Since their completion the first two towers have maintained a 100 occupancy rate with multinational companies embassies and firms such as Banco Multisectorial de Inversiones BMI Ericsson Continental Airlines Microsoft Inter American Development Bank and Banco Promerica maintaining offices there Centro Financiero Gigante Edit Centro Financiero Gigante Centro Financiero Gigante is a complex of office buildings consisting of five towers the highest of which is 77 meters 253 feet tall and has 19 floors It is a phased project which began with the construction of the two towers After several years the number of buildings has increased and it has become one of the most significant business complexes in San Salvador The tallest tower is occupied by the Telefonica phone company the next tallest tower is used by RED Business Communication Systems The complex also includes the Banco Azteca center Stream Global Services representing Dell in Central America The Israeli Embassy of San Salvador Tigo call centers and other small offices and banks The project started in 1997 with Phase I the construction of the two tallest towers In Phase II a seven story high tower for the old Dell company in Central America was built and in Phase III a 12 story high tower for Tigo and a 10 story high tower for Telemovil The final phase was remodeling of the Telemovil building to convert it into the Banco Azteca Center Alameda Manuel Enrique Araujo and Zona Rosa Edit Barcelo Hotel Along Alameda Manuel Enrique Araujo and Zona Rosa there are many businesses banks and financial centers government institutions and museums These include AFP Confia the Superior Council of Public Health the HSBC Central Office AFP Crecer the Ministry of Public Works the Centro Internacional de Feria y Convenciones International Center of Fairs and Conventions the Presidential Palace the Museo Nacional de Antropologia David J Guzman National Museum of Anthropology the Banco Promerica Financial Center the Ministry of Tourism the Channel 2 amp 4 Studio Center the Channel 6 Studio Center and the Centro de Compania de Alumbrado Electrico de San Salvador CAESS Centro or Central Electric Lighting Company of San Salvador Communications Edit See also Telecommunications in El Salvador A relatively large proportion of residents have telephones televisions and access to the internet and several communications companies have their headquarters in San Salvador The largest are Tigo Claro Telecom Movistar Telefonica and Digicel Services and retail shopping Edit San Salvador s economy is based mostly on the service sector The city has many restaurants and shopping malls including Metrocentro the largest shopping mall in Central America as well as retail stores such as Wal Mart Office Max and a Pricesmart warehouse club The tallest shopping mall in the region Centro Comercial Galerias was built around and over an old mansion La Casona dating from the late 1950s which was home to a family of Spanish origin the Guirolas Industry Edit San Salvador has small industrial zones scattered throughout the municipality although most of them are concentrated in the eastern section near the border with Soyapango Much of the industry is related to food processing beverage manufacturing and sugar refining Construction materials ranging from ceramic tiles to concrete blocks and concrete are produced in large quantities plastics extrusion including the production of piping is also an important industry Industrias La Constancia El Salvador s largest brewer and bottler of purified water dominates the Salvadoran export market of beers and bottled water The company became part of the second largest brewer in the world SABMiller in 2005 Its flagship brand is Pilsener a pilsner style lager beer the national beer of El Salvador In 2011 La Constancia centralized its operations and opened its new headquarters in San Salvador where it moved in 1928 from the Santa Ana Department The company produces the Agua Cristal brand of bottled water the best selling in El Salvador and in the Central American region The Coca Cola company uses the La Constancia installations to manufacture its beverage brands sold in El Salvador and the rest of Central America Unilever has a plant in San Salvador Its products include foods beverages cleaning agents and personal care products Unilever manufactures all its products sold in Central America in San Salvador Urban development EditEarly colonial development could not anticipate the extensive growth of the city in the following centuries Thus the city contains many narrow streets which create traffic problems and sidewalks are often overcrowded As the expansion of San Salvador continues the need for infrastructure improvements becomes more acute During the 1960s urban expansion was most prevalent in the northern and southern parts of the city while the 1970s saw growth continue further south north and