Terazidere

Terazidere is a neighborhood (mahalle) in the Bayrampaşa district of Istanbul Province, Turkey. It is on the European side of Istanbul.

It is bordered by the Bayrampaşa neighborhood of Altıntepsi on the north, the Bayrampaşa neighborhoods of Orta and Vatan on the east, the Zeytinburnu neighborhood of Maltepe on the south, and the Esenler neighborhoods of Namık Kemal and Yavuz Selim on the west.[1]

The neighborhood's population is 15,206 (2024).[2]

The neighborhood's name (literally, Turkish: terazi, "scale, balance" + dere, "creek") comes from the creek named Terazidere, now covered over, which flowed from the confluence of Ayvalıdere and Cicöz Creeks to Zeytinburnu and ultimately to the Sea of Marmara.[3]

After 1950, the area began to be settled by immigrants from the Balkans. The numerous factories in the area brought rapid population growth. Because of increased demand for water, a well was opened in Terazidere in 1963. However, insufficient sewage infrastructure led to an outbreak of cholera in 1970. (The source of the outbreak was traced to a stream originating in the village of Habipler to the north of Bayrampaşa.) Terazidere is now one of the main industrial centers of the area.[4][5][6]

References

  1. ^ "Terazidere 34035 Bayrampaşa/İstanbul" (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved 24 April 2025.
  2. ^ "Terazidere Mahallesi Nüfusu, Bayrampaşa, İstanbul" [Terazidere Neighborhood Population, Bayrampaşa, Istanbul]. Türkiye Nüfusu, İl İlçe Mahalle Köy Nüfusu (in Turkish). Retrieved 24 April 2025.
  3. ^ Aktaş, Cihan (2024). Sokaklar Unutmuyor: Esenler'in Hâfızası [The Streets Do Not Forget: Esenler's Memory] (PDF) (in Turkish). İstanbul: Esenler Belediyesi. pp. 120–121. Retrieved 24 April 2025.
  4. ^ "Tarihçe" [History]. T.C. Bayrampaşa Kaymakamlığı (in Turkish). Cumhurbaşkanlığı İletişim Merkezi. Retrieved 24 April 2025.
  5. ^ Şahin, Cemalettin (2015). "İstanbul'un İlçeleri" [Istanbul's Districts] (PDF). Antik Çağ’dan XXI. Yüzyıla Büyük İstanbul Tarihi (in Turkish). İstanbul: TDV İslam Araştırmaları Merkezi. Retrieved 24 April 2025.
  6. ^ İstanbul İRAP: İl Afet Riskazaltma Planı [Istanbul İRAP: Provincial Disaster Risk Reduction Plan] (PDF) (in Turkish). İstanbul: T.C. İstanbul Valiliği. 2021. p. 127. Retrieved 25 April 2025.