Neuquén City, Neuquén Province, Patagonia, Argentina

History | Neuquén as an Argentine Province | Economy | Transport | Museums

🇦🇷 Neuquén is the capital city of the Argentine province of Neuquén and of the Confluencia Department, located in the east of the province. It occupies a strip of land west of the confluence of the Limay and Neuquén rivers which form the Río Negro making it part of the ecoregion of Alto Valle del Río Negro. The city is it the largest city in Patagonia. Along with the cities of Plottier and Cipolletti, it is part of the Neuquén-Plottier-Cipolletti conurbation.

History The first inhabitants of the area were very mobile and moved according to the seasons of the year, climatic conditions, and the abundance of food and game. Around the 16th century the people living in different areas of the province began to be assimilated by the Mapuche people. One of the most important trails used by the Mapuches passed through the area of the confluence of the Limay and Neuquén rivers.

In the 17th century European explorers arrived in the area of the confluence.

In 1604, Hernando Arias de Saavedra decided to explore the trails to Patagonia. With the support of the ranchers of Buenos Aires, Santa Fe, and Corrientes, he departed from Buenos Aires and passed through the mountains of the Sierra de la Ventana. He reached what is now the city of Neuquén and continued on, possibly passing through what is today Auca Mahuida.

In 1782, departing from Carmen de Patagones, Basilio Villarino traveled upstream on the Río Negro. On 23 January 1783, he arrived at the confluence of the Limay and Neuquén Rivers, camping on an island. He then followed the Limay to the confluence of the Collón Curá, then from there to the Chimehuin River.

Neuquén as an Argentine Province In 1885, the lands of what was at that time called Confluencia (i.e., "confluence", referring to the two rivers) were auctioned to a few people. Shortly after the Conquest of the Desert campaign conducted by the military over Patagonia, the Tehuelche and Pehuenche tribes that inhabited the province of Neuquén were either killed or pushed out of these lands.

Since there was no defined border with Chile, the Argentine government reached an agreement with the British-owned Buenos Aires Great Southern Railway company that was constructing a railway network, mainly in Buenos Aires Province, to build an extension to the town in exchange for lands, in order to populate it. In 1899, the railroad reached Cipolletti in Río Negro province, and three years later, after the construction of the bridge, arrived at Neuquén.

Neuquén was officially founded on 12 September 1904, and the capital of the territory was transferred from Chos Malal to the young town. The name "Neuquén" derives from the Mapudungun word nehuenken, meaning drafty, which the native people used in reference to this river.

By 1930, the town had only 5,000 inhabitants. In the 1960s, it acquired a new importance when oil deposits were found in the province by the state company YPF. The 1970s and 1980s saw massive demographic growth, accompanied by improvements such as the creation of the National University of Comahue in 1971.

In 2020, Sister Mónica Astorga Cremona, a Carmelite nun, founded Costa Limay Sustainable Complex for Transgender Women in Neuquén, the first permanent housing program in the world for transgender people.

Economy Neuquén is both an important agricultural centre, surrounded by fertile lands irrigated by the waters of the Limay and Neuquén rivers in an otherwise arid province, and a petrochemical industrial centre that receives oil extracted from different points of the province. It belongs economically and geographically to the Alto Valle region that produces apples, pears, and other fruits.

With the discovery of the Vaca Muerta oil fields west of the city (3rd largest shale gas & oil reserves in the world), it has begun to experience a boom in real estate and construction. It is expected that over the next few years the city will experience unprecedented growth as it is the only significant city in the region (it has an airport, shopping centres, office space and institutions to become the centre of the operations not only of the oil & gas companies, but also their suppliers)

Transport National Route 22 divides the city into two-halves.

The Presidente Perón Airport is eight km (5.0 miles) away from the city and serves regular flights to Buenos Aires, San Carlos de Bariloche, Comodoro Rivadavia, Río Gallegos, Río Grande, Ushuaia, and San Martín de los Andes.

The Tren del Valle commuter rail service links Neuquén with neighbouring Cipolletti.

