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Torrent, Valencia
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Torrent,[a] also known as Torrente,[b] is a city and municipality located within the metropolitan area of the city of Valencia, Spain. It is the largest municipality of the Horta Oest comarca, with 83,962 inhabitants (2020). It is situated some 7 km from Valencia city proper, to which it is connected via the metro. The two metro stations in Torrent are called Torrent and Torrent Avinguda on lines 1, 2 and 7.
Key Information
It is bordered by Aldaia, Alaquàs and Xirivella in the north, Picanya and Catarroja in the east, Alcàsser and Picassent in the south and Montserrat, Godelleta, Turís and Xiva in the West. All of the cities are part of the province of Valencia.
Geography
[edit]There are only a few remarkable mountains in the municipal territory: El Vedat (142 m), Morredondo (157 m), Barret (142 m), Cabeçol de l'Aranya (228 m) and the Serra Perenxisa (329 AMSL). About a 20% of the territory is mountainous. Torrent is crossed by a gully (Barranc de Torrent) which flows into the Albufera lagoon and estuary.
History
[edit]The village of Torrent was officially founded by people of European ancestry in 1248, after the Reconquista although the tower and its fortification were built several centuries earlier. Archaeological research suggests that there were inhabitants in the zone in the Bronze Age.
It was originally a fief of the Knights Hospitaller.
Main sights
[edit]The Medieval Tower
[edit]
The Medieval Tower was built by the Moors and was part of an ancient castle. It was double-walled and had some underground passages.
The tower, which lies in a square, has a truncated pyramid shape and is 30 metres high, with 5 floors and a terrace where The Cross of the St. John of Jerusalem order and a Valencian "rat penat" can be seen at the four upper corners. Access to the tower is through an exterior staircase connecting to a door at the first floor. Around 1613 porticoes were built around to house a market around the tower. In 1847 it became the property of Torrent.
The tower has often been used as a prison throughout its history, and the porches have hosted the Courts in its upper floors since 1908 (when new ones were built). The porticoes were demolished in 1970. After its restoration, the Tower houses two exhibition halls.
Sant Lluís Bertran's Hermitage
[edit]The shrine dedicated to Saint Lluís Bertran is a traditional and renowned church in Torrent, as festivities of Sant Blai among others are held in the hermitage. In 1634 the City Council agreed to build the chapel dedicated to Saint Lluís Bertran. Following many changes and reconstructions the church was used for military purposes during the Spanish Civil War and was finally restored after that conflict.
Internally, it consists of a nave and two sides. The neoclassical facade is divided into three parts. The door has an archivolt, with St. Lluis' image and a large rosette appearing over the door. The bell tower has a hexagonal base and was finished in 1829. It has four bells and a clock with three spheres, installed there in 1950.
Església de l'Assumpció
[edit]The parish church of Nostra Senyora de l'Assumpció was built in the 13th century, in the same place as the current one, but much smaller. Its rector attended the diocesan synods in the fourteenth century. An image of the "Verge del Pòpul", which disappeared in 1936, was likely the main image in the ancient parish. It has had many fires and thefts with the result that the church that exists nowadays has had many restorations and modifications.
Local politics
[edit]Until 2007, the mayor was supplied by the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) who controlled the local council either alone or with the support of smaller left wing parties. The People's Party had majority control of the council from 2007 to 2015. Since 2023, the mayor has been Amparo Folgado Tonda of the People's Party, who have governed in a minority administration with the support of Vox.
