Los Olivos is a district of the Lima Province in Peru . Is a District of the Cono Norte area in the city of Lima .
13-426: Los Olivos may refer to: Los Olivos District , Peru Los Olivos, California , United States Los Olivos, Los Santos , Panama [REDACTED] Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles about distinct geographical locations with the same name. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to
26-406: A group of neighbors from El Trébol and Sol de Oro Urbanization came together to form the " Rosa de América " Management Committee . On February 4, 1977, a new committee with greater scope was created. The district was officially established on April 6, 1989, when it separated from San Martín de Porres . The main reason for the separation was the abandonment of these residential developments by
39-412: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Lima Province Lima Province is located in the central coast of Peru and is the only province in the country not belonging to any of the twenty-five regions , thus being quasi-autonomous. Its capital is Lima , which is also the nation's capital. Despite its small area, this province is the major industrial and economic powerhouse of
52-538: The La Costa Department . The department was further subdivided as time passed but the Lima Province kept being part of it. Due to the massive migration from other areas of the country, the need to separate the province from the rest of the department was forecast by experts. In 2002, the new regionalization law passed by President Alejandro Toledo made the Lima Province a separate entity from
65-672: The Thomas Restobar nightclub in Los Olivos, just north of Lima, when police arrived to the scene. Neighbors had alerted police about the event. Partygoers, upon police arrival, rushed to escape through a single door, according to a statement from the Peru Interior Ministry. No tear gas or weapons were fired. 11°58′13″S 77°04′26″W / 11.97028°S 77.07389°W / -11.97028; -77.07389 This Lima Province geography article
78-539: The Municipality of San Martín de Porres. The district has a total land area of 18.25 km . Its administrative center is located 75 meters above sea level . According to a 2002 estimate by the INEI , the district has 301,226 inhabitants and a population density of 16,505.5 persons/km . In 1999, there were 53,660 households in the district. Most people living in this district belong to the new middle class . Most of
91-581: The Peruvian economy. It concentrates almost one-third of the country's population and 50% of Peru's GDP in 2012. The province was created in 1821, as Peru's territory was divided into departments , provinces , districts and parishes . The province was part of the Lima Department , which was formed by the territories of present-day Lima , Callao and Ica regions, and the provinces of Casma , Huarmey and Santa , which later would be part of
104-480: The districts of Lima province are fused together in a continuous urban area , with the exception of the beach resort of Ancón and Santa Rosa in the north and Punta Hermosa , Punta Negra , San Bartolo , Santa Maria del Mar and Pucusana in the south. Lima Province is administered by the Metropolitan Municipality of Lima ( Municipalidad Metropolitana de Lima ), which also administers
117-436: The heads of households in the district are immigrants, coming predominantly from the north of the country, where those from the regions of Ancash , Cajamarca , La Libertad , Piura and Lambayeque stand out, with those from the first department being more numerous. Many of these immigrants come from the little bourgeoisie . Los Olivos is considered by some media as the best developed district of Cono Norte of Lima , due to
130-467: The intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Los_Olivos&oldid=932969582 " Category : Place name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Los Olivos District In the Viceroyalty and early years of the republic, it
143-555: The large number of services found in the district and the high quality of life ( HDI ) of the district, in addition to those provided due to the proximity of the large stores and shopping centers of the Independencia and Comas Districts. On 22 August 2020 thirteen people were killed in a while trying to flee an illegal nightclub party in Peru raided by police on Saturday night, officials said. There were approximately 120 people at
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#1732773141695156-503: The rest of the newly created Lima Region . The province is divided into 43 districts of Lima . Each of them is headed by a mayor , although the Metropolitan Municipality of Lima ( Municipalidad Metropolitana de Lima ), led by the mayor of Lima , also exercises its authority in these districts. These districts are grouped together into four sectors: Central Lima, North Lima , East Lima , and South Lima . All
169-609: Was part of the great territory of Carabayllo . In the mid-16th century, when the encomienda system failed, the Lima Cabildo granted land to Nicolás de Ribera in the Chillón Valley and to Francisco de Ampuero in Chuquitanta . By the 17th century, near these properties, the haciendas of El Naranjal, Pro, Infantas, and Aznapuquio were established. The first efforts to create a new district date back to 1970, when
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