August 01, 2006

About Buenos Aires


Buenos Aires is the most European of all Latin American cities. With its magnificent architecture, wide boulevards, leafy parks, grand buildings and varied culture and nightlife, the city is reminiscent of Paris or Barcelona. The Porteños (‘people of the port’), as the residents of Buenos Aires are called, seem more European too – but this is hardly surprising considering that most are descended from European, predominately Italian, immigrants who settled here in the 19th century. With them came a culture and a cuisine that still flavours the city and can be enjoyed in countless art galleries, theatres and museums, as well as fine restaurants. But the city has also spawned its own art forms, notably the tango, for which Buenos Aires is famous.

Buenos Aires is the third largest city in South America and comprises 47 barrios (neighbourhoods) in which nearly three million people live. Situated in the east of Argentina beside the Rio de la Plata and surrounded by seemingly never ending flat land known as the Pampas, the vast sprawling conurbation is a true 24-hour city. there is always something going on to occupy the senses. The downtown area is as noisy and congested as any other major urban centre, but the city is really a pleasant place to walk around.



Following the economic crisis that has plagued the country since December 2001, devaluation made life expensive for the Porteños and job losses plunged many into poverty, evidenced by the families of cartoneros (cart people) who take to the city streets each evening to rummage through bins for materials to sell for recycling.

Buenos Aires has bounced back, however, and there are strong economic indicators and physical signs that the Argentine economy is on the mend. Despite any lingering financial worries, the Porteños continue to get on with life and enjoy life’s luxuries : many diners still patronise classy restaurants, the bars and cafés bustle with people and the city’s elite dance the night away in South America’s best clubs.



Stroll through the neighborhoods of Recoleta or Palermo, full of buildings with marble neoclassical facades on broad tree-lined boulevards, and you know exactly why it got that moniker. European immigrants to Buenos Aires, mostly from Spain and Italy, brought with them the warm ways of Mediterranean culture, wherein friends, family, and conversation were the most important things in life. Whiling away the night over a long meal was the norm, and locals had always packed into cafes, restaurants, and bars until the early morning hours. The peso crisis hit the locals all the harder because of this, making the lifestyle and good times that they cherished almost unattainable for a period of time.

In Buenos Aires, you'll find a city quickly recovering from its former problems, with old cafes and restaurants not only full of patrons but competing with all of the new restaurants and cafes opening up at a breakneck pace all over town.

The crisis also had a remarkable effect on the country's soul. Argentines as a whole are becoming more self-reflective, looking at themselves and the reasons why their country fell into so much trouble and trying to find answers. This has lead, ironically, to an incredible flourishing of all things Porteno, the word Buenos Aires locals use to describe both themselves and the culture of their city. Unable to import expensive foods from overseas anymore, Buenos Aires's restaurants are concentrating instead on cooking with Argentine staples like Pampas grass-fed beef and using locally produced, organic ingredients as seasonings. What has developed is a spectacular array of Argentine-nouvelle cuisine of incredible quality and originality. Chefs can't seem to produce it fast enough in the ever-expanding array of Buenos Aires's restaurants, particularly in the trendy Palermo district on the city's north side.



This new Argentine self-reliance and pride is not just limited to its restaurants. The same thing has happened with the country's fashion. In the go-go 1990s, when the peso was pegged to the U.S. dollar, Argentines loaded up on European labels and made shopping trips to the malls of Miami for their clothing. Now, however, even the middle class cannot afford to do this anymore. Instead, with necessity as the mother of invention, young Argentine designers are opening up their own shops and boutiques in the Palermo Soho neighborhood, putting other Argentines to work sewing, selling, and modeling their designs. Women, especially, will find fantastic and utterly unique fashions in Buenos Aires that you won't find anywhere else in the world, at prices that are unbelievable. And if you're looking for leather goods, say no more. The greatest variety and quality in the world are available all over town.

Importantly, the most Porteno thing of all, the tango, has also witnessed an explosive growth. Up until the peso crisis, Argentines worried that the dance would die out as young people bopped instead to American hip-hop and European techno. But the peso crisis and the self-reflection it created helped bolster the art form's popularity: New varieties of shows for tourists mean you can now see a different form of tango every night of your stay. And, more importantly to residents, the traditional, 1930s-style milongas (tango salons), have opened in spaces all over town. These are drawing not only the typical tango dancers but young Argentines, who have rediscovered their grandparents' favorite dance, as well as young ex-pats from all over the world who are making Buenos Aires the world's new hot city, the way Prague was at the end of the Cold War.