Summary of council election results
[edit]| 1979 | 1983 | 1987 | 1991 | 1995 | 1999 | 2003 | 2007 | 2011 | 2015 | 2019 | 2023 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) | 9 | 15 | 13 | 16 | 11 | 13 | 15 | 11 | 9 | 9 | 11 | 10 |
| Union of the Democratic Centre (UCD) | 8 | |||||||||||
| United Left (IU) | 4 | 2 | 1 | 2 | 1 | |||||||
| People's Party (PP) | 8 | 8 | 6 | 10 | 10 | 8 | 13 | 14 | 9 | 8 | 9 | |
| Valencian Union (UV) | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 1 | |||||||
| Democratic and Social Centre (CDS) | 2 | |||||||||||
| Coalició Compromís (Compromís) | 1 | 1 | 2 | 4 | 2 | 2 | ||||||
| Citizens (Cs) | 2 | 2 | ||||||||||
| Vox (Vox) | 2 | 4 | ||||||||||
| Total number of seats | 21 | 25 | 25 | 25 | 25 | 25 | 25 | 25 | 25 | 25 | 25 | 25 |
Source:[2]
Twin towns
[edit]
Benalup-Casas Viejas, Spain
Gharb, Malta
Zebbug, Malta
Notable people
[edit]- Paco Alcácer, footballer
- Vicente Guaita, footballer
- Pedro López Muñoz, footballer
- Roger Martí, footballer
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ Pronunciation of Torrent:
Valencian: [toˈrent] - ^ Pronunciation of Torrente (unofficial) :
Spanish: [toˈrente]
References
[edit]- ^ National Statistics Institute (13 December 2025). "Municipal Register of Spain of 2025".
- ^ Torrent local results, argos.gva.es accessed 23 July 2020
External links
[edit]- Official website (in Catalan and Spanish)
- Federació Esportiva Municipal de Torrent, Local Sports Federation
Torrent, Valencia
View on GrokipediaGeography and Environment
Location and Physical Geography
Torrent is a municipality situated in the Horta Sud comarca of the Province of Valencia, within the Valencian Community of eastern Spain. It lies approximately 7 kilometers southwest of Valencia city center, forming part of the broader Valencia metropolitan area. The municipality's geographic coordinates are approximately 39°26′13″N 0°27′55″W.[7][8] The total surface area of Torrent spans 69.37 square kilometers. The average elevation is around 50 meters above sea level, with the town center at about 46 meters.[9][10][11] Physically, Torrent occupies a transitional landscape typical of the Valencia huerta, featuring a flat eastern plain dedicated historically to irrigated agriculture, which gradually ascends westward and southward into low hills. Notable elevations include El Vedat at 142 meters, Morredondo at 157 meters, Barret at 142 meters, and Cabeçol de l'Aranya at 228 meters, comprising roughly one-fifth of the territory in modest mountainous areas. This terrain reflects the broader coastal plain of the region, influenced by proximity to the Mediterranean Sea and river systems supporting fertile alluvial soils.[12][3]
Climate and Environmental Risks
Torrent possesses a Mediterranean climate, featuring mild, wet winters and hot, dry summers. Average annual temperatures reach 17.1°C, with maximum daytime highs averaging 31°C in August and dropping to 16°C in January; nighttime lows typically fall to around 10°C during winter months. Precipitation totals approximately 427 mm annually, concentrated in the autumn, particularly October, which records the highest monthly average of about 74 mm, while July sees the least at under 20 mm.[13][14][15] The area faces significant environmental risks from flash flooding, exacerbated by its position in the Valencia province's flood-prone lowlands. Historical data indicate at least 75 major inundations in the province between 1483 and 1982, with notable events in 1897 and 1957 driven by intense autumnal "cold drop" (DANA) storms that deliver extreme rainfall over short periods. Urban expansion and impervious surfaces in Torrent and surrounding suburbs have intensified runoff, heightening vulnerability to such events.[16][17] The most recent catastrophe occurred on October 29, 2024, when a DANA system dumped over 490 mm of rain in parts of the Valencia region within hours—equivalent to a year's precipitation—triggering flash floods that killed more than 200 people province-wide and devastated southern suburbs including Torrent. In Torrent, flooding submerged streets, damaged infrastructure, and buried vehicles under mud, with recovery efforts ongoing into 2025 amid renewed rain alerts exacerbating psychological trauma among residents. Climate analyses attribute the event's intensity partly to warmer Mediterranean waters fueling heavier downpours, though local factors like inadequate early warning systems and river channel modifications contributed to the toll.[18][19][20]Demographics
Population Dynamics
