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Missing image Culiacan_Sight_at_Night.JPG Night view of Alvaro Obregón Avenue Culiacán is a city in North West Mexico, capital and biggest city of the state of Sinaloa with 745,532 inhabitants and considered the 15th largest in the country. The city is located in a fertile valley where the rivers Tamazula and Humaya meet to form the Culiacán river, and is located at 54 mts above de the sea level. It is placed in the center of the state with almost equal distant to the other urban centers of the state: Los Mochis to the north, and Mazatlán to the south. Culiacan is sister city of Saint Paul, Minnesota.
HistoryExperts do not agree on the meaning of the name, but it apparently comes from the word colhuacan, which can mean "place where roads turn", "place of snakes", but traditionally the most accepted translation would be "place of the those who adore the god Coltzin". Before the Spaniards arrival, this site had been a small Indian settlement since 628 when passing Aztecs had first founded it. Missing image Culiacan1945.jpg Culiacan, 1945 The city existing today was founded in 1531 by the Spanish captain Nuсo Beltrán de Guzmán and named San Miguel de Culiacán. Explorer Francisco Vásquez de Coronado set out from Culiacán to explore what is now the southwestern United States. Settlers from Europe came to Culiacán, and in the following centuries, Culiacán continued to be a quiet town. It was only after the federal government built dams in the adjacent areas in the 1950s that agriculture exploded and the city began to grow exponentially. It still has a yearly shortage of workers, who have to be brought from south Mexico, especially the state of Oaxaca. Because of this, unemployment has been characteristically low, around 3.0% over the last 10 years. WeatherAverage year temperature is 24 C, with minimum of 2 C and reaching as high as 47 C in summer with an annual rainfall of 658 mm. Hot, humid summers and cool and generally dry winters are characteristics of this city’s weather. Missing image Vista_aerea_Culiacan_paint.JPG Satellite view of Culiacán DemographyMissing image Bandera.jpg Mexican flag on Culiacan river The total population of the city is 745,532 reaching almost a million adding the inhabitants of the satellite cities of Navolato (a municipality of its own),Costa Rica and Eldorado and those of the rural villages such as El Salado, Quila,Culiacancito, Imala and San Pedro. People from Culiacan are called Culiacanenses or Culichis. Immigration to Culiacán comes from all parts of the world, but especially from southern Mexico and Europe. There are Greek, German, French and Japanese communities in Culiacán, largely because of the economic boom of the last 50 years. Culiacan is world famous for the beauty of its people, maybe as a result of the mixture of all these diverse background. Culiacan is growing so fast in both, population and surface, that the former towns fo El Barrio, Aguaruto and Bachigualato (home of Culiacan International Airport) are now boroughs within the city. In order control this unmeasured growth, authorities of the three levels of government set up the Desarrollo Urbano Tres Rios, an urban development program intended to urbanize the areas along the three rivers that go across the city. Now at days, the area surrounding the rivers is a dynamic sector with high speed avenues and boulevards, shopping malls, parks, commercial and governmental offices and housing developments, all of these conjugated with the beauty provided by the magnificent scenery of its three rivers. TourismTourism industry in Culiacán has grown considerably in the last decade from a small number of hotels and small jet airport to a busy international fishing and hunting destination for thousands of tourists every year. Culiacán has a very active nightlife and social scene. Missing image REAR_VIEW_CATHEDRAL.JPG San Miguel Archangel Cathedral, next to Plazuela Alvaro Obregon in Downtown Missing image Inside_cathedral.jpg Inside San Miguel Cathedral Attractions in Culiacán include:
Missing image DSC08477.JPG Centro de Ciencias de Sinaloa Missing image Asteroide_culiacan.JPG World's second largest Meteorite
Missing image Culiacan_Palacio_at_Night.JPG City Hall in Downtown Safety: Tourism related petty crime, such as pocket-picking and tourist scams, is almost zero in the city. In Culiacán, your main concern should be watching out for the mix of careless drivers and narrow colonial streets. Stay in the sidewalks, even if tempted to wander around the colorful streets. Zebra crossings are only cosmetic, but crossing lights are to be taken seriously. There are police women ( very good looking ones )who will admonish you the first time, and give you a ticket if you are a known offender, if you cross the street when the red "Do not walk" sign is on. Although there is drug related crime in the zone, it's victims are individuals who take part in illegal activities, and it finds place in the low income neighborhoods outside the metropolitan area. Most of it involves drug traffickers, not average citizens, like any other big sized town. Missing image Dancing_fountains_Culiacan.jpg Dancing Fountains in Culiacán.
TransportationMissing image Downtown_Culiacan.jpg Downtown Culiacan seen from its tallest building Though there are several high speed roads, most of the city’s streets are rather narrow and traffic jams are common on rush hours. The city has a total of 9 bridges: 6 across the Tamazula river, 2 in Humaya River and the longest one crossing Culiacan river, most of them of great architectural beauty. Efforts to solve traffic problems have been made but most of the city streets and bridges are now crowded and insufficient to handle regular and rush hours traffic; and a 40 km/hr speed limit in most parts of the city worsen the situation. It was recently published that there are 530,000 cars in Culiacán making the per capita number of cars one of the highest in the country considering the 745,000 inhabitants. The city is a rail junction and is located on the Panamerican Highway that runs north to the United States and South to Guadalajara and Mexico City and the Benito Juárez Highway or Maxipista wich is a toll road that runs paralel to the free highway. Culiacan is linked to the satellite city of Navolato by an excellent Freeway that is planned to be continued to Altata, in the Pacific ocean coast. Culiacan is served by:
SportsMissing image Angel_flores_stadium.jpg Angel Flores Baseball Stadium The city is home of two professional league sport teams: Baseball with los Tomateros de Culiacán from the Liga Mexicana del Pacifico and Soccer with Los Dorados de Sinaloa from Federación Mexicana de Futbol. Duck, dove and goose hunting season goes from early november through march. Culiacán also holds a yearly international marathon.
Universities
Companies headquartered in Culiacan
News and Media
Drug Traffic IssueA word about drugs and Culiacán. After the fall of Burma in World War II, the USA were short of opium for medical purposes. The climate in the Sierra near Culiacán was ideal for growing opium, and the government encouraged its trade and production. After the war ended, the many US soldiers who became addicts continued to encourage the opium growers to stay in business, and though the practice was by then illegal, small plantations continued to be a source of extra income for farmers in the mountains of the sierra. The amount of opium produced was not especially high, but this created the first chain of drug trafficking in Sinaloa. Later, as cocaine came into fashion in the 1970's, Culiacán became the contact point between Colombian and American druglords, given the high numbers of small landing strips in the state, its high quality of life, and the big size of the city, which makes it easy to remain unnoticed. Overall Culiacán is a beautiful place to visit. It is a beautiful mixture of modern and colonial Mexico, nearby sea and mountains. It can be a bit difficult to navigate because of the three rivers crossing the city, but the locals are always happy to give you a hand and are proud of their lively and beautiful city. See alsoExternal Links
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