For the visitor from abroad, there has never been a better time to visit Buenos Aires. Devaluation has made it a cheap city to explore and enjoy and the division of wealth remains largely invisible to the tourists sightseeing and shopping by day and dancing and enjoying gastronomic delights at night. With a continuous agenda of cultural attractions and events, there is much to see and do. The city is also home to an incomparable array of theaters and other traditional venues. Buenos Aires's vast arrays of museums, many in beautiful neoclassical structures along broad tree-lined Avenida Libertador, are as exquisite as the treasures they hold inside. Buenos Aires has a mild climate and is a year-round destination, although the city can get very hot and humid during the summer months (Dec-Feb). The city can also be quiet during summer as many Porteños take their holidays at this time.
 
See also the Time Out Guide, for more information on the city and things to do.
 
For more comprehensive information on Argentina, see

  

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April 02, 2006

Why Go Now


Andy Rash

After the devastating 2002 currency crash and the 2004 nightclub fire which claimed 194 lives, Argentina's capital has recovered a lot of its swagger and fun.

The populist President Néstor Kirchner's early payoff of Argentina's International Monetary Fund debt, and less-than-friendly treatment of President Bush at the Summit of the Americas in November, played well in a country tired of international advice, and in last October's midterm elections Mr. Kirchner's mascara-caked wife, Cristina, won a senate seat amid a wave of Evita nostalgia.

The economy is booming, too: After hitting bottom in 2002, it bounced back in 2004 and 2005, a turnaround that is visible in the sheer number of new apartment towers and clothing stores popping up in the trendy Palermo area. And yet it is still shockingly inexpensive, with first-rate meals rarely costing more than 78 pesos a person, or $25 at 3.14 Argentine pesos to $1.

During this recovery, international skepticism about the local economy has meant that the exchange rate has actually improved for American travelers, with the peso recently falling to a three-year low against the dollar. The downside is that there has been a surge in the cost of living in a land as famous for its explosive inflation as for its huge steaks. With the economic boom predicted to continue throughout 2006 and into 2007, travelers might be advised to visit before inflation makes Argentina no longer the eye-popping bargain it has been since 2002.


For more information on Tourism in Argentina, see

 

Thanks to Contributor : IAN MOUNT April 2, 2006 NY Times


 

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April 01, 2006

Where to Shop

Named the first Unesco City of Design in August 2005, Buenos Aires takes its presentation seriously. For shopping, most locals (and tourists) head to any number of large shopping centres (or malls) :

  • Gallerias Pacifico - Avenida Florida, the pedestrian mall in the centre of the city and a good tourist trap for leather sellers pushing a whole array of leather products. Watch out for gypsies and bad money change agents callng out "cambio"
  • Abasto - Avenida Corrientes, in Abasto is perhaps the largest of the city shopping centres and often packed on a weekend
  • Patio Bullrich - Avenida del Libertador, Recoleta, for poncy labels at high prices and for spotting old Recoleta "antiques" barely still breathing, wrapped up in their fur coats and Chanel suits, doddling along or sipping coffee contemplating their next round of plastic surgery
  • Paseo Alcorta - Avenida Alcorta, Palermo Chico is reasonable and has a large Carrefour superstore
  • Alto Palermo - Avenida Santa Fe, Palermo is also reasonably large with most of the same retailers as elsewhere

Avenida Cordoba around the intersection of Avenida Scalabrini Ortiz offers up a whole sleuth of outlet stores.

Lavalle intersection with Larrea is an area dedicated to material & cloth merchants where jewish owners dominate.

For furniture, check out Avenida Belgrano between Avenida 9 de Julio as far as Avendia Jujuy, for cheap and cheerful furniture and a broad range of not so expensive no designer furniture.

For shoes, Marina Palmer, the author of the 2005 memoir "Kiss and Tango: Looking for Love in Buenos Aires," recommends the tango dancer Alicia Muñiz's intimate Comme Il Faut , Arenales 1239, tel 4815-5690. The tiny leopard-skin-decorated store, upstairs on a small Recoleta alley, specializes in sexy tango shoes with stiletto heels of at least 2¾ inches (about 260 pesos).

The Colegiales neighborhood's Dorrego market, at Dorrego and Zapiola (check Centro Metropolitano de Diseño, a converted garage, regularly houses shows of local housewares and clothing designers.