The population of Torrent has undergone substantial expansion since the mid-20th century, transitioning from a modest agrarian base to a suburban hub within the Valencia metropolitan area. In 1950, the municipality recorded 15,974 inhabitants, reflecting limited urbanization prior to widespread industrialization.[21] This figure multiplied more than fivefold over the subsequent decades, driven primarily by internal migration from rural Spain seeking employment in emerging manufacturing sectors such as textiles, footwear, and ceramics, as well as the appeal of affordable housing near Valencia city, located just 7 kilometers away.[21] By the 1981 census, the population had surpassed 40,000, accelerating further in the late 20th century amid Spain's economic liberalization and regional development policies.[1] Post-2000 growth incorporated significant international migration, with foreign residents comprising about 11% of the total by 2017, contributing to sustained increases amid Spain's EU integration and labor demands in construction and services.[3] The 2011 census marked 79,843 residents, rising to 83,962 by 2020 and reaching 89,401 as of January 1, 2024, per the Instituto Nacional de Estadística (INE) municipal register revision.[22] This yields a population density of approximately 1,292 inhabitants per square kilometer across 69.23 km², indicative of compact suburban expansion.[1] Annual growth rates have moderated to around 1-2% in recent years, supported by natural increase and net positive migration balances within the Horta Sud comarca, which added over 9,500 residents in 2024 alone.[23] Demographic pressures include aging trends common to Spain, with potential strains on infrastructure from continued inflows, though no acute depopulation has occurred unlike in more remote rural areas. Migration patterns emphasize economic pull factors over policy-driven relocation, with data from INE padrones underscoring organic growth tied to regional employment hubs rather than centralized incentives.[22]Ethnic and Social Composition
As of 1 January 2024, 85.1% of Torrent's residents held Spanish nationality, 3.9% were nationals of other European Union countries, and 11.0% originated from non-EU countries, yielding a total foreign-nationality share of 14.9%.[24] This distribution aligns with the municipality's total population of 89,456 residents, where immigration has sustained growth rates exceeding 2% annually in recent years.[1] The non-EU segment, comprising the majority of foreigners, primarily draws from regions such as Latin America, North Africa, and Eastern Europe, though specific breakdowns for Torrent mirror provincial patterns dominated by Moroccan, Romanian, and Colombian nationals.[25] Socially, Torrent's composition features a slight male majority (approximately 51%), with 62.7% of the population in working ages (18-64 years), 20.5% under 18, and 16.8% aged 65 and older, indicating a maturing but active demographic profile suited to its industrial base.[1] The foreign influx has diversified social fabrics, particularly in lower-income neighborhoods tied to manufacturing and agriculture, yet integration challenges persist, as evidenced by localized concentrations of non-EU residents in peripheral zones.[26] Overall, the municipality retains a cohesive social structure rooted in Valencian working-class traditions, with limited evidence of ethnic enclaves disrupting broader homogeneity.[27]Languages
In Torrent, situated in the Valencia metropolitan area, Spanish predominates as the primary language of communication. The 2021 Encuesta de Conocimiento y Uso Social del Valenciano, conducted by the Generalitat Valenciana for the Valencia region and metropolitan area (including Horta Sud), indicates that 69.2% of residents always speak Spanish at home, compared to 10.3% who always speak Valencian. Among social interactions, 61.4% always use Spanish with friends, versus 5.8% always using Valencian. Valencian competence levels show 80.7% of residents understand it well or perfectly, 51.1% speak it competently, 59.6% read it well, and 40.5% write it proficiently.[28] A municipal consultation in early 2025 on the base language for primary education revealed that 55.64% of participating families in Torrent selected Castilian Spanish, while 44.36% chose Valencian, highlighting preferences within the framework of co-official languages.[29]History
Ancient and Medieval Foundations
