Raúl Aguilar Batres (December 1, 1910 – May 13, 1964) was a Guatemalan civil engineer. He is the inventor of the street naming and house numbering conventions that are used in Guatemala City and other cities in Guatemala.
Biography
Aguilar Batres was born December 1, 1910, in Guatemala City. He graduated from the Universidad Nacional in 1939 with a degree in civil engineering. He served as a university professor, as an assistant engineer on the Joint Commission on the boundary with Mexico, and in the Guatemala City Department of Planning. Aguilar Batres devised a system to rename and number the streets of Guatemala City, dividing the city into 25 zones. North-south streets were numbered as Avenidas and east-west streets as Calles. Hyphenated numbers were assigned to addresses to indicate distance in meters from a specified cross street. The system was introduced in 1947[1] and subsequently adopted by other cities such as Quetzaltenango. Aguilar Batres died May 13, 1964.
Legacy
Calle de Amatitlán in Guatemala was renamed Calzada Raúl Aguilar Batres within a few years of Aguilar Batres' death. A monument, featuring a marble bust sculpted by Rodolfo Galeotti Torres was created in 1970 and placed on Calzada Aguilar Batres in zone 11 of Guatemala City.
See also
References
- ↑ Ramírez, Alberto (April 4, 2004). "Las zonas fantasma de la capital". Prensa Libre. Archived from the original on July 10, 2007.
Further reading
- "Monumento a Raúl Aguilar Batres recobra su esplendor". Tú eres la Ciudad. Municipalidad de la Ciudad de Guatemala. August 30, 2007. Archived from the original on July 14, 2011. Retrieved April 11, 2009.