As a municipality
with its own local government structure since 1994, Attard
covers a surface area of about seven square kilometres and
has a growing population nearing 10,000. It comprises to its
north, on the Mdina and Mosta side, the flat expanse known
as Ta' Qali; and below it, in the direction of the village
core, the area known as Ta' l-Idward joining with Misrah Kola,
across from the valleys of Wied San Martin, Wied Incita and
Wied Irmiedi, on the Zebbug side. Down to its west, close
to Wied is-Sewda on the Qormi side, is an older part known
as Tax-Xarolla and as Taht ir-Rahal; while to its East, up
to Tal-Mirakli chapel on the Lija side, is the relatively
large zone called Ta' Fgieni, which borders on the village
core with its seventeenth century parish church. South of
this is the Sant'Anton quarter, deriving its name from the
historic palace and botanic gardens of Sant'Antonio, which
have long been a symbol of Attard.
Attard
is mostly residential now but it comprises a good part which
is still agriculture, even rural; another part is recreational
parkland with open gardens and national sports facilities.
Although not a market town in olden times, Attard now hosts
a thriving 'national' vegetable market known as 'il-Pitkalija'
on the edge of Ta' Qali, several crafts shops, and a handful
of small factories of recent origin. The Malta Financial Services
Centre are headquartered in the Attard area, which is also
serviced by supermarkets, banks various confectioneries, a
leading garage, shops and stores, salons, clinics.
In terms
of population, Attard used to be the smallest of the 'Three
Villages' - the cluster of Attard, Lija and Balzan, in the
very centre of the main island - but is now by far the largest
of them. Residents recall that it was from the mid-eighties
onwards (when as we have seen the population boomed further)
that the village became more of a hubbub of activity, partly
due to the untiring efforts of a new parish priest from 1986
to 1993, which have been carried forward by his successor,
and partly, no doubt, because Attard was beginning to suffer
from the symptoms of its trans formation from a rural village
into a bursting town, and had to rise to the challenge to
survive as a community.
Attard continues to be a historic place, and a relatively
peaceful one, with flowers in blossom everywhere. Its own
profile has been sharpened, its infrastructure improved, and
the secular dimension of social life heightened since the
introduction of the local government in 1994, but infrastructural
needs, including civic ones, have not kept pace with the all
to rapid demographic growth and ever-increasing urbanisation.
In spite of its growth, the locality has retained a human
dimension with open spaces and some leafy streets, the highest
buildings being four storey social housing apartment blocks
on the edges.
Tucked
away from the boisterous seaside resorts and night spots,
sloping gently down from the hills above it, with a syncretic
socio-cultural dynamism of its own, symbolised by its elegant
parish church, centralised by location and circumstance, spurred
on in recent years by the municipal network no less than the
parish pump, and the prospect of 'opening up' through twinnings
with other towns, Attard has had for years one of the fastest-growing
population rates in the Maltese Islands as well as one of
the highest levels of social mobility, with a record number
of teenagers proceeding to a university education.