Archaeological findings in the vicinity of Torrent indicate human presence from the Iberian period, with the area associated with early settlements of the Edetani tribe, though specific artifacts linked directly to Torrent remain limited.[30] The broader Valencia region, including Horta Sud, experienced Roman influence following the founding of Valentia Edetanorum in 138 BC, with agricultural exploitation shaping the landscape, but no major Roman structures have been identified at Torrent itself. During the Visigothic era, the territory fell under their control after the fall of the Western Roman Empire in 476 AD, transitioning to Muslim rule after the Umayyad conquest of Hispania in 711 AD. Under Al-Andalus, Torrent functioned as an alquería, a rural Muslim farmstead, centered around a fortress that served defensive and administrative purposes amid the fertile huerta orchards.[31] The site's consolidation as a notable urban nucleus occurred during this Islamic period, leveraging irrigation systems like the acequias derived from earlier Roman engineering.[30] The Reconquista altered this trajectory when King James I of Aragon captured Valencia on September 9, 1238, incorporating the surrounding alquerías, including Torrent, into Christian domains. The medieval foundations of Torrent as a Christian settlement were formalized on November 28, 1248, through the Carta de Poblament, a charter granted by the commander of the Order of Saint John (Knights Hospitaller) in Valencia, repopulating the former alquería with Christian settlers and establishing feudal rights, land distribution, and municipal privileges.[32][33] James I subsequently donated the Muslim-origin castle, including its prominent tower—now the Torre del Castillo in the Plaza Mayor—to the Hospitallers, who fortified it as a commandery overseeing the area's agricultural output and defense.[31] This period marked the shift to a repoblated village economy focused on citrus and silk production, under the Order's patronage until the 19th century.The Carta de Poblament not only delineated boundaries shared with neighboring Picanya but also enshrined customs from Catalan and Aragonese law, fostering demographic and economic stability amid ongoing border skirmishes with lingering Muslim holdouts.[34] By the late medieval era, Torrent's integration into the Kingdom of Valencia solidified its role as a suburban outpost to the capital, with the castle tower enduring as the primary architectural vestige of its Moorish and early Christian phases.[35]
Industrialization and Modern Growth
The industrialization of Torrent accelerated in the mid-20th century, particularly following Spain's 1959 Stabilization Plan, which spurred national economic liberalization and infrastructure development. Previously agrarian, the municipality benefited from its location in the Horta Sud comarca, adjacent to Valencia's expanding port, which facilitated export-oriented manufacturing and attracted internal migrants seeking factory jobs. This shift marked a departure from traditional agriculture, with early industrial activities including chocolate production, in which Torrent emerged as a leading locality in the region during the early 20th century.[36][37] By the 1960s and 1970s, Torrent developed extensive industrial infrastructure, including multiple polygons that hosted diverse sectors such as textiles, ceramics, and metalworking. The Mas del Jutge industrial area, one of the municipality's primary economic engines, concentrated dozens of companies generating significant local employment and contributing to the comarca's overall industrial footprint of 63 polygons spanning 20 million square meters by 2015. This expansion mirrored broader trends in peri-urban Valencia, where port-driven logistics and EU integration post-1986 further boosted manufacturing output and foreign investment.[38][39] Modern growth in Torrent has sustained this industrial base amid demographic surges, with population rising from approximately 20,000 in 1960 to over 80,000 by the early 21st century, largely fueled by job opportunities in manufacturing and ancillary services. However, the sector faced challenges from the 2008 financial crisis, prompting diversification into logistics and construction-related activities, though core industrial polygons remain vital to the local economy. Recent investments, such as infrastructure upgrades in areas like Mas del Jutge, underscore ongoing efforts to enhance competitiveness and attract new enterprises.[40][39][41]Recent Developments and Challenges