Nearby Palermo SoHo is packed with shops selling clothes by young Argentine designers. Felix , Gurruchaga 1670, tel 4832-2994, hits a Williamsburg-goes-B.A. vibe, with stylish sneakers (219 to 239 pesos) and retro T-shirts (65 pesos).

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Where to Stay

The luxurious Recoleta neighborhood, with its famous mausoleum-stacked cemetery and obsession with doorman-polished brass, has long been anchored by the Louis XIV-style Alvear Palace Hotel, Avenida Alvear 1891, tel (54-11) 4808-2100. But the glitzy 74-year-old institution — with 210 rooms, tea from 4 to 7 p.m., Hermès toiletries and doubles starting at $385 plus 21 percent tax — gets stiff competition from the 165-room Palacio Duhau-Park Hyatt Buenos Aires , Avenida Alvear 1661, tel 5171-1234 just two blocks away. There, a garden links the renovated Duhau family mansion, built in 1934 and inspired by Château Le Marais in France, with a contemporary addition. Prices for deluxe rooms are tentatively are at $410, plus tax.

Of course, it goes without mentioning the ridiculously lavish Faena Hotel + Universe for the seekers of decadent modernism.

Trendier Palermo's barrios, namely Palermo SoHo and Hollywood are home to new design-conscious, Wi-Fi-outfitted boutique hotels. Across the tracks in Palermo Hollywood sits the divinely intimate Hotel Home, Honduras 5860, tel 4778-1008. Opened by the English music producer Tom Rixton and his wife, Patricia O'Shea, the 17-room Home has Scandinavian-style furniture and vintage wallpapers, a spa and gorgeous garden pool with lots of space to relax. Rooms start at $115, plus tax.

In San Telmo, The Cocker, is a very chic and small hotel which offers five elegant suites surrounded by stunning roof gardens set in a newly-restored art-nouveau townhouse in the heart of San Telmo, catering for the individuals who enjoy fine things. Av. Juan de Garay 458, San Telmo, reservations@thecocker.com

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Where to Eat

Casa Cruz, Uriarte 1658, Palermo Viejo, tel 4833-1112, gm@casa-cruz.com Germán Martitegui is the owner. Forget “Sucre” for an “in” place to go (“Sucre” has uncomfortable chairs and loud ambiance) “Casa Cruz” is everything a fine dining experience should be. Fantastic food in a truly romantic and comfortable setting. Expensive but worth every penny.

The more recent wave of starkly designed restaurants has carved a nouvelle Argentine cuisine from the traditional steak-and-pasta diet. At the top of the list sought for tourists is the always-full Sucre , Sucre 676, tel 4782-9082, for lunch and dinner daily, with the local über-chef Fernando Trocca at the helm. Dishes like leg of lamb with rosemary and mint (27 pesos) are consistently good, but the cavernous concrete space can leave some cold despite the huge fireplace.

Mott (El Salvador 4685; tel 4833-4306, breakfast, lunch and dinner daily) sweetly updates the trend in a heaven-white box with many of Sucre's design elements. There, Maria Lancio's kitchen turns out interesting dishes like sweet-and-pungent fruit and mushroom risotto (24 pesos) and a tender lamb ragout with pumpkin tart (29 pesos).

Buenos Aires, of course, is beef-crazed, and Cabaña Las Lilas, Avenida Alicia Moreau de Justo 516, tel 4313-1336 , based in the tourist-packed Puerto Madero port, is arguably its most famous, and expensive, purveyor, where a T-bone steak costs 49 pesos. This is where Clinton had a steak when he was visiting, very elegant “yuppie” decor, but the steaks are unreal. Great “special occasion” place.

Across the street from the soccer coliseum known as La Bombonera sits the classic Don Carlos, Brandsen 699, tel 4362-2433, closed Sunday and during soccer games, where the waiters bring a seemingly endless variety of dishes, from spinach fritters to steak, and the only ordering you do is answering Don Carlos's one question: "Meats or pastas?" Lunch comes to about 35 pesos a person - no credit cards.

Highly recommended is the restaurant POSITANO Espectaculos in Palermo / Belgrano border, Olleros 1760, tel 4772 7539, for fine food and operatic theatre combined. Right now, with the Teatro Colon closed (from Nov 2006 for 6 months) expect to be entertained by any and or many of the finest Argentine opera singers, up close and personal !

