Monsanto Forest Park
Monsanto Forest Park is a protected forest in Lisbon, Portugal. It offers a well diversified tree-covered area to the Portuguese capital. A large number of species were introduced in Serra de Monsanto (Monsanto Hills) during the reforesting period. Owing to climate and geological characteristics these originated very interesting ecosystems implanted in the urban patch of Lisbon (and surrounding municipalities). The Ecological Park of Lisbon, located at Monsanto Forest Park , is a meeting point for a new contact with the environment, right in the heart of the Portuguese capital. Its main purpose is to make visitors sensitive to the many variables of the environment, for instance, geology, climate, flora, and fauna. The Park has a perimeter of four kilometres, a total area of fifty hectares, being almost sixteen a fenced area and thirty four hectares non-fenced. It spreads over Serra de Monsanto, from Alto da Serafina to the Woods of S. Domingos de Benfica, passes the farm of Marquis de Fronteira and the Lead Shooting Club of Portugal. The Ecological Park runs an Interpretation Centre, with an Auditorium, a Space for permanent and occasional Exhibitions, and a Centre of Multimedia Resources.
History
The history of Monsanto Forest Park is closely related to the city of Lisbon. Owing to its proximity to several watercourses, good fishing areas and fertile soils, the region of Monsanto was occupied by man since prehistory. In the Metals age, people lived on agriculture, cattle raising, and they settled on the banks of the river Tagus, in the area where Lisbon sets today. With the Romans, Olisipo (name of Lisbon in former times), grew in terms of population and the primitive forest was reduced. With the Muslim occupation the area gave place to olive tree plantations, kitchen gardens, wheat fields and even horse breeding. The large number of wind mills, still existing at Serra de Monsanto (Monsanto Hills), is the response to the generalization of the cereals culture. The Águas Livres Aqueduct, built by order of King D. João V in 1731, solved the problem of the lack of water and it unquestionably became a landscape mark. The intensive agricultural usage of the soils led to the erosion and practically to the destruction of the original vegetation. In the 1930s, the increasing demand for construction areas led Duarte Pacheco, a Portuguese Secretary of State for the Public Works, to recover an idea coming back from 1868: the reforesting of the then practically bare Serra de Monsanto. The regulation for Monsanto Park occurs in 1934 and the works for replantation were carried out by farmers and prisoners from Monsanto Fort. It was the architect Keil do Amaral who presented the first global project for the park, including leisure and sports areas, some of them still existing. The Ecological Park has a privileged location at Monsanto Forest Park - the largest green patch in the city of Lisbon, with almost 1000 ha. The Monsanto Park Circuit, a 5.440 km (3.380-mi) race track, hosted the 1959 Formula One Portuguese Grand Prix.