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Encyclopedia > Isla Verde

Isla Verde is an area in northern Puerto Rico, located in the city of Carolina.


Bordered to the north by the Atlantic Ocean, to the west by the San Juan area of El Condado, to the south by Santurce (also a San Juan area) and to the east by downtown Carolina, Isla Verde has been, for decades, a main touristic area in Puerto Rico, hosting various hotels, casinos and discoteques.


Isla Verde has both very posh areas, as well as extremely poor places. The area has had a steady growth in crime numbers, particularly because of the presence of the Residencial Luis Llorens Torres and the nearby Las Casas and Ramos Antonini public housing areas, where drugs are distributed, generating many drug wars.


Most of Isla Verde, however, is filled with restaurants, hotels and mansions. Many celebrities have lived in Isla Verde's posh areas, including some former Menudos, among them, Robby Rosa and Roy Rossello. During the late 1970s and early 1980s, world boxing champion Wilfredo Gomez owned a discoteque (which was shaped like a Flying saucer) in the area, and Samuel Serrano also owned businesses there.


The Luis Munoz Marin Airport, which many people mistakenly think is situated in San Juan, is actually located at the Isla Verde area, which, as aforementioned, belongs to the city of Carolina. For almost four decades, the airport was given the unofficial "Isla Verde International Airport" title, both by locals and visitors.


Since the airport's creation and up until September 11, 2001, aviation fans could enjoy a day at the beach and, at the same time, watch the airplanes land or take-off at a specially designed spot located near Pinones, another Carolina barrio. But after the September 11 tragedies, this spot was closed because the general public could also see general aviation activities take place, such as luggage handling, gas filling and others. Another reason that this spot in particular was closed is that it could have provided a view for an attacker of a presidential airplane or for terrorists. Roberto Clemente died in Isla Verde, soon after his airplane took off on December 31, 1972. The plane nose-dived, falling into the beach in front of the airport. No bodies have actually been found.


Because of the airport's location in the Isla Verde area, Isla Verde's streets have had to be closed several times for welcomings; such were the cases of the times that any Puerto Rican has won the Miss Universe contest, whenever Felix Trinidad returns from a fight, when John Paul II visited in 1984, and during the 1987 visit of Spain's royal family to Puerto Rico.


The Isla Verde area is rich in coconut palm trees.


  Results from FactBites:
 
146 Wn.2d 740, Isla Verde Int'l Holdings, Inc. v. City of Camas (10265 words)
Isla Verde's argument rests on the premise that the access road must be constructed on property to the east of the proposed development, and the owner of that property has stated that she will never grant an easement for a secondary access road.
Isla Verde also says that the condition constitutes a taking, because the property is not suitable for any other purpose and therefore imposing a condition on subdivision development that is impossible to perform deprives it of any economically viable use for the property.
Although Isla Verde complains that the condition is impossible to satisfy, it relies solely on the testimony of one neighbor to the east who has stated that she will not grant an easement for construction of a secondary access road over her property.
99 Wn. App. 127, ISLA VERDE INT'L v. CITY OF CAMAS (4726 words)
Isla Verde objected to the proposed secondary road, complaining that it would be unable to obtain the necessary easements from landowners, one of whom had already stated that she would not grant an easement for such a road.
Isla Verde argues in the alternative that even if it could obtain the required easement, the cost might be "extraordinary." But it failed to produce evidence as to the cost of acquiring the right of way or building the road.
Isla Verde responds that the impact fees violate those statutory provisions because they are duplicative and unnecessary given the set-aside requirement and City's surplus of park and open space acreage.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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