For an update on parrillas, barbecue restaurants where more than a quarter of the patrons might actually speak Spanish, try La Dorita, Humboldt 1905 & 1892, tel 4773-0070, lunch and dinner daily, where a photographic take on the Last Supper as an Argentine BBQ overlooks diners drinking wine served in traditional penguin-shaped carafes and eating veal sweetbreads (12 pesos) and lomo, or tenderloin (20 pesos for two people).

788 Foodbar, Arenales 1877, Recoleta tel 4814-4788, has a very cool atmosphere, trendy, yuppie, we arrived at 9 pm and were the first in the restaurant to have dinner. There is an area with couches and comfortable chairs to have drinks. Food is excellent, wine list was a little pricey. For 2 the bill comes to about $125 pesos which includes appetizers, main dishes, 2 coffees, and a bottle of decent Argentine red wine. Complimentary champagne with the bill (in December 2004.)

Empire Bar - Tai food - Tres Sargentos 427, Retiro tel 4312-5706 gets good recommendations.

La Olla de Felix, Arenales between Montevideo and Rodriguez Peña, tel 4811-2873, open for lunch and dinner. Reservations required. Quite a find, and easy to walk by it without noticing. It’s very small, maybe 15 small tables, that’s why reservations are necessary. There are only 5 or 6 entrees, no appetizers, only 4 or 5 desserts. That’s it. Home style cooking, delicious. The entrees are inexpensive, wines are simple and inexpensive. A wonderful place.

La Parolaccia Trattoria, Riobamba 1046, tel 4812-1053, also locations in Belgrano and Puerto Madero. A wonderful Italian restaurant, beautiful decor, delicious and inexpensive for the quality of the food. Best calamari in Bs.As. Call for reservations as they fill up pretty quick.

Restó, Montevideo 938, near M. T. Alvear, tel 4816 6711, Mon to Fri, lunch, Thurs & Fri, dinner. Call for reservations, very small, romantic and intimate. Simply the most amazing food at the most incredible prices. Three price fix menus to choose from. French / California fusion.

Rodi Bar, Vicente Lopez 1900, right on the corner of Ayacucho, tel 4801-5230. A favorite family restaurant with great “neighborhood” atmosphere, you know you are in Argentina when you’re in here, very comfortable, waiters with bow ties. Huge menu selection (hilarious translations in English), grilled trout is very yummy (stay away from sauces on the fish), creamed spinach is creamy and mouth watering. Very reasonable and cheap wine list.

Tancat, Paraguay 645, Retiro, tel 4312-6106/5442. Great place “downtown” near the pedestrian street Florida. Specialty is “tapas” but everything is good here, great seafood.

Teatriz, Riobamba 1220, tel 4811-1915, teatriz@yahoo.com is very special and fabulous decor. Food, preparation and presentation are top rate, so the prices reflect that, also the wine list has some nice expensive choices, but luckily a few modestly priced bottles can be found. Make reservations!

A great web site to get information on restaurants in B.A. : elgourmet.com Click on "guia de restaurantes", then "tipo de cocina" to find international spots. Or you can set up specific search parameters (neighborhood, type of cuisine, price). If you can't read Spanish, the point rating system is easily understood.

The Economist (of all things) actually has a good listing of restaurants

If you're hungry in Buenos Aires or just yearning to sample some local cuisine in any one of Buenos Aires many restaurants, don't miss expat resident Dan Perlmans expansive and informative restaurant review list on his site Saltshaker.

 

 

 

 

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What to do...


CULTURE IN BUENOS AIRES

This is a city that abounds with Art Galleries and Museums. For more details see Buenos Aires Culture.

 

DURING THE DAY

With relatively few must-see sites besides the Casa Rosada, the Obelisk, Recoleta Cemetery and Teatro Colón (closed from October 2006 for supposedly 7 months of renovation yet still closed as at October 2007), a visit to Buenos Aires tends to be less about ogling architecture than absorbing culture. You can join those who pass the day in a park with ice cream or mate, the local herbal tea — start with a cone of frutilla granizada at Persicco, at the corner of Salguero and Cabello, or Volta near the corner of Avenida Libertador and Lafinur, one of the best of the city's innumerable Italian-named ice cream shops. From there, stake out Las Heras Park, Avenida Las Heras and Avenida Coronel Diaz, where an array of dog walkers and bikini-clad (male and female) sunbathers attest to Argentines' twin loves, sometimes simultaneous, of canines and bronzing.