west The housing developments of Colonia Miravalle Montebello Satellite Maquilishuat San Mateo Lomas de San Francisco Alta Mira Loma Linda La Floresta and Jardines de la Libertad were built during this period The expansion of San Salvador while occurring in all directions was primarily in the direction of the volcano of San Salvador The increased demand for housing was due to an increase in the numbers of middle class workers members of the military and professionals Around 2000 the city expansion westward slowed There was an expansion of middle class neighborhoods such as Merliot Santa Elena and the Tier but internal migration and the cessation of armed conflict created a high demand for urban public housing This gave rise to large urban development projects mostly in the east and north to the phenomenon of bedroom communities and to a disorderly growth pattern Notable residents EditNayib Bukele President of El Salvador Alfredo Cristiani Former President of El Salvador Carlos Calleja Businessman and CEO of Grupo Calleja owner of largest supermarket chain in El SalvadorArchitecture EditSan Salvador s colonial structures especially its colonial cathedrals have been destroyed over time by historic earthquakes consequently Modernist and Gothic style cathedrals have taken their place During the Salvadoran civil war large building construction projects were halted and eventually cancelled due to the collapse of the economy the remainder of early Modernist office and hotel buildings collapsed during the 1986 San Salvador earthquake and the January 2001 and February 2001 El Salvador earthquakes while the few remaining old buildings were left uninhabitable Only a few large structures have survived the earthquakes including the Sheraton Presidente San Salvador Hotel and the Hilton Princess San Salvador Hotel The seismic nature of the San Salvador area has until recently hindered the construction of high rise buildings and skyscrapers in the city however with new technological advances and the advent of earthquake resistant structures high rise buildings have begun rising over San Salvador Today the city has monuments plazas stadiums high rise buildings large malls and cathedrals built in Neo Gothic Modernist Populuxe Googie Streamline Moderne Art Deco and Futurist style architecture Churches Edit Iglesia El Carmen Iglesia El Rosario Iglesia El CalvarioModern structures Edit Centro Financiero Gigante Torre Roble Torre Terra Alta Torre Alisios 115 Torre 515 Avenida La Capilla Torre 525 Avenida La Capilla Torres 105 Campestre Torre El Pedregal Tallest tower in San Salvador City Sheraton Presidente San Salvador Hotel Hilton Princess San Salvador HotelPopulux Googie Streamline Moderne and Art Deco structures Edit Control tower at the El Jabali international Autodromo Palacio de los Deportes Carlos El Famoso Hernandez Stadium Hospital Capilla Divina Providencia Church where Oscar Romero was assassinated Gimnasio Nacional Jose Adolfo Pineda Monumento al Divino Salvador del Mundo Monumento Hermano Bienvenido a Casa Lifestyle Center La Gran Via Multiplaza El Salvador Monumento a la Revolucion El Salvador Monumento a La Constitucion de El Salvador Ilopango International Airport Centro Internacional de Ferias y Convenciones CIFCO Estadio Jorge Magico GonzalezFuturist structures Edit Dr Prudencio Llach Observatory Torre Futura Torre Cuscatlan Millenum plaza Edificio Insigne Edificio Avante El Salvador International Airport is going through a large scale modernization and retrofitting transitioning from a modern style to a futurist style architecture when its finished Tourism and sites of interest EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Historic Downtown Edit Main article San Salvador Historic Downtown San Salvador Historic DowntownThe historic downtown of San Salvador includes the area where the capital city of El Salvador has been located since the 16th century The original buildings of the Spanish colony have been mostly destroyed by natural disasters over the years The few notable surviving buildings were erected in the late 19th and early 20th centuries Mayor Norman Quijano started several large projects with the goal of restoring the former grandeur of the buildings in the center One such project is to reroute the public transportation routes so they no longer pass through the historic downtown Another project is the relocation of unauthorised street vendors to a designated public market National Palace Edit Main article National Palace El Salvador National Palace of El Salvador The current National Palace building replaced the old National Palace built in 1866 1870 which was destroyed by fire on 19 December 1889 The construction done between 1905 and 1911 was the work of engineer Jose Emilio Alcaine under the direction of the foreman Pascasio Gonzalez Erazo To finish the project legislation was passed that collected one colon for