The town was built around Fort Zoutman shortly after it was built in 1796. Initially, the town had no official name, being known only as the town on the Bay of Horses, a place from which native-bred horses were raised and exported to neighboring Curaçao. The town has ever since been the capital city of the island. The city is named after the first King William I of the Netherlands. The name was conferred on the city in the 1820s when interest in Aruba increased due to the discovery of alluvial gold deposits. Air Aruba once had its headquarters in Oranjestad. Air Aruba suspended its operations on October 23, 2000. Tiara Air has had its head office in Oranjestad since 2006, except between 2014 and 2016 when the company suspended services due to the Venezuelan Airline Crisis.
Geography
Small portions of the city are formed from a series of man-made expansions of land into the sea. Present-day Renaissance Marketplace, as well as the adjacent Queen Wilhelmina Park, lies within this land reclamation.
Climate
Oranjestad has a hot semi-arid climate. Temperatures are high year-round, the air is humid with low diurnal temperature variation also year-round, whilst rainfall is very low due to the region lying in a zone of divergence between the southeast trade winds to the south and the North American Monsoon further north. The exception to this aridity occurs during the short rainy season from October to December when the southward retreat of the Intertropical Convergence Zone generates more frequent moist northeasterly winds.
Several modern recreations have emerged, including the outdoor shopping mall at Royal Plaza, and a few scattered buildings along Main Street and on the Main Square. Fort Zoutman is one of the town's attractions, others being the tax-free harbour and the Willem III Tower, located near the fort. There are about eight museums on the island.
Renaissance Island
The touristically named Renaissance Island is a cay island, officially known as the Bucuti Rif and it is off the coast near Oranjestad. It is privately owned and has the only private beaches on Aruba. There are two beaches: Iguana Beach and Flamingo Beach. A Beechcraft 18 and a Convair 400 were both deliberately sunk about offshore to create a diving site. Flamingoes can be seen on the island. However, they are not native to Aruba.
Transport
Oranjestad is served by the Queen Beatrix International Airport, from the city center. Its downtown is served by a tramway line inaugurated in December 2012. Caya G. F. Betico Croes, also called Main Street, is Aruba's main shopping street in Oranjestad, however in the past few years shoppers have increasingly turned to Lloyd G. Smith Boulevard, the main thoroughfare in the city. This is in part because the boulevard is closer to the cruise ship terminal and harbour area. Oranjestad houses the largest port on the island capable of docking up to five large vessels. In 2003, over 200 container ships called at the Oranjestad port. A smaller port for shorter cargo vessels is at Barcadera, to the east. Plans have been proposed to increase loading capacity at Oranjestad, and for the construction of a marina to make up for inadequate docking space available for yachts and fishing boats. Traffic in the center of town is a growing issue for island commuters. The government is under pressure to make improvements to the periphery, which runs around the city. In late 2006 planning began for the installment of a roundabout, along the main boulevard and next to the Free Zone, at one of the island's most troublesome intersections. The plans were completed in 2008. In the meantime, several businesses and government departments have relocated their offices outside of the city centre, spurring a boom in construction and modernisation.
Education
Oranjestad is home to the University of Aruba, which offers programs in law and economics, and to the island's largest secondary school, both modeled on the Dutch system. Many students enroll in universities in the Netherlands for graduate and postgraduate degrees. Oranjestad is also the location of Xavier University School of Medicine, Aruba, a U.S.-based curriculum medical school. The school offers a 2-year pre-medicine and 4-year medical program leading to an M.D. degree. All classes are taught in English.