 

Then stroll the embassy and jacaranda-lined Avenida del Libertador to the Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes , Avenida del Libertador 1473, tel 4803-0802, closed Mondays, free entry. The Buenos Aires art world got an upgrade in November, when works by Cézanne, Gauguin and Renoir, stolen from Bellas Artes on Christmas in 1980 and found in Paris in 2002, were returned and joined works ranging from Manet to Rothko.

"El estress" is a constant topic among Porteños (Buenos Aires residents), and many nearby estancias (ranches) offer half-day escapes from the city for those needing to unwind. A "Día de Campo" at the 1880 Italianate estancia built for General Pablo Ricchieri, Estancia El Ombú, Ruta 31, cuartel VI, Villa Lía, San Antonio de Areco, tel 4710-2795, includes gut-busting amounts of wine and gaucho-cooked meat, swimming in two pools and horseback rides on its 740 acres. A day costs $45 a person, $110 double occupancy, for a day and night (meals included).


WHAT TO DO AT NIGHT

As Buenos Aires night life starts vampirically late, a predinner cocktail or snack is advisable. Barring one of the regular openings at Malba (Museo de Arte Latinoamericano de Buenos Aires), where free wine brings out a large portion of the city's art students, there's El Diamante (Malabia 1688, second floor; 4831-5735; closed Sundays). Co-created by Sucre's Fernando Trocca just over a year ago, the plant-filled roof deck on the Paraguayan-themed bar fills on Fridays and Saturdays with the young and well-dressed drinking concoctions like the capizen (vodka, ginger and hesperidina); 12 pesos.

After dinner, Las Cañitas's young and affluent crowd the popular new Kandi (Báez 340; 4772-2453), which has a loungy vibe and retro Brady Bunch decorations. For tango, the city's many choreographed shows can be entertaining, albeit overpriced. Travelers who want to participate should head to the 10:30 p.m. Friday or Saturday beginners classes (9:30 on Wednesday, Thursday and Sunday) at La Viruta (6 pesos), curiously located in the basement of the city's Armenian cultural center , Armenia 1366, tel 4774-6357 . After lessons, the dancing continues until 6 a.m.

Decorated with bright red walls, minichandeliers and white leather lounge chairs, the year-old Bulnes Class, Bulnes 1250, tel 4861-7492, Thursday to Saturday from 11 p.m. on, fills with a young gay male crowd looking for something more relaxed than the nightclubs.

Newly opened, check out Club 647 in San Telmo for coolness sublime.

For a web site (in spanish) to see what's on, check out vuenosairez.com


YOUR FIRST TIME OR THE 10TH See a soccer game. Argentina's soul bleeds for the sport, and the most fearsome rivalry is that between Boca Juniors and River Plate. If you can, go to one of the biannual Superclásicos between the two teams. The near-riot experience is really about watching passionate fandom, learning the songs and taunts, and discovering why visiting-team fans get a 30-minute head start after a game (their safety). Tickets to a Superclásico, usually scalped via a hotel concierge or ticket broker, run around 300 pesos. La Bombonera, home of the Boca Juniors, is a place of soccer legend Brandsen 805, tel 4309-4700.


HOW TO GET AROUND The easiest way to get around is via the huge fleet of yellow and black taxis; a trip across town will rarely cost more than 15 pesos. More independent visitors can take the subte (subway) or one of the careening city buses. For a transit and street map, buy a pocket-size "Guía T" (about 3 pesos) at a newspaper kiosk.

 

 

 

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Where to Relax


The city and surrounds offers a whole range of Spas for massage, beauty treatment and health benefits. Try :

  • AqueSulis , in Lobos (about 100km from the city) offers and exellent spa

  

 

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What to do...by Barrio

The term "Barrio" refers to a neighbourhood in Buenos Aires. Thanks to Molly Malone who did her Masters Degree in Buenos Aires, here's a useful insight to BsAs and things to do by "barrio".   For an interactive Buenos Aires map, click on the link.


Barrio Norte

ONE neighborhood that has become a recent craze for Argentine yuppies is Barrio Norte. Its cobblestone streets are filled with chic clothing boutiques, corner bakeries, funky bars, small dance clubs and stylish restaurants.

A great place to eat is Parrilla Tabaré on Charcas Street #3387, where you can enjoy a complete lunch, typically served from 1 to 3 p.m., or dinner, which starts at 9 p.m. It has a warm ambience with white linen tablecloths and salmon-colored walls.