every quintal of coffee exported The materials used were imported from several European countries including Germany Italy and Belgium The Palace s facilities were occupied by government offices until 1974 The building contains four main rooms and 101 secondary rooms each of the four main rooms has a distinctive color The Red Room Salon Rojo is used for receptions held by the Salvadoran Foreign Ministry and the ceremonial presentation of ambassadors credentials It has been used for ceremonial purposes since the administration of General Maximiliano Hernandez Martinez The Yellow Room Salon Amarillo is used as an office for the President of the Republic while the Pink Room Salon Rosado housed the Supreme Court and later the Ministry of Defense The Blue Room Salon Azul was the meeting place of the Legislature of El Salvador from 1906 and its classical architecture with Ionian Corinthian and Roman elements is notable The room is now called the Salvadoran Parliament in commemoration of its former purpose and was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1974 Metropolitan Cathedral Edit Main article San Salvador Cathedral San Salvador Cathedral facing Plaza Barrios in the city center The Metropolitan Cathedral of the Holy Savior Catedral Metropolitana de San Salvador is the principal church of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of San Salvador and the seat of the Archbishop of San Salvador The church was twice visited by Pope John Paul II who said that the cathedral was intimately allied with the joys and hopes of the Salvadoran people During his visits in 1983 and 1996 the Pope knelt and prayed before the Tomb of Archbishop oscar Romero assassinated in 1980 whose tomb here is a major draw for pilgrims The cathedral s site is the location of the old Temple of Santo Domingo St Dominic Forty four people died on Palm Sunday 31 March 1980 during the funeral of Archbishop Romero as a result of a stampede after some gunmen allegedly members of security forces although it has never been corroborated fired on mourners and on Romero s funeral cortege The gunmen were never identified The square in front of the cathedral was the site of celebrations after the signing of the Chapultepec Peace Accords that ended the Salvadoran Civil War in 1992 The cathedral was finished off with a festive tiled ceramic mural facade by the Salvadoran master Fernando Llort and inaugurated on 19 March 1999 In late December 2012 the Archbishop of San Salvador Jose Luis Escobar Alas ordered the removal of the facade without consulting the national government or the artist himself Workers chipped off and destroyed all the 2 700 tiles of the mural 18 National Theater Edit Main article Teatro Nacional de El Salvador National Theater of El Salvador The Teatro Nacional de El Salvador or National Theater of El Salvador is the oldest theater in Central America It was designed by the French architect Daniel Beylard with construction starting on 3 November 1911 The building was inaugurated on 1 March 1917 It is of French Renaissance style with modern touches and was decorated by the Italian architect Lucio Cappellaro The National Theater is located on the southern side of Francisco Morazan Plaza on Calle Delgado It was built in the French Renaissance style with details done in the Rococo Romantic and Art Nouveau styles and can seat 650 spectators in the Grand Hall It has balconies on three levels the Presidential Balcony located between the third and second Floor has a direct view of center stage The building features an ellipsoidal dome containing a mural by painter Carlos Canas and a crystal chandelier other impressive spaces include the Chamber Hall and the Grand Foyer The theater is open to tourists and after the Historic Downtown Restoration has been used for plays shows operas song recitals and modern dance performances It is the largest and most luxurious theater in Central America and was declared a National Monument in 1979 Calle Arce Edit Calle Arce named after Manuel Jose Arce first president of the Federal Republic of Central America is a major street in San Salvador Mayor Norman Quijano inaugurated the first phase of its redevelopment near the Plaza de la Salud which focuses on improvements to the sidewalks between 21st and 19th Avenida Norte Twelve antique lights originally from Spain and dating from 1900 will be installed along with six benches and 40 trees At the same time sidewalks will be renovated with ramps to provide access for people with disabilities and seniors Calle Arce is monitored by 24 members of the Corps Metropolitan Agents CAM who specialize in the maintenance and protection of the new public space Parks and plazas Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Plaza Gerardo Barrios Plaza Gerardo Barrios Edit La Plaza Gerardo Barrios also known as the Civic Plaza is located in the heart of the city The statue that