Infrastructure
[edit]
The Hotel Polana
Central Bank of Mozambique
Municipal Market of Maputo
The central area of Maputo is a planned city with square blocks and wide avenues, with Portuguese traces and their typical architecture of the 1970s. After the Carnation Revolution (1974) military coup in Lisbon, Portuguese refugees fled in massive numbers close to the date of independence (1975), and the resultant lack of skills and capital, in the context of a fierce civil war and government mismanagement, contributed to its state of dereliction in the years following these events.[citation needed]
Recovery of the older infrastructure has been slow and most property developers in recent years[which?] have decided to invest in the construction of new properties rather than rehabilitating any of the existing ones. The rates for property in the city are high as investment increases, larger numbers of businesses are hoping to locate within easy reach of the airports, banks and other facilities.[citation needed]
Maputo faces many challenges, such as poor transport and drainage infrastructure, which have profound implications on people's livelihoods, particularly in informal settlements. Inadequate planning regulation and law enforcement, as well as perceived corruption in government processes, lack of communication across government departments and lack of concern or government coordination with respect to building codes are major impediments to progressing the development of Maputo's infrastructure, according to the Climate & Development Knowledge Network.
As a coastal city, Maputo is particularly vulnerable to the impacts of sea level rise, and population growth is putting increasing pressure on the coastal areas.
PROMAPUTO[edit]
This section does not cite any sources. Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (May 2023) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
In 2007, the municipality of Maputo began a project to seriously consider rehabilitating the city's infrastructure. PROMAPUTO was a project that began as co-operation between the local city council and the International Development Association (IDA) of the World Bank. The first phase (PROMAPUTO1) took place between 2007 and 2010 and was chiefly concerned with developing the systems, knowledge and planning required to support the gradual overhaul of the infrastructure. The project was broken into several key areas and a budget allocated to each of these, namely: Institutional Development, Financial Sustainability, Urban Planning, Urban Infrastructure Investment and Maintenance, Metropolitan Development (services such as waste collection and disposal). The total financial allocation for this phase was US$30 million. Little was done, however.
Maputo's central mail station
In 2011, PROMAPUTO2, the second phase of the project began. This phase was to last until 2015 and a total of US$105 million was spent. The plan called for an IT systems, Integrated Financial Management Information System (IFMIS) together with Geographic Information System (GIS). These systems would supposedly help the municipality control its budgets and manage tenders, while the GIS would allow for precise information about land location and titling to be kept. Several roads should have been expanded and improved and the Avenida Julius Nyerere finally completed. Financial sustainability for the project was to be guaranteed through the improved collection of property tax (IPRA). The project also coincided with the recent overhaul of the Road Safety and Traffic Regulations (final completion 2020) which was an antiquated system that had not seen changes since the 1950s. Amongst the new regulations, heavy penalties and fines would now apply to many detrimental actions done by automobiles, such as pollution, loud noises, and illegal maneuvers.[citation needed]
Building projects[edit]
On 10 November 2018, the Maputo–Katembe bridge, Africa's largest suspension bridge, was inaugurated, connecting the center of the city to the urban district of Katembe, on the south bank of the estuary
In spite of its previous instability, Mozambique is experiencing one of the fastest growth rates for a developing country in the world. The projected growth rate for 2011 is expected to be around 7.5%, some of it centered on the construction of several capital intensive projects in Maputo. Some of the more notable developments include Edificio 24, a mixed-use development that will be located at the center of the city along Avenida 24 Julho and Avenida Salvador Allende. The Maputo Business Tower is a modern 19-story building. The Radisson Blu corporation has constructed a 22-story hotel with 256 rooms in one of the city's trendiest spots on the marginal along the beach. A 15-story building for the second largest telecommunication company in the country, Vodacom, was projected to be completed in 2010. The regeneration of the Maputo waterfront is an urban regeneration project that is being developed at site of the former annual industrial fair grounds (FACIM).[citation needed]
Rehabilitation projects[edit]
This section does not cite any sources. Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (May 2023) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
In February 2011, president Armando Guebuza announced that the Vila Algarve would be restored to its former condition and the building transformed into a museum for the veterans of the civil war. The Vila Algarve belonged to the International and State Defence Police (PIDE) during colonial rule. It was where political prisoners and others accused of conspiring to harm the regime were taken for interrogation and torture. There are claims that several individuals were executed in the building. No dates have been released on when the renovation is to commence. The building has changed ownership several times and has been an off-on residence for squatters.[citation needed]
Sports facilities[edit]
Maputo hosted the 2011 All-Africa Games. The main stadium Estádio do Zimpeto was built in Zimpeto for the Games that also hosted the football and athletics competitions. The Zimpeto Olympic Pool for swimming was also built for these Games. Other venues in Zimpeto for the Games were the Pavilhão do Zimpeto for basketball and Courts do Zimpeto for tennis.