Parrilla Tabaré specializes in grilled beef — almost every part of the cow. Bife de lomo (filet mignon/tenderloin), bife de chorizo (T-bone), asado de tira (side ribs) and entraña (center cut) are just some of the dozens of options. Fish lovers should try the white salmon from the coastal town of Mar del Plata or the freshwater trout. A three-course dinner for two with a bottle of fine Argentine Malbec wine will cost about $19.

Two blocks away is a major shopping thoroughfare, Avenida Santa Fe. Between Calle Bulnes and Avenida 9 de Julio, you can find bargains on leather shoes, handbags, lingerie and clothing and shop at Alto Palermo, a trendy mall. Prüne, on the mall's second level, is an excellent place for high-quality leather purses and wallets. (When shopping for clothes, be prepared for a struggle if you wear anything larger than a medium or a size 8 shoe. Argentine women are petite, and much of the clothing is skintight and extra small.)

At Avenida Santa Fe and Calle Callao, you'll find Bond Street, a punk-influenced shopping area for the younger generation. The three-level labyrinth of stores includes dozens of piercing and tattoo shops straight out of Venice Beach.

If you prefer contemporary and experimental jazz tunes, head for Thelonious, at 1884 Salguero, a popular spot that's hidden from public view. After going through its black iron door and climbing the dark stairs, you'll enter a brick warehouse filled with low tables and leather sofas. The funky wire chandelier hanging over the stage has hundreds of light bulbs. Mixed drinks, wine, pizzas and cheese plates are offered, as well as jazz nightly.

Palermo

THE central landmark in the Palermo neighborhood is Plaza Serrano. Seven days a week, the plaza is full of attractive young people at outdoor cafes drinking beer and enjoying a picada (an appetizer of assorted hams, salami, cheeses and olives). On Saturdays and Sundays, the plaza and its surrounding cafes house an extensive jewelry and funky retro clothing fair. You'll pay no more than $3 to $10 for skirts, tops, lingerie, jeans, belts or shoes.

Around the corner is the one-room La Finca wine boutique, at 5147 Honduras with an assortment of vintages from top wineries, including Viña Cobos, started by Napa Valley's Paul Hobbs in Mendoza, Argentina. Try the full-bodied 2002 Cobos Malbec, which scored 95 points in Wine Spectator magazine. (The main grape grown in Argentina is Malbec, which was brought more than a century ago from Cahors, France.)

Grab a chair at one of La Finca's small wooden tables, sip a glass of wine, and snack on goat cheese and sun-dried tomato tapas.

For elite dining in the neighborhood and an excuse to break away from Argentina's carnivore-centric cuisine, try Casa Cruz Restaurant, at 1658 Uriarte. Towering brass doors lead into a softly lighted room with an oval bar, long sofas and burgundy velvet chairs. The back wall of the dining area is glass, converted into a transparent wine cellar with a view of the kitchen.

Chef Germán Martitegui is among the best known in Buenos Aires, preparing dishes that are substantial and always delicately presented. The menu includes lightly smoked red tuna with lentil salad and grilled octopus with passion fruit purée. An average main course costs $13.

Since it opened more than a year ago, Casa Cruz has become the spot for Argentine models and businessmen, and visits from international pop stars such as Enrique Iglesias and actors such as Colin Farrell and Benicio Del Toro are everyday occurrences. Make your reservations at least two days ahead.

Microcentro

MOVE on toward the city center, and next to the Retiro train station, you'll find the 180-foot tall English clock tower , donated by the British in 1916. Across the street is the Islas Malvinas-Falkland Islands War Memorial, which is set in lush San Martín Park. It commemorates the Argentine troops killed in the 1982 Falklands War with Britain.

Just a few blocks from Plaza San Martín is Casa Roca Restaurant, set in a 19th century Italian-Renaissance style mansion that was the home of ex-President Julio A. Roca. The high ceilings, crystal chandeliers, Persian rugs and wild pheasants roaming the garden make visitors feel as though they have been transported to Tuscany. The house has been converted into a quiet refuge in the city center, offering a gourmet three-course menú del día, for $14 per person. It's open only for lunch from 12:30 to 4 p.m. Mondays through Fridays.

In the heart of the Microcentro, there are popular happy-hour destinations that are especially pumping on Wednesday nights. The craziness begins around 9 p.m. for drinks, and the dancing lasts until 6 a.m.