dominates the site designed by Francisco Durini Caseres is dedicated to President Gerardo Barrios and was unveiled in 1909 It was the work of the sculptors Antonio and Carlos Ezeta who were brothers The figure made of bronze is placed on a pedestal of granite and depicts battle scenes and the shield of El Salvador Plaza Gerardo Barrios is the site of many demonstrations and political rallies Mass is celebrated there as well and it is the destination of many parades The plaza is also the focal point for celebrations accompanying the feast of San Salvador on 5 and 6 August The religious procession called El Descenso The Descent dedicated to the Divine Savior of the World and representing the resurrection of Jesus and his descent from the tomb terminates there Plaza Libertad Edit Plaza LibertadPlaza Libertad is the location of the Monumento de los Heroes Monument to the Heroes a commemoration of the centenary of the First Cry of Independence in 1811 The monument designed by Francisco Durini Caseres and installed in 1911 is crowned by an angel of freedom at its pinnacle holding a laurel wreath in both hands As a consequence of increased commercial activity the area around the plaza was enhanced with the construction of two ornate buildings the Portal la Dalia in 1915 1916 and the Portal de Occidente in 1917 Plaza Morazan Edit Plaza MorazanDuring the administration of President Rafael Zaldivar the Salvadoran government ordered the erection of a marble statue here to commemorate the fortieth anniversary 15 March 1882 of the death of Francisco Morazan former president of the Federal Republic of Central America The sculpture was created by the artist Francisco Durini Vasalli originally of Tremona Italy The government declared 15 March as a day of national civic celebration and Morazan s son attended the inauguration as a representative of the Government of Honduras Casa Duenas Edit Casa DuenasThis important residential building was built in the 1920s by coffee farmer Miguel Duenas The government confiscated the house in 1922 to cover the owner s debts and it then remained unoccupied for years From 1930 to 1933 Mexico leased the house for use by its diplomatic delegation and from 1935 to 1957 the United States legation rented the house for its ambassadors residence Six successive U S ambassadors resided there and occasional guests such as former Presidents Richard Nixon and Lyndon B Johnson Senator Robert Kennedy and movie stars Clark Gable and Tony Curtis stayed there After 1957 it was the temporary headquarters of an advertizing agency then was vacated again in 1960 In 1973 the Department of Vocational Training Ministry of Labor occupied the structure in 1986 it was declared a Cultural Asset by an Executive Agreement of 8 May 1985 The Ministry of Labor transferred the property to the authorities of the Ministry of Education with a directive to explore the possibility of its restoration and rehabilitation The restoration work began in 2001 under the leadership of Dr Alfredo Martinez Moreno former director of the Salvadorean Language Academy and the Royal Spanish Academy Convention centers Edit Centro Internacional de Ferias y Convenciones CIFCO The Centro Internacional de Ferias y Convenciones CIFCO is a multipurpose convention center in the Colonia San Benito Zona Rosa District 3 5 miles 8 0 km from the Historic Downtown of San Salvador District 1 in a residential area with good transportation facilities and easy access to first class hotels The center is affiliated with the Union of International Fairs UFI and the Association of International Fairs of America AFIDA and is regarded as the largest and most modern convention center in Central America The CIFCO amphitheater is one of the most important performance venues in San Salvador hosting many concerts and international artists It has a capacity of 15 000 persons A renovation lasting from 2003 until 2010 added five pavilions a three level underground parking for 3 500 vehicles and hotels Goals of CIFCO include Support the international exchange of technological commercial and industrial ideas Plan and organize conventions for exhibitors from the realms of commerce industry and tourism Provide a pleasant environment for guests and visitors Promoting the image of El Salvador both nationally and internationallyAs of the beginning of 2021 a hospital to contain the COVID 19 pandemic has been built on the CIFCO grounds Museums Edit San Salvador has many museums with the largest being the Museo Nacional de Antropologia de El Salvador MUNA and Museo de Arte de El Salvador MARTE MUNA s mission is to help Salvadorans reflect on their cultural identity through exhibitions research publications and educational programs in the fields of archeology and anthropology The museum s exhibits demonstrate social processes of the various human cultural groups that have inhabited El Salvador MARTE s mission