At the end of this century Piraeus had
suffered such a sudden grown that a lot of new buildings were needed to cover
the new necessities . So, a fever of construction dominated the city for those
years: educational institutions (the High School, the Rallion Girls' College,
the Lyceum - which began operating in 1862 - the elementary schools), churches,
the Stock Exchange Building, the Town Hall ...
By the end of the century, all the necessary
educational institutions had been built , also many large churches, the Stock
Exchange Building, Central Market (1861-63), the old and disappeared Town
Hall (known ROLOI or Clock-Tower (1869-73)), the Municipal Theatre (1884-
95) and the old Post Office Building (1899-1901), as well as some charity
Institutions (the "Tzannion" Hospital, the "Zannion" Orphanage for boys, the
Old People's Home, the "Hadjikyriakon" Orphanage for girls).
At the same time the port, vital part
of the city, suffered some redefinitions (dredging operations, construction
of the Royal Landing, the Troumba Pier and the quay-ways up to the Customs
House area, the commencement of construction work on the Outer Moles and the
permanent dry-docks) to make it more modern and able to cope with the modern
times: 2,500 vessels with a total 1,500,000 tones of cargo per year at the
end of the century. But not only the activity of this new Piraeus was dependent
of the port and its Merchant Firms, because it was the time of the establishment
of the first factories (the L. Rallis Silk Mills, ship-yards and engineering
workshops of Vasiliades, John McDowel and Varvour, Perrakis, Kouppas' silver
foundry, the Retsinas, Volanakis and Lyginos Textile Mills, the Dilaveris
Tile Works, the Metaxas, Pouris and Barbaressos Distilleries, the Dimokas,
Seferlis, Loumos and Panagiotopoulos flour mills, etc.).
Piraeus said goodbye to the 19th century
with a population of 51,020 and as the most part of the big cities of the
world with the arrival of the electricity: the gas-lighting (1878) was replaced
by the electricity between 1903-1904 and in 1904 it was the time for the old
train Piraeus-Athens.