Vouliagmeni (, meaning "sunken") is a seaside suburb and former municipality 18 km south of Athens city centre. Since the 2011 local government reform it is part of the municipality Vari-Voula-Vouliagmeni, of which it is a municipal unit. The municipal unit has an area of 5.805 km2. Its population was 4,332 at the 2021 census. In 1993 and again in 2009, it hosted the annual meeting of the Bilderberg Group.[Avriani, 2/6/2010] The suburb is named after Lake Vouliagmeni, located in its vicinity. It is one of the most prestigious Athenian suburbs, home to renowned hotels and beaches. The area has some of the highest real estate prices in the Mediterranean.
Geography
Vouliagmeni sits on the southwestern foot of the
Hymettus mountain range. It is bisected by a
palm tree lined boulevard, Athinas Avenue, which arrives from Athens city centre as Vouliagmenis Avenue, then runs parallel to the seashore and continues southwards. The area east of the main road is the rocky slope of a foothill of Mount
Hymettus, and the bulk of the town is built there, along with the local elementary school, post office, banks and town hall.
The western half, located between Athinas Avenue and the sea, is covered with pine trees and consists of two peninsulas, Megalo and Mikro Kavouri ("Big Crab" and "Little Crab") that feature sandy and pebble beaches in between rocky shores, luxury hotels (including the Astir Palace Hotel occupying most of Mikro Kavouri), the local high school, the picturesque chapel of "St. George of the crab", two marinas, an aquatic sports club (the "Nautical Club of Vouliagmeni", see below), a sports club (soccer, basketball, volleyball, tennis) and upscale restaurants, taverns and cafeterias on the waterfront.
The Mikro Kavouri is connected to the mainland with a narrow, sandy isthmus commonly referred to as "Laimos" (λαιμός, i.e. the "Neck"), flanked by one public beach on one side and Astir Palace beach on the other side. The Megalo Kavouri is land largely owned by the Church of Greece, which maintains an enclosed, protected pine forest and an orphanage. An air force camp is also located there. Dotted with lavish villas, the two Kavouri areas are among the most expensive pieces of housing real estate in Greece.
The Vouliagmeni beaches are consistently awarded the coveted EU blue flags for environmental excellence. The triathlon competition for the 2004 Summer Olympics took place in this area. The small, rocky islet of Fleves lies off shore.
History
Ruins of the Temple of Apollo Zoster have been excavated and can be viewed inside the public Astir Hotel beach. According to legend, when
Leto was about to give birth to
Apollo and
Artemis, she fled writhing in pain to
Delos. During her flight she discarded her girdle, which fell on the Mikro Kavouri peninsula. When her son, the god
Apollo, was born, he picked up the discarded girdle and girdled himself in honour of his mother, and was hence named "Zoster" (Girt). Other remnants of early human habitation found in Vouliagmeni include
Neolithic and
Bronze Age building foundations, and a 5th-century BC outpost. In classical times the area was the Athenian
deme of Aixōnídes Halaí (), i.e. the Saltfields of Aixōnē (modern day
Glyfada). The deme's citizens were called Ἁλαεῖς,
Halaeīs.
Nautical Club of Vouliagmeni
The
Nautical Club of Vouliagmeni, or
"NOV" (
Greek language: Ναυτικός Όμιλος Βουλιαγμένης, "NOB") was founded by local sportsmen in 1937 and is located on the eastern edge of the Mikro Kavouri, adjacent to the Astir Palace Hotel and overlooking the bay, town and lake. The club admits members and their guests and operates a
marina, a
school, junior and Olympic competition
sailing boats and facilities, an open-air, heated swimming pool, two rocky beaches, members' indoor and outdoor lounges, a gym, and a restaurant. The pool hosts swimming,
finswimming, synchronized swimming and
water polo teams, and the respective training schools for children. The women's and men's water polo teams are considered a traditional force in European water polo and have won many Greek and several European Championships and Cups. The club often hosts
LEN Euroleague and
LEN Cup tournaments, its star players consistently being capped for the Greece men's national water polo team and Greece women's national water polo team. The club crest depicts a blue
anchor set inside a white
lifebuoy with eight crimson stripes; blue, white, and crimson being the club colors.
Lake Vouliagmeni
Immediately to the south of town and very close to the sea, a rare geological formation is to be found that gave the suburb its modern name:
Lake Vouliagmeni ("Sunken Lake"), a small brackish-water lake fed by underground currents seeping through the mass of Mount
Hymettus. Because of its comfortable water temperature, ranging from 22 to 29 °Celsius
, the lake functions as a year-round
thermal bath.
Historical population
|
| 2,897 |
| 3,450 |
| 6,442 |
| 4,180 |
| 4,332 |
Notable residents
Greek businessperson Chrysanthos Panas was raised in Vouliagmeni.
Songwriter Bob Dylan stayed in Vouliagmeni in the summer of 1964 composing many of the ballads later recorded for Another Side of Bob Dylan.
World champion tennis player Stefanos Tsitsipas was raised in Vouliagmeni
External links