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Centru Civic

The Centru Civic (literally "Civic Center") is a portion of Bucharest, Romania which was completely rebuilt as part of the scheme of systematization under the dictator Nicolae Ceauşescu.

Bucharest had taken significant damage due to Allied bombing during World War II (see Romania during World War II) and the earthquake of March 4, 1977 (see Bucharest earthquake of 1977). However, neither of these changed the face of the city as much as the redevelopment schemes of the 1980s, under which eight square kilometers in the historic center of Bucharest were leveled, including monasteries, churches, synagogues, a hospital, and a noted Art Deco sports stadium. This also involved evicting 40,000 people with only a single day's notice and relocating them to new homes, in order to make way for the grandiose Centru Civic and the immense Palace of the People, now officially renamed as the Palace of Parliament, a building second in size only to the Pentagon.

The Centru Civic is a complex of modern concrete buildings with marble façades, centered on a boulevard originally known as the Boulevard of the Victory of Socialism, renamed after the 1989 revolution as Unification ("Unirii") Boulevard. The Boulevard, modeled after Paris's Champs Elysées and a few meters longer than it, runs roughly east-west, constituting a grand approach to the Palace of the People at its western terminus. A grand balcony in the Palace surveys the entire length of the boulevard.

The Centru Civic includes numerous government offices and apartments, the latter being roughly equal in number to the housing units destroyed for its construction. The apartments were originally intended to house Romania's communist elite, but the completed complex is certainly not a preferred residence for the city's new capitalist elite, with the possible exception of buildings that look out on the now-bustling Unirea Square, where the Centru Civic bisects the Dâmboviţa River, which is channelled underground past the Square.

The Centru Civic stands out through its high degree of architectural uniformity, but also through its lack of commercial spaces. Most of the small shops and restaurants that form the heart of Bucharest are to be found in the areas immediately to the north of the Centru Civic.

The never-completed eastern portion of the Centru Civic is generally known to Bucharesteans as "Hiroshima". Concrete hulks of half-completed buildings stand where historic buildings (including much of the city's historic Jewish quarter ) once stood.

The Centru Civic is surrounded on nearly all sides by historical buildings and neighborhoods. Lipscani, in particular, is one famous nearby street. Many churches, such as the Sf. Nicolai-Mihai Vodă Church, were moved rather than demolished, and the nearby Antim Monastery remains largely intact, although minus its eastern wing. Immediately adjacent to the Centru Civic, just off of Unirii Square, is the Metropolitan Hill (Dealul Metropoliei) with the Patriarchal Cathedral and Palace, seat of patriarch of the Romanian Orthodox Church.

10-26-2009 08:16:03
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