The Red Light District Zip Code

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Zip Codes are largely responsible for the automation of the United States Post Office’s mail handling. Today, over 600,000,000 pieces of mail are delivered each business day, and our mail can take as little as one day to reach its destination. Back in 1799, it could take three weeks for a letter to travel from Lexington, Massachusetts to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The cost of mail was relatively much higher back then. It cost twenty-five cents to send a letter 450 miles – not much less than it costs today to send a letter anywhere in the country, and in considerably less time!

Today, many of us in the United States expect to have our mail delivered to our homes and offices at no extra charge. Before July 1, 1863, city residents had to pay to have a postal worker bring their mail to them; rural customers had to travel to pick up their own mail for another 30 years. Zip codes wouldn't have helped much in those days.

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Perhaps the most romantic era in our United States postal history is that of the Pony Express. Before then, stagecoaches took more than 20 days to deliver mail from coast to coast. In 1860, William H. Russell bought strong horses and put a listing for good horseback riders in newspaper ads that read: “Wanted: Young, skinny, wiry fellows not over 18. Must be expert riders willing to risk death daily. Orphans preferred.” Russell’s Pony Express was in service for 18 months, cutting the time it took for mail delivery coast to coast in half. The service closed in 1861 when telegraph lines connecting the coasts were finished being laid, allowing people to send information much faster and cheaper than they could by Pony Express.

The history of the United States Post Office is filled with fascinating data and amusing facts. Did you know the first Post Office in the United States was actually a tavern? Or that the United States employed camels to deliver mail over deserts in the Southwest? Or that one of the first airmail deliveries involved a three mile flight, and that the pilot dropped the bag of mail from the flying plane to a postmaster waiting below?

Zip Codes didn’t come into use until 1963. Their inventor, Robert Aurand Moon, is known as the “Father of ZIP Codes” and was nicknamed “Mr. ZIP Code.” Another character also went by this name: the lovable cartoon ambassador, Mr. Zip or Mr. Zippy, who some think was largely responsible for the success of United States ZIP code compliance.

And just what are ZIP Codes? And how does the United States Post Office use them? What do the numbers stand for? Where does the ZIP code data come from? How about the ZIP + 4 Codes? There’s plenty to learn about the Zoning Improvement Plan Codes!

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Zona Norte (officially Colonia Zona Norte, 'North Zone (neighborhood)') is an official neighborhood, as well as a red light district located in Tijuana, Mexico. It is among the largest red-light districts in North America known for its brothels, which present themselves in public as strip clubs and bars, similar to gentlemen's clubs in the United States.

Neighborhood of Tijuana
Colonia Zona Norte
Location within Central Tijuana
Coordinates: 32°32′20″N117°02′44″W / 32.538876°N 117.045572°WCoordinates: 32°32′20″N117°02′44″W / 32.538876°N 117.045572°W
CountryMexico
StateBaja California
Municipality (municipio)Tijuana
Borough (delegación)Centro
ZIP Code
Area code(s)664
Adelita Bar and Hotel Coahuila

Many bars and strip clubs in Tijuana's red light district in which women are the feature entertainment also operate as brothels, which offer attached hotel rooms for short intervals of time. Many other bars, styled 'lady bars', function as less explicit social clubs where prostitutes and nude sex shows are not accommodated on site, but 'lady drinks' are offered at elevated prices, and freelance prostitutes look for clients.

Tropical Bar and Hotel Rizo de Oro

These compare in most respects to the hostess bars in Japan. The red light district in Tijuana is also known for highly commercialized street prostitution, particularly behind the main strip clubs on Calle Coahuila, in a large high-traffic alley named 'Primer Callejón Coahuila'.

Primer Callejón Coahuila

Illicit drug sales are also common to the red light district, but they occur largely out of the public eye. Heroin use and theft, not common elsewhere in Mexico, are rampant here.

Bar La Carreta

Due to its proximity to San Diego, California, it is frequented by US citizens, as well as locals. The district is also known as La Coahuila for the name of the primary avenue that runs through it.

Location[edit]

Artículo 123/Calle Primera (1st street) at Avenida Constitución

Zona Norte is bordered by Downtown Tijuana (Zona Centro) on the south, Zona Río on the east, San Diego and the Mexico–United States border on the north, and colonia Castillo on the west. Politically, the Zona Norte neighborhood is part of the Delegación Centro (Central Borough).[1] Tijuana's red light district itself encompasses just a couple of blocks within Zona Norte.

The unofficial boundaries of the red light district extend from Avenida Revolución to Av. Miguel F. Martinez, east to west, and from Baja California to Calle Primera, north to south. The focal point of the red light district, however, is the core block bordered by Calle Coahuila on the north, and Primer Callejón Coahuila on the south.

Prostitution[edit]

Interior of a gentlemen's club in Zona Norte.

Prostitution is permitted in Tijuana's red light district, designated a Zona de tolerancia, or 'tolerance zone'. Legal prostitution within the city requires sex workers to obtain a permit and be subjected to monthly health checkups.[2]Brothels in Tijuana, many of them modeled on strip clubs and hostess clubs, must also conform to certain health regulations, such as standards of cleanliness, fixed operating hours and be placed a regulated distance from schools or day-care centers.[3]

A street prostitute in Zona Norte.

In addition to established brothels, there are prostitutes who work outside on the 'callejónes' or alleys and are referred to as paraditas, Spanish for 'the standing girls', for the habit of standing on the streets to advertise their services. Paraditas have been regarded as part of Tijuana's cultural history, and attempts to force the women off the streets to curb such public advertising have proven unpopular and unsuccessful.[4] These street workers are either illegal prostitutes who do not have permits, or legal prostitutes who simply prefer the relatively quiet environment of the street to the loud music and smokey atmosphere of the bars.

The Red Light District Zip Codes

Problems[edit]

Gray Goose

Illegal drug sales occur in Zona Norte.[5][6]Substance abuse is not uncommon. 10% of hospitalizations in Tijuana are for alcoholism.[7]

Prostitution of children is a problem in Tijuana's Zona Norte, both in the form of voluntary acts as well as illegal child trafficking. Voluntary prostitution by children, often referred to as survival sex in order to obtain a warm meal or a place to sleep for the night is prevalent in the area. Often these children are smuggled across the border into San Diego and other nearby areas.[8]

Michael Hemmingson's ethnographic study, Zona Norte: The Post-Structural Body of Erotic Dancers and Sex Workers in Tijuana, San Diego, and Los Angeles,[9] found that many of these girls lie about their age, saying they are 19-22, and do not work the streets, but special brothels. The study suggests much of trafficking claims are exaggerated by organizations with political, moral, and religious agendas.

Dutch Annie Queen Of The Red Light District

Young boys are also often recruited as prostitutes, sometimes as early as age 8. This forced prostitution tends to cater more to pedophiles from the United States.[10]

Ludacris The Red Light District

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^'H. Ayuntamiento de Tijuana, B.C. Mexico'. tijuana.gob.mx. Retrieved 25 June 2016.
  2. ^Cearley, Anna (October 11, 2004). 'From the street to discreet'. San Diego Union-Tribune.
  3. ^'Tijuana tries to make prostitution safer'. The Arizona Republic. September 15, 2005.
  4. ^Marosi, Richard (January 23, 2005). 'Prostitutes in Tijuana fight, beat City Hall'. Los Angeles Times.
  5. ^'Tijuana: Zona Norte the principal point of sale of drugs'. www.borderlandbeat.com.
  6. ^'U.S.-Mexico bridge proposal draws mixed reviews'. San Diego Business Journal. February 4, 2002.
  7. ^UniradioInforma. '10% de hospitalizados en Tijuana son por alcoholismo'.
  8. ^Guillén, Manolo (March 5, 2006). 'Trafficking in Children'. The San Diego Independent Media Center.
  9. ^'study'. c-s-p.org. Retrieved 25 June 2016.
  10. ^Azaola, Elena (June 2000). 'Boy and Girl Victims of Sexual Exploitation in Mexico'(PDF). UNICEF.

External links[edit]

  • Zona Norte, Tijuana travel guide from Wikivoyage
  • Zona Norte, photographs by Chris Bava, Sensitive Skin magazine #9, published December, 2012
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