In the post-Franco era, Torrent underwent significant urban expansion and infrastructural modernization, driven by its integration into the Valencia metropolitan area and proximity to major transport routes. Population growth accelerated from the 1980s onward, with the municipality's boundaries extending to accommodate residential and commercial developments, including the consolidation of industrial zones like Mas del Jutge. This period saw investments in local governance reforms and cultural initiatives, such as the revival of the historical magazine Torrens in 2024, which documented the town's evolving identity amid demographic shifts.[42] However, rapid urbanization exacerbated vulnerability to environmental hazards, particularly recurrent flooding from local ramblas and torrents in the Horta Sud comarca. The October 14, 1957, overflow of the Turia River devastated the broader Valencia province, claiming at least 81 lives and severely impacting Torrent through inundation of low-lying areas, prompting subsequent hydraulic engineering like the Turia diversion that shifted risks to peripheral zones.[43][44] Historical records indicate over 75 major inundations in Valencia Province between 1483 and 1982, highlighting a pattern of episodic but predictable threats tied to Mediterranean climate dynamics and inadequate early drainage infrastructure.[16] The most catastrophic recent challenge occurred on October 29, 2024, when a DANA (depression isolated at high levels) event unleashed torrential rains exceeding 500 mm in hours, causing flash floods that killed 11 people in Torrent alone amid 222-229 regional fatalities. Avenues like San Lorenzo and Padre Méndez were submerged, destroying homes, roads, and businesses, while exposing deficiencies in real-time alert systems and urban planning that permitted construction in high-risk floodplains.[45][46] By November 2024, reconstruction efforts included debris clearance and temporary housing for over 500 displaced families, but persistent issues like delayed evacuations and resource allocation strained local capacities, fueling public scrutiny of regional preparedness.[47][45] Ongoing developments aim to address these vulnerabilities through sustainable urban strategies, such as the 2025 construction of a strategic roundabout in the Mas del Jutge polygon to enhance mobility and economic resilience, alongside broader EU-funded initiatives for flood-resilient infrastructure. Yet, the 2024 disaster underscored causal factors like upstream sediment buildup in channels and post-1957 development patterns that prioritized growth over ecological buffers, complicating long-term mitigation in a region with intensifying extreme weather.[48][49][16]Economy
Industrial Heritage and Key Sectors
Torrent's industrial heritage originated in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, closely tied to the surrounding Horta Valenciana's agricultural productivity, with early factories focusing on processing local produce into spirits, canned goods, and chocolate, the latter sector active from 1892 through much of the 20th century.[50] Infrastructure developments, including the railway's arrival in 1893, facilitated expansion by improving access to markets in nearby Valencia. Footwear manufacturing also emerged as a notable activity, leveraging the region's labor resources and proximity to raw materials. In contemporary terms, key economic sectors center on manufacturing within dedicated industrial zones, particularly the Polígono Industrial Mas del Jutge, which supports diverse operations enhanced by connectivity projects like the 2009 Pont Blau bridge linking the city center to peripheral industrial sites.[3] The food processing industry remains prominent, exemplified by Industrias Cárnicas La Cope, a leading meat products firm with annual revenues exceeding €88 million as of recent rankings.[51] Chemical manufacturing constitutes another vital sector, with companies such as Industrias Químicas IVM S.A. specializing in coatings and finishes for wood and other surfaces, serving primarily the Iberian market from its Torrent headquarters.[52] These sectors underscore Torrent's role as a suburban industrial hub within the Valencia metropolitan area, though recent events like the October 2024 floods have posed recovery challenges to local operations.[53]Employment, Growth, and Challenges