Maputo has a number of stadiums designed for football, which can be modified for other purposes, such as the new Estádio do Zimpeto, Estádio do Maxaquene and the Estádio do Costa do Sol which can seat 32,000, 15,000 and 10,000 people respectively. The largest stadium in the Metropolitan Area is, however, the Estádio da Machava (opened as Estádio Salazar), located in neighbouring Matola municipality. It opened in 1968, in Machava and was at the time the most advanced in the country conforming to standards set by FIFA and the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI). The cycling track could be adjusted to allow for 20,000 more seats. It was the site where Portugal officially handed over the country to Samora Machel and FRELIMO on 25 June 1975. In 2005, the Birmingham based reggae group UB40 held a one-night-only concert in the stadium filled to maximum capacity. A newer stadium called the Estádio do Zimpeto which is located in the suburb of Zimpeto will be opened in 2011.[needs update] The stadium will be built in time for the 2011 All-Africa Games with a capacity for 42,000 spectators. A smaller football stadium, Estádio Mahafil, holds 4,000 people.
Beginning in the 1950s, motorsport was introduced to the city. At first race cars would compete in areas around the city, Polana and along the marginal but as funding and interest increased, a dedicated race track was built in the Costa Do Sol area along and behind the marginal with the ocean to the east with a length of 1.5 km (0.9 mi). The initial surface of the new track, named Autódromo de Lourenço Marques did not provide enough grip and a crash in the late 1960s killed eight people and injured many more. Therefore, in 1970, the track was renovated and the surface changed to meet the safety requirements that were needed at large events with many spectators. The length then increased to 3,909 km (2,429 mi). The city became host to several international and local events beginning with the inauguration on 26 November 1970. The track was abandoned after 1975 and events only occurred sporadically such as in 1981 when the government allowed the sport again. Since 2000, interest has been rekindled by the Automovel & Touring Club de Moçambique (ATCM) and several events including go-carting, drag racing and motocross are planned.
The city's main basketball arena is the Pavilhão do Maxaquene which holds up to 3,500 people. It is home to Ferroviário de Maputo which competes in the Basketball Africa League and the Mozambican Basketball League.
Street names[edit]
The street names were changed after independence in 1975. Close ties with the Eastern Bloc highly influenced the new names that were chosen as did removal of names referring to colonial era figures.
Street names in Lourenço Marques and Maputo
Lourenço Marques
Maputo
Avenida 18 de Maio
Avenida Mártires de Inhaminga
Avenida 31 de Janeiro
Avenida Agostinho Neto
Avenida 5 de Outubro
Avenida Josina Machel
Praça 7 de Março
Praça 25 de Junho
Avenida Afonso de Albuquerque
Avenida Ahmed Sekou Touré
Rua Aires de Ornelas
Rua de Kassuende
Rua Alexandre Herculano
Rua Timor Leste
Avenida Almirante Canto e Castro
Avenida da Tanzania
Avenida Álvares Cabral
Avenida Zedequias Manganhela
Museu Álvaro de Castro
Museu de História Natural
Avenida Alves Correia
Avenida da Zambia
Casa Amarela
Museu Nacional da Moeda
Avenida Anchieta
Avenida Olof Palme
Avenida Andrade Corvo
Avenida Ho Chi Min
Escola Andrade Corvo
Escola Primária do 1º e 2º Graus 16 de Junho
Avenida de António Enes
Avenida Julius Nyerere
Liceu António Enes
Escola Secundária Francisco Manyanga
Rua António de Oliveira Salazar
Rua da Mesquita
Cabaret Aquário