is to contribute to development of the country s education and culture through the conservation and dissemination of its artistic heritage and by improving historical knowledge reaffirming cultural values that shape the Salvadoran identity and promoting new artistic idioms MARTE is a private nonprofit organization opened on 22 May 2003 Since then the museum has become an essential element of the cultural life of Central America with its representative view of art from the mid 19th century to contemporary times 19 20 A different sort of museum is the Tin Marin Museo de los Ninos Tin Marin Children s Museum located between Gimnasio Nacional Jose Adolfo Pineda and Parque Cuscatlan 21 Tin Marin seeks to contribute to children becoming integral and creative citizens through significant learning cultural stimulation and entertaining experimentation 22 The museum has more than 25 exhibits including The Airplane The Grocery Store and the Planetarium Sports Edit Estadio Cuscatlan with a capacity of over 45 000 is the largest soccer venue in Central America and the Caribbean citation needed It was announced on 16 November 2007 that Estadio Cuscatlan would become the first soccer stadium in Central America and the Caribbean to have a large LED screen citation needed on which spectators can view the action The screen is 40 meters in height and width and was completed in March 2008 The stadium was built in the early 1970s just before the beginning of the civil war intended to jump start an era of modernization in San Salvador but development in the country ground to a halt during the 12 years of war Another major stadium is the Estadio Jorge Magico Gonzalez with a capacity of 35 000 This stadium hosted the Central American and Caribbean Games in 2002 in which El Salvador came in 6th place among 37 countries Magico Gonzalez Stadium San Salvador is the home of three major soccer teams in the Primera Division de Futbol de El Salvador Alianza F C C D Atletico Marte and C D Universidad de El Salvador Alianza F C and Atletico Marte play their home games at Estadio Cuscatlan and C D Universidad de El Salvador plays theirs at Estadio Universitario UES Alianza is well known throughout El Salvador for its loyal supporters and for the exuberant atmosphere created during games Major tourist attractions Edit Catedral Metropolitana Metropolitan Cathedral Teatro Nacional de El Salvador The National Theatre of El Salvador National Palace El Salvador The pus Monumento al Divino Salvador del Mundo Monument to the Savior of the World Casa Presidencial The Presidential Mansion Monumento a La Libertad Monument to Liberty Estadio Cuscatlan Soccer stadium Monumento a la Constitucion Constitution monument Plaza Alberto Masferrer Los Planes De Renderos An attraction with many pupuserias overlooking San Salvador Education EditSan Salvador has numerous private high schools including Protestant and Catholic high schools as well as secular ones the city also has numerous private bilingual schools Transportation EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message San Salvador is a major regional transportation hub served by a comprehensive public transport network Major routes of the national transportation network run through the city Airport Edit The country s primary airport is Monsenor oscar Arnulfo Romero International Airport which handles all international flights It replaced Ilopango International Airport as the country s main airport on 31 January 1980 Ilopango airport is located within the city limits and could not be expanded due to the lack of land and the proximity of the surrounding population so the new airport was built outside the city in the neighboring department of La Paz Monsenor oscar Arnulfo Romero International Airport lies on flat terrain and it is not surrounded by populated areas so it can be expanded in the future It is located in the municipality of San Luis Talpa 40 km 25 miles from San Salvador With 2 076 258 passengers in 2008 it was the third busiest airport by passenger traffic in Central America Ilopango International Airport Ilopango International Airport is used for military and charter aviation It recently underwent renovation and re opened in 2009 Ilopango is the host of an annual air show Tamarindo Regional There are plans to rehabilitate the airport on the Eastern Salvadoran coast of El Tamarindo La Union Roads Edit Construction of the first expressway freeway in El Salvador RN 21 Boulevard Diego Holguin San Salvador has excellent transportation connectivity due to its extensive road network and its street maintenance system San Salvador s metropolitan road system handles approximately 400 000 vehicles per day citation needed The main highway passing through San Salvador is the CA 1 Pan American highway which at one point becomes Bulevar Arturo Castellanos The RN 21 Bulevar Monsenor Romero is a major east west road connecting