Basque Eurocity Bayonne-San Sebastián

The Eurociudad Vasca Bayonne-San Sebastián (French: Eurocité basque Bayonne-Saint-Sébastien; Basque: Baiona-Donostia Euskal Eurohiria) is the name given to the urban cross-border region located between Spain and France along the coast of the Cantabrian Sea in the Bay of Biscay.

Given the progressive European integration and the disappearance of internal borders in the European Union, as of 1993 various local institutions on both sides of the border created cross-border cooperation agreements that have led to the creation of a cross-border city project that brings together 42 local entities, both Spanish and French. This project covers the realization of common projects (synergies in the tourism sector, freight transport, use of common infrastructures, etc.). The consortium that directs the eurocity [es] project has the legal entity of a European economic interest group (Groupement européen d'intérêt économique). In the future it could become a eurodistrict.

The project is based on the existence of a real urban region that crosses the border, on the existence of synergies and complementarities between both sides of the border and on the existence of a common Basque cultural base. The three official languages of the institution are Spanish, French and Basque.

Description

The Basque Eurocity stretches linearly for just over 50 km along the Basque Coast. On the one hand, it encompasses the coastal region of the French department of the Pyrenees-Atlantiques (Côte Basque), between the mouth of the Adur River and the Bidasoa River. It is a relatively flat and traditionally tourism-oriented region, heavily urbanized, but with a relatively low population density, since a large part of the homes are single-family homes, second homes or are tourism-oriented.

On the other side of the Bidasoa river, the Eurocity extends through the Gipuzkoan regions of Bajo Bidasoa, San Sebastián region and part of Urola-Costa, reaching the town of Guetaria at one end. The Spanish part is geographically more rugged than the French, being therefore less urbanized, but it has a different urban typology, with locations with a higher population density and a more industrial character; so it has a larger population.

The two poles of the Eurocity are the city of San Sebastián, on the one hand, and the BAB District (Bayonne-Anglet-Biarritz) on the other. At its central axis are the towns of Fuenterrabía, Irún and Hendaya, which have further deepened cross-border relations with the Bidasoa-Txingudi Consortium.

Localities that comprise it

The Eurocity has approximately 620,000 inhabitants divided into 42 local entities.

City Population
Ahetze 1,318
Anglet 36,800
Arbonne 1,375
Arcangues 2,733
Ascain 3,097
Bassussarry 1,817
Bayonne 44,300
Biarritz 30,055
Bidart 4,670
Biriatou 831
Boucau 7,007
Ciboure 6,283
Guéthary 1,284
Halsou 503
Hendaye 12,596
Jatxou 811
Lahonce 1,890
Larressore 1,320
Saint Jean de Luz 13,247
Saint-Pée-sur-Nivelle 4,331
Sara 2,184
Souraïde 1,082
Saint-Pierre-d'Irube 3,873
Urrugne 7,043
Villefranque 1,742
Total 192,192
City Population
Aia 1,751
Andoain 13,993
Astigarraga 4,388
Hondarribia 16,073
Getaria 2,547
Hernani 19,138
Irun 60,261
Lasarte-Oria 17,647
Lezo 5,912
Orio 4,643
Oiartzun 9,728
Pasaia 16,104
Errenteria 39,276
Donostia-San Sebastián 183,308
Urnieta 6,094
Usurbil 5,669
Zarautz 22,353
Total 428,885

History

On January 18, 1993, Henri Grenet, president of the Bayona-Anglet-Biarriz District, and Eli Galdos, deputy general of the Guipúzcoa Provincial Council, signed a cross-border cooperation agreement that would be the germ of the Basque Eurocity.[1]

In 1997 the Bayona-San Sebastián cross-border observatory was created by the Provincial Council of Guipúzcoa and the Bayona-Anglet-Biarritz District (converted into the Bayonne-Anglet-Biarritz agglomeration community),[2] under the legal form of an Association European Economic Interest.[1]

In 2001, the Bidasoa-Txingudi Consortium, which brought together the municipalities of Irún, Fuenterrabía and Hendaya, joined the Eurocity.

References

  1. ^ a b "Genesis". Eurociudad.org. Retrieved March 14, 2020.
  2. ^ Barbería, José Luis (February 25, 1997). "San Sebastián and Bayonne lay the foundations for a 'Eurocity'". El País. Retrieved March 14, 2020.

External links

  • Official site
  • Basque Eurocity on Google Maps