Torrent's economy relies heavily on its industrial sector, with significant employment in manufacturing, logistics, and warehousing concentrated in areas like the Mas del Jutge and other poligonos industriales. These zones host numerous factories and distribution centers, supporting jobs in production, assembly, and related services, as evidenced by ongoing recruitment for roles such as operarios de producción and mozos de almacén. The municipality's proximity to Valencia city facilitates commuter employment, though local data indicate a registered unemployment rate of 14.32% as of recent figures, with approximately 6,219 individuals listed as jobless amid a working-age population base.[54][55] Economic growth in Torrent has been driven by demographic expansion and infrastructure investments, with the population reaching 89,401 inhabitants by 2024, reflecting steady influxes that bolster demand for housing, services, and commercial activity. Municipal initiatives, including a 6.9 million euro budget modification in 2025 for urban transformation projects, aim to enhance public services, neighborhood revitalization, and employment generation through targeted spending. Additionally, developments like a new strategic roundabout in the Mas del Jutge poligono are designed to improve mobility and attract business investment, contributing to localized economic momentum.[56][48] Key challenges include the lingering effects of the October 2024 DANA floods, which severely impacted Torrent, resulting in 11 confirmed fatalities and widespread damage to infrastructure, businesses, and industrial sites. The disaster contributed to broader provincial economic disruptions, with estimates suggesting a 0.1-0.2 percentage point drag on Spain's GDP growth in the final quarter of 2024, alongside halted operations in affected poligonos and markets. Reconstruction efforts, supported by regional funding exceeding 270 million euros for mobility alone, face delays due to financial strains and supply chain interruptions, exacerbating pre-existing issues like structural unemployment in a region where Valencia province's job market lags national averages in certain sectors.[45][57][58]Local Government and Politics
Administrative Framework
Torrent functions as a municipality within the Spanish local government system, governed by an ayuntamiento headquartered at Calle Ramón y Cajal 1.[59] The legislative body is the Pleno, comprising 25 concejales elected by proportional representation every four years under the Municipal Electoral Law.[60][61] The executive authority resides with the alcalde or alcaldesa, selected by the Pleno from its members, who presides over the Junta de Gobierno Local for day-to-day decision-making on non-regulatory matters.[60] The ayuntamiento maintains three organismos autónomos to handle specialized functions: the Junta Local Fallera de Torrent, responsible for organizing the annual Fallas festivals; the Consell Agrari Municipal, which administers agricultural services and rural activities; and the Fundación Deportiva Municipal, overseeing public sports facilities and programs.[62][63] Additionally, it operates three empresas públicas with fully municipal capital—Nous Espais Torrent, S.A., focused on urban maintenance and public spaces; Retosa (Recaudación de Torrent Unipersonal Municipal S.A.), handling tax collection; and IDEA't, promoting local economic development—and one empresa mixta, Aigües de l'Horta, managing water supply and sanitation services.[64][65] As a compact urban municipality with a single population nucleus and no pedanías or formal internal administrative divisions, Torrent's structure emphasizes centralized services without decentralized rural boards.[66] The overall framework aligns with the Valencian Community's local regime law, prioritizing efficient resource allocation across urban planning, public works, and citizen services.[67]Election Results and Governance
In the municipal elections held on 28 May 2023, Torrent's 25-member city council was elected using proportional representation under the D'Hondt method, with a turnout of 65.93%. The Partido Socialista Obrero Español (PSOE) obtained the highest share of votes at 37.53% (15,155 votes), securing 10 councilors, a decrease of one from 2019. The Partido Popular (PP) followed with 33.28% (13,436 votes) and 9 councilors, an increase of one seat. Vox garnered 14.15% (5,715 votes) for 4 councilors, up two from the previous election. Smaller parties, including Acord per Guanyar (8.86%, 2 councilors) and Ciudadanos (3.03%, 0 councilors), received limited support.[68]| Party | Votes | Percentage | Councilors (Change from 2019) |
|---|---|---|---|
| PSOE | 15,155 | 37.53% | 10 (-1) |
| PP | 13,436 | 33.28% | 9 (+1) |
| Vox | 5,715 | 14.15% | 4 (+2) |
| Acord per Guanyar | 3,579 | 8.86% | 2 (New) |
| Ciudadanos | 1,227 | 3.03% | 0 (-2) |