Roadways Avenida Prestes Maia Francisco Prestes Maia has many
streets named for him throughout his home state of São Paulo. The largest of these is Avenida Prestes Maia, an
arterial expressway in
downtown São Paulo that is part of the North-South Corredor (
Corredor Norte-Sul). Many municipalities in
Greater São Paulo — as well as some in the so-called
interior of the state — have at least one street named,
Avenida Prestes Maia or some derivation thereof, e.g.,
Avenida Francisco Prestes Maia,
Avenida Doutor Francisco Prestes Maia, etc.:
Rodovia Prestes Maia (BR-101) Brazil's longest highway, BR-101, is also still popularly known as
Rodovia Prestes Maia for much of its 4,800 km (3,000 mi), despite having been officially renamed more than a decade ago to honor another politician from São Paulo,
Mário Covas.
Rodovia Governador Mário Covas, as BR-101 has officially been known since 2001, -->
Mayor Prestes Maia Library The
Mayor Prestes Maia Library (
Biblioteca Prefeito Prestes Maia) is a multi-story
public library located at 822 João Dias Avenue in the
Santo Amaro district of São Paulo. The building itself was designed by Prestes Maia. Since December 2012, the library's collection of more than 53,000 items has been focused on architecture and
urbanism, including fiction and non-fiction books, magazines, atlases,
braille and
multimedia items. The lower three floors contain reading rooms and the
reference and
circulation areas. The upper floors are made up of offices, meeting and exhibition space, and the
archives of the former mayor. The
special collection,
Coleção Prestes Maia, of roughly 12,000 items includes rare books about architecture, urbanism,
aesthetics, and
history, as well as a collection of personal objects, works of art, and Prestes Maia's papers. The majority of the material at the Biblioteca Prefeito Prestes Maia circulates regularly or is otherwise available to the public. The library's collections are indexed in the São Paulo Municipal Library System
online catalog. The renovations of
Galeria Prestes Maia continued until 2013. The remodeled space contains various exhibition spaces, as well as two tunnels connecting the
Matarazzo Building (São Paulo's city hall) and the old Othon Hotel building (now occupied by the city government). ==Bibliography==