Escola Nacional de Dança
Rua Major Araújo
Rua Bagamoyo
Edifício do Atneu Grego
Palácio dos Casamentos
Avenida Augusto de Castilho
Avenida Vladimir Lenine
Rua dos Aviadores
Rua da Argélia
Edifício do Banco Nacional Ultramarino
Banco de Moçambique
Bartolomeu Dias, Rua
Avenida Mártires de Mueda
Belegard da Silva, Avenida
Avenida Francisco O. Magumbwé
Caldas Xavier, Avenida
Avenida Marian N'gouabi
Câmara Municipal, Edifício da
Conselho Executivo
Consiglieri Pedroso, Rua
Rua Revolução de Outubro
Couceiro da Costa, Avenida
Avenida Armando Tivane
Desportivo de Lourenço Marques, Grupo
Grupo Desportivo de Maputo
Dicca, Cinema, Estudio 222
Matchedje Cine-Estúdio 222
Diogo Cão, Avenida
Avenida Lucas Luali
Direcção Geral das Alfândegas, Edifício da
Reitoria da Universidade Eduardo Mondlane
Doutor Serrão, Avenida do
Avenida Emília Daússe
Dr. Brito Camacho, Rua do
Avenida Patrice Lumumba
Dom João de Castro, Avenida
Rua Dom João de Castro
Dom Luiz 1º, Avenida
Avenida Samora Machel
Dom Manuel I, Avenida
Avenida da Marginal
Duques de Connaught, Avenida dos
Avenida Friedrich Engels
Eduardo Costa, Rua
Rua de Mukumbura
Estâncias, Estrada das
Rua das Estâncias
Fazenda, Edifício da
Conselho de Ministros
Fernandes Tomaz, Avenida
Avenida Mártires da Machava
Fonte Luminosa, Praça da
Praça Robert Mugabe
Funchal, Prédio
Hotel Rovuma
Gago Coutinho, Aeroporto
Aeroporto de Mavalane
General Bettencourt, Avenida do
Rua da Base Ntchinga
General Botha, Rua do
Avenida Tomás Nduda
General Craveiro Lopes, Avenida
Avenida dos Accordos de Lusaka
General Machado, Avenida do
Avenida Guerra Popular
General Machado, Escola
Universidade Pedagógica
General Rosado, Rua do
Avenida Kim Il Sung
Gomes Freire, Avenida
Avenida Paulo Samuel Kankhomba
Governador Simas, Rua do
Rua Mateus Sansão Muthemba
Guerra Junqueiro, Rua
Rua José Mateus
Heróis de Marracuene, Rua dos
Rua da Resistência
Hotel Clube
Centro Cultural Franco-Moçambicano
Infante, Cinema
Cinema Charlot
João Albasini, Largo
Praça 21 de Outubro
João Belo, Escola Primária
Escola Primária 7 de Setembro
João das Regras, Rua
Rua de Nachingwea
João de Deus, Avenida
Avenida Romão Fernandes Farinha
José Cabral, Parque
Parque dos Continuadores
Joaquim de Araújo, Escola
Escola Secundária Estrela Vermelha
Lapa, Rua
Rua Joaquim Lapa
Lar Moderno, Edifício do
Centro de Estudos Brasileiro
Latino Coelho, Avenida
Avenida Maguiguana
Lidemburgo, Rua de
Avenida Rio Tembe
Lisboa, Miradouro de
Miradouro
Lisboa, Rua de
Avenida Milagre Mabote
Luciano Cordeiro, Avenida
Avenida Albert Luthuli
Mac Mahon, Praça
Praça dos Trabalhadores
Manuel de Arriaga, Avenida
Avenida Karl Marx
Manuel Rodrigues, Cinema
Cine Teatro África
Massano de Amorim, Avenida
Avenida Mao Tsé Tung
Mendonça Barreto, Avenida
Avenida do Rio Limpopo
Mouzinho de Albuquerque, Praça
Praça da Independência
Nevala, Rua de
Avenida Nkwam Nkruma
Nossa Senhora de Fátima, Avenida
Avenida Kenneth Kaunda
Oliveira Salazar, Estádio
Estádio da Machava
Paiva de Andrada, Avenida
Avenida Mahomed Siad Barre
Paiva Manso, Avenida
Avenida Filipe Samuel Magaia
Pero da Covilhã, Rua
Rua Belmiro O. Muianga
Pero de Alenquer, Rua
Avenida Amílcar Cabral
Pesca Desportiva, Clube de
Escola Náutica de Moçambique
Pinheiro Chagas, Avenida
Avenida Eduardo Mondlane
Porto, Rua do
Rua Malhangalene
Princesa Patrícia, Rua da
Avenida Salvador Allende
Rebelo da Silva, Escola Primária
Escola Primária 3 de Fevereiro
República, Avenida da
Avenida 25 de Setembro
Sagres, Rua de
Avenida 10 de Novembro
Salazar, Liceu
Escola Secundária Josina Machel
Sporting Clube de Lourenço Marques
Clube de Desportos Maxaquene
Turismo, Hotel
Hotel Ibis
Vasco da Gama, Jardim
Jardim Tunduro
Vasco da Gama, Mercado
Mercado Municipal (Bazar da Baixa)