the cities of Santa Tecla and Antiguo Cuscatlan finally merging in San Salvador with the RN 5 East West also known as Bulevar los Proceres that later turns into the North South RN 5 heading towards the International Airport Another major roadway is the RN 4 Carretera Este Oeste which runs from San Salvador through Apopa and subsequently merges with the CA 1 Panamericana RN 5 Los Proceres East West El Salvador International Airport Roads in the capital are called street if they run east west and avenue if they run north south Road numbering starts at the downtown intersection of Avenida Espana Avenida Cuscatlan and Delgado Arce street Avenues to the west of this intersection have odd number names and to the east they have even number names Streets have odd number names if they are to the north of the intersection and even number names if to the south One particularly heavily traveled road is 49a Avenida Norte which connects with the RN 5 highway to the airport An important historical street is Calle Arce which was closed in order to create a pedestrian only mall in the historic downtown of San Salvador Some streets in the city are very narrow with little room for cars to pass although many streets are wide Speed limits are 90 km h 56 mph on highways 60 km h 37 mph on main roads and 40 km h 25 mph on secondary streets and avenues SITRAMSS Edit The San Salvador Metropolitan Area Integrated System of Transportation SITRAMSS is a proposed high volume bus transportation system The first route of the SITRAMSS will make a round trip from San Martin through Ilopango Soyapango San Salvador and Antiguo Cuscatlan to Santa Tecla It is projected that between 40 and 60 busses capable of carrying 160 passengers per trip will start operating in the second half of 2013 23 The departure interval will be approximately eight to ten minutes 24 By the time the buses have reached the San Salvador historic downtown they will have already transported 20 000 passengers SITRAMSS is a public private partnership involving the current passenger transport operators who must purchase the buses To pay for the infrastructure development a loan of 50 million has been provided by the Inter American Development Bank BID The system will work with a prepaid card system which is expected to reduce the time required for passengers to enter the busses An estimated 200 000 passengers will be transported daily or about 5 600 000 every month 24 Bus and taxi Edit SITRAMSS bus system Approximately 200 000 people use the city s public bus system daily Some of the bus transportation system is operated by the city government but most of it is operated by the private sector This mixture of ownership has contributed to safety and traffic problems In 2013 when the SITRAMS commences operation it will resolve many of these problems 25 Bus rides typically cost between 0 20 and 0 25 depending on the route The city government operates a free bus system for use by handicapped elderly and pregnant women this is the only such system in Central America A taxi system operates throughout the entire city fares depend on the route as taxi drivers charge based on the location of the destination rather than on elapsed time Taxis in San Salvador are yellow and the fleet is composed primarily of Toyota Corollas Railway Edit Main article Rail transport in El Salvador Railway service was absent during the 1990s but beginning on 1 October 2007 the National Railways of El Salvador FENADESAL resumed service Tickets cost 0 10 Trains depart from near the East Bus Station and travel to the town of Apopa service suspended from 2013 There are plans to start operation of another route connecting the northern side of San Salvador Cuscatancingo to Apopa and from Apopa to the city of Nejapa There is also a historic railroad consisting of railroad cars from the 1960s which were refurbished and put into operation by the ministry of tourism Once a month visitors can board the antique train and experience the way San Salvadorans transported themselves in the 1960s Disasters EditSee also 1986 San Salvador earthquake Salvador del Mundo fallen from its pedestal The Gran Hotel The city has suffered from many severe earthquakes the most disastrous of which occurred in 1854 The San Salvador volcano erupted again in 1917 26 resulting in three major earthquakes that damaged the city so extensively the government was forced to temporarily move the capital to the city of Santa Tecla known at the time as Nueva San Salvador The 1986 San Salvador earthquake struck on 10 October 1986 causing considerable damage to the city and surrounding areas Between 1 000 and 1 500 people are believed to have been killed and over 10 000 people were injured 200 000 people were left homeless after the earthquake and a week of minor aftershocks 27 28 landslide caused by the 2001 earthquake The 2001 El Salvador earthquakes struck El Salvador