The largest is Opera Bay, at 225 Cecilia Grierson, designed to look like a miniature Sydney Opera House, with huge white triangular-shaped sections forming the roof.

The club is along the Río de la Plata in the newly developed Puerto Madero area. It's full of writhing Argentines in their 20s and 30s wearing suits and ties while dancing to '80s, '90s, techno and Latin rock music on its four dance floors. Come early to dine and watch people flirt their way through the crowd.

San Telmo

ALSO hopping until sunrise and best on Wednesday nights is Club Museum, at 535 Perú, in a building designed by Gustave Eiffel, the architect of Paris' famed tower. Outside, it looks like an old warehouse, but inside, it's a multi-level dance area constructed from steel bars. Here, you'll find a mix of Argentines in their 20s to 40s, enjoying a night of dancing before they roll into work the next morning.

For tango, head to Bar Sur, at 299 Estados Unidos. This traditional tango bar has only eight tables, and professional tango dancers perform from 8 p.m. to 3 a.m. daily. The fee is $30 per person, with appetizers included. Reservations are a must.

If you are in the mood for an exclusive VIP experience, don't miss the swank Club 647, a members-only restaurant that's open to the public by reservation.

Inside, you'll see dark blue walls and velvet chairs, glass-beaded chandeliers and a red light that oozes from behind the bar, illuminating life-size photographs of three partly nude women draped in black satin, wearing Carnival masks and sprawling on a chaise longue.

Nonmembers are asked to leave at 2 a.m., unless the club's English owners invite you to the members-only area upstairs behind smoky glass walls. The club code of conduct says, "What happens in Club 647 stays in Club 647."

Recoleta

AFTER a night of partying, some exercise and fresh air might do you good. A good option is the Rosedal section of the parks of Palermo, where anyone can take a free gym class outdoors, maneuver a paddleboat on the lake or rent a bike. On the park's island is a botanical rose garden with a Baroque-style bridge connecting a paved running path.

Just a five-minute taxi drive from the park, down Avenida del Libertador, you can have a traditional English tea from 3 to 5 p.m. at the upscale Alvear Palace Hotel's garden room underneath a glass dome. The assorted trays are filled with bite-size sandwiches, pastries and chocolates, as well as authentic herbal teas. Each tray serves two people and costs $11.

Walk down Avenida Alvear, the Rodeo Drive of Argentina, and you'll pass high-end designer shops — with Beverly Hills prices.

A few blocks down, make a left and you can't miss the new hot spot Rubia y Negra Bar and Restaurant, at 1630 Libertad, which is upstairs and illuminated by candles. It opened last year and offers its own delicious dark and light brews. Beautiful people of all ages lounge on the red sofas and eat sushi off low wooden tables.

If you are in the mood for live jazz, the classy Jazz Voyeur Club, in the basement of the newly opened Meliá Recoleta Plaza Hotel, at 1557 Posadas, has great vibes every Thursday evening and free drinks with a $7 cover charge.

Around Microcentro

At Las Cholas restaurant in Las Canitas neighborhood to the northwest of Microcentro, you can order Argentina's herbal tea blend called maté, which is served in a fist-size gourd and sipped through a metal straw. Las Cholas serves food from the northern region of Argentina — homemade empanadas, puffed half-moon pastries filled with Roquefort cheese, spiced beef, chicken, ham or spinach. They are either al horno (baked) or fritas (fried). Also try the tasty locro (beef and corn stew) or the tamale-like humitas (filled with sweet corn and wrapped in their husks). An empanada or tamale will cost you $1.

 

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March 01, 2006

Construction Boom in Buenos Aires

A strong recovery from the financial crisis of 2002 has seen the construction industry in Buenos Aires enter a boom period, unforeseen since the economic boom between 1880 and 1920, when Buenos Aires ranked alongside London, New York and Paris in cache.

For details on this construction boom, click here.

 

Current Economic Indicators for Buenos Aires and Argentina also suggest continued growth and recovery. For more details on this and Property Values in Buenos Aires, see Economic Indicators.

Posted by Russell at 00:00:00 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

January 01, 2006

About the author

This brief insight to Buenos Aires has been compiled as part of a larger guide to Buenos Aires via the web site dedicated to property in Buenos Aires : TopFloor.blog.com

For more information contact Russell Ferrier : email russell_ferrier@hotmail.com

 

Posted by Russell at 00:00:00 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |