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Ovrya is a town in Greece just 5 km directly south of Patras, and 7 km south from the GR-33 highway. It is a suburb within the Patras metropolitan
area . It is also the seat of the Municipality of Messatidos.
Olive groves, and pasture used to dominate the area, however house building has been booming with the growth of the Patras
metropolitan area. Much of the locality is hilly and slightly rugged.
The neighboring communities are Mintologi to the SW, Paralia (Patras Beach) to the W, Deménika, Zarchoulaiika and Patras to
the N, Savalí to the NE, Kríni to the E, and Thea and Kallithea to the S. It is dominated with hills south of the community, and
flat terrain is around 20% of Ovrya.
The line now starting east of the new beltway. There are
streets with about 70% to 80% (excluding the beltway) are narrow. The rest are widened two-lane local streets. It is bordered by
the municipal boundaries of Paralia and Patras, and non-municipal boundaries of Demenika, Kríni, Théa-Kallithéa.
The community main street is Demokratías Street (GR-33
Patras-Tripoli Highway), and followed by Eleías Street (Old GR-9), and secondary streets are Polytechneíou which ends near Kríni
where the remaining olive groves and pastures are founded. Also west of Ovrya for a size of less than 2 square kilometres.
Buildings are lined up with the main street (Demokratías Street) north of the community. Ovrya's first school next to its
narrowest street (Ovrya's south side) are lined up with a few trees, and neighbors the remaining olive groves and pastures of
Patras.
Ovryá has two schools, churches, playgrounds, community square, and thousands of houses and buildings (2,000 for the
community, and 4,000 for the municipality in range.)
Ovrya and Messatidos have no hotels. The nearest hospital is in Aghios Andreas N of Ovrya. It has access to it beaches in the southwest.
Two gas stations, Silk Oil where
Texaco used to be, and an Esso (Eko, Exxon) gas station is next to an exit formerly the 6th exit of the beltway.
Two mountains are Omblos, a cliffy rocky one SE, hills to the south, seaside beach towns to its west, mountains of Acarnania
to its north and the amazing Pan-Achaean Panachaiikós range and the Achaia Clauss in the NE.
Much of the housing developments began in the 1970s when Patras was booming.
The community's first and only supermarket was Kronos which was opened in the mid-1990s and is located not far from the beltway. Alpha-Beta
Vassilopoulos and Veropoulis are founded in suburbia's downtown.
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