Museums There are cultural spaces housed in former railroad buildings from the early 20th century, such as the Gregorio Álvarez and the Paraje Confluencia museums and the Emilio Saraco Art Gallery. The more recently built Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes, designed by Mario Roberto Alvarez, opened in 2004. The museum showcases both national and international artists. The building consists of four halls which include both the temporary and the permanent collection, as well as an auditorium and theater.

A variety of historical monuments dating from the 20th century, such as the Fotheringham Crossing Pyramid in the Sapere neighbourhood, can be found throughout the city.

America/Argentina/Salta/Neuquen_Province 
<b>America/Argentina/Salta/Neuquen_Province</b>
Image: Albasmalko

Neuquén City has a population of over 224,685 people. Neuquén City also forms part of the wider Neuquén-Plottier-Cipolletti metropolitan area which has a population of over 340,000 people. For the location of Neuquén City see: Neuquén.

To set up a UBI Lab for Neuquén City see: https://www.ubilabnetwork.org Twitter: https://twitter.com/UBILabNetwork

Text Atribution: Wikipedia Text under CC-BY-SA license

North of: -38.953

🇦🇷 Cipolletti -38.929

🇦🇷 Neuquén -38.926

🇨🇱 Temuco -38.733

🇦🇷 Bahía Blanca -38.718

🇳🇿 Taupō -38.687

🇳🇿 Gisborne -38.659

🇦🇺 Rosebud -38.356

🇦🇺 Latrobe -38.275

🇨🇱 Angol -38.25

🇦🇺 Morwell -38.233

South of: -38.953

🇦🇷 General Roca -39.027

🇳🇿 Stratford -39.333

🇳🇿 Napier -39.505

🇳🇿 Hastings -39.645

🇨🇱 Valdivia -39.8

🇳🇿 Whanganui -39.932

🇳🇿 Palmerston North -40.357

🇦🇷 Viedma -40.808

🇳🇿 Masterton -40.95

🇦🇺 Burnie -41.05

West of: -68.064

🇧🇴 La Paz -68.15

🇨🇦 Baie-Comeau -68.15

🇧🇴 El Alto -68.159

🇦🇷 Ushuaia -68.272

🇧🇶 Kralendijk -68.272

🇦🇷 San Rafael -68.333

🇺🇸 Ellsworth -68.417

🇦🇷 Rivadavia -68.467

🇦🇷 San Juan -68.517

🇨🇦 Iqaluit -68.52

Antipodal to Neuquén City is: 111.936,38.953

Locations Near: Neuquén City -68.0642,-38.9525

🇦🇷 Neuquén -68.052,-38.926 d: 3.1  

🇦🇷 Cipolletti -67.987,-38.929 d: 7.2  

🇦🇷 General Roca -67.575,-39.027 d: 43  

🇦🇷 Bariloche -71.31,-41.133 d: 367.6  

🇦🇷 San Carlos de Bariloche -71.312,-41.143 d: 368.4  

🇨🇱 Angol -72.25,-38.25 d: 372  

🇦🇷 San Rafael -68.333,-34.6 d: 484.6  

🇦🇷 Santa Rosa -64.283,-36.617 d: 421.7  

🇨🇱 Temuco -72.667,-38.733 d: 399.3  

🇨🇱 San Carlos -71.95,-36.417 d: 443.1  

Antipodal to: Neuquén City 111.936,38.953

🇨🇳 Taiyuan 112.56,37.869 d: 19882.9  

🇨🇳 Yingxian 113.191,39.554 d: 19888  

🇨🇳 Jinzhong 112.753,37.688 d: 19857.4  

🇨🇳 Fenyang 111.77,37.262 d: 19826.5  

🇨🇳 Pingyao 112.15,37.2 d: 19819.3  

🇨🇳 Datong 113.284,40.095 d: 19843.3  

🇨🇳 Hohhot 111.652,40.811 d: 19807.1  

🇨🇳 Yangquan 113.563,37.858 d: 19828.2  

🇨🇳 Ordos 109.785,39.604 d: 19816.3  

🇨🇳 Yulin 109.734,38.286 d: 19809.9  

Bing Map

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