on 13 January and 13 February 2001 resulting in considerable damage to the city especially in Las Colinas suburb where a landslide destroyed homes and killed many people During the 1980s when political conflicts in El Salvador exploded into Salvadoran civil war many people fled to the capital since most of the fighting occurred elsewhere San Salvador itself was not directly affected by the war until the final offensive of 1989 Hurricanes tsunamis and landslides also pose a threat In November 2009 Hurricane Ida hit the departments of San Salvador San Vicente and Cuscatlan In San Vicente the municipalities of Verapaz and Guadalupe were totally destroyed by rainfall accompanying the hurricane and the resultant landslide The Army and the Red Cross were able to rescue most of the victims but many thousands of people were left homeless The government opened public schools to be used as temporary shelters for three months The Hurricane destroyed some bridges and some towns lost communications The people of El Salvador raised money for the homeless and international aid came from countries such as the United States Mexico Nicaragua Guatemala and the European Union Tropical Storm Agatha Edit See also Tropical Storm Agatha 2010 Tropical Storm Agatha Tropical storm Agatha hit the Central American coast on Thursday 27 May 2010 About 3 feet 0 91 m of rainfall was recorded over a period of five days in the Metropolitan Area of San Salvador producing sinkholes flash floods and mudslides Districts particularly hard hit included downtown El Picacho and Montebello Tropical Storm Amanda Edit See also Tropical Storm Amanda 2020 Tropical Storm Amanda making landfall in Central America on 31 May Tropical storm Amanda caused torrential rainfall across El Salvador which was heavily impacted by the storm In El Salvador torrential rainfall caused significant damage along coastal cities in the country as rivers overflowed and swept away buildings In the capital San Salvador 50 houses were destroyed and 23 vehicles fell into a sinkhole rivers overflowed and swept away buildings damaging 900 homes and displacing over 1 200 people Movement restrictions in place for the ongoing COVID 19 pandemic in El Salvador were temporarily lifted to allow people to purchase medicines while hardware stores were allowed to open with limited capacity so people could purchase equipment for repairs El Salvador President Nayib Bukele declared a 15 day national state of emergency due to the storm Amanda was considered the worst weather disaster to effect El Salvador in 22 years since Hurricane Mitch in which Amanda caused rainfall accumulations of at least 600 mm 23 62 in in many parts of the country and Mitch only caused at least 400 mm 15 74 in in other areas in a longer period of time Security and crime EditFurther information Crime in El Salvador Concerns about public safety in San Salvador increased in the late 1980s due to the civil war Although it was fought primarily in the countryside during the latter years of the war guerrillas started attacking the capital city San Salvador recovered quickly after the cessation of hostilities but gang mara violence became a problem The 18th Street gang originating in Los Angeles California United States has proliferated in San Salvador The Mara Salvatrucha is a rival gang In 2002 crime rates skyrocketed and the municipal government was unable to combat the rise Recent efforts by mayor Norman Quijano to restore public safety have been somewhat successful Security measures in San Salvador s most troubled Districts 5 and 6 which border Soyapango and are home to many gangs included safety campaigns and recreational activities to keep youth from joining gangs The mayor also initiated a security camera program so the police can monitor the most heavily trafficked areas of the city The project was launched in the historic downtown and will expand throughout the entire city 29 As of 2011 update San Salvador had managed to reduce its crime rate and reduce its murder rate to a level lower than that of Haiti Venezuela 30 Mexico Guatemala or Honduras 31 although at over 90 murders per 100 000 residents the per capita rate was more than 10 times higher than major cities such as New York or London 32 Also according to a UN Development report San Salvador has a relatively low robbery rate of 90 per 100 000 33 compared to San Jose the capital of Costa Rica which has 524 robberies per 100 000 34 Districts 3 and 4 are the wealthiest in the country and in theory the safest but in reality even Colonia Escalon is surrounded by marginal communities and there are countless cases of robbery and criminal activities in or around the area Districts 1 and 2 have a slightly higher crime rate than 3 or 4 while District 5 bordering San Marcos and District 6 bordering Soyapango have the highest crime rates Photo gallery of sites in San Salvador Edit Cuscatlan Stadium San Salvador night view Northwest San Salvador The Metropolitan Cathedral Monument to the Revolution Apartment towers in San Salvador Torre Futura in the World Trade Center San Salvador Boulevard De Los Heroes Boulevard Monsenor Romero Boulevard Diego de Holguin Twin towns and sister cities EditMain article List of twin towns and sister cities in El Salvador San Salvador is twinned with Caracas Venezuela Medellin Colombia Guadalajara Mexico 35 La Paz Bolivia Los Angeles United States Managua Nicaragua Madrid Spain Mexico City Mexico Montreal Quebec Canada Saint Petersburg Russia Panama City Panama Sao Paulo Brazil Tel Aviv Israel Washington D C United States Miami United StatesSee also EditAntiguo Cuscatlan Concepcion de Ataco San Salvador volcano Santa Tecla Soyapango ZacatecolucaReferences Edit Global BR Data BRT CoE Retrieved 12 July 2019 United Nations Data El Salvador Capital city Population Major Agglomerations Of The World City Population Accessed 12 Jul 2019 Sub national HDI Subnational HDI Global Data Lab GlobalDataLab Biggest Cities El Salvador Geonames org Retrieved 24 February 2012 1 Archived 27 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine Demographia World Urban Areas 17th Annual Edition 202106 History of the Jews in El Salvador Ibero American Summit Central American Bank for Economic Integration Normales Climatologicas 1981 2010 in Spanish Ministerio de Medio Ambiente y Recursos Naturales Archived from the original on 14 September 2019 Retrieved 14 September 2019 Cappelen John Jensen Jens El Salvador San Salvador pg 85 PDF Climate Data for Selected Stations 1931 1960 in Danish Danish Meteorological Institute Archived from the original PDF on 27 April 2013 Retrieved 18 December 2012 Station San Salvador in French Meteo Climat Retrieved 2 May 2017 Census 2007 Retrieved 31 January 2022 El Salvador Estimaciones y Proyecciones de Poblacion Municipal 2005 2025 Revision 2014 Report Direccion General de Estadistica y Censos September 2014 Retrieved 25 April 2016 Roberto Marin Guzman 2000 A Century of Palestinian Immigration into Central America Editorial Universidad de Costa Rica pp 42 49 ISBN 9789977675879 Que es el Dinero What is Money in Spanish Banco Central de Reserva de El Salvador 2000 Archived from the original on 13 June 2007 Heidenry Rachel 6 January 2012 Archbishop Orders Destruction of Salvadoran Mural Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting Retrieved 3 February 2013 Marte Museo de Arte de El Salvador suphasithruxkhaphngephyithyaelatangpraeths www munaelsalvador com Cuscatlan Park one of the biggest urban parks in El Salvador Explore beautiful el salvador com Archived from the original on March 8 2012 Retrieved February 24 2012 2 Archived 31 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine VMT promete el SITRAMSS hasta 2013 Laprensagrafica com Archived from the original on April 7 2012 Retrieved February 24 2012 a b Preparan primera fase de SITRAMSS Laprensagrafica com Archived from the original on April 7 2012 Retrieved February 24 2012 elsalvador com Los buseros quieren invertir en el Sitramss Elsalvador com Retrieved 24 February 2012 San Salvador Global Volcanism Program Smithsonian Institution Harlow David H e a August 1993 The San Salvador earthquake of 10 October 1986 and its historical context Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America 83 4 1143 1154 Bibcode 1993BuSSA 83 1143H doi 10 1785 BSSA0830041143 S2CID 130882786 Retrieved 28 May 2009 Significant earthquakes in 1986 Archived from the original on February 27 2009 3 Archived 26 December 2011 at the Wayback Machine International Human Development Indicators UNDP Hdrstats undp org Archived from the original on January 26 2012 Retrieved February 24 2012 International Human Development Indicators UNDP Hdrstats undp org Archived from the original on January 21 2012 Retrieved February 24 2012 Dailey Kate 29 November 2012 Who What Why What happened to crime in New York City BBC News BBC News Magazine Retrieved 29 November 2012 International Human Development Indicators UNDP Hdrstats undp org Archived from the original on March 4 2012 Retrieved February 24 2012 International Human Development Indicators UNDP Hdrstats undp org 29 January 2010 Retrieved 24 February 2012 Sister Cities Public Relations Guadalajara municipal government Archived from the original on 2 March 2012 Retrieved 12 March 2013 Further reading EditSee also Bibliography of the history of San SalvadorExternal links EditSan Salvador at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Resources from Wikiversity Travel information from Wikivoyage Data from Wikidata Municipality of the city of San Salvador The Tramways of San Salvador 1876 1929 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title San Salvador amp oldid 1145356471, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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