Polo in Argentina

Though nowhere near as popular as football, polo is a big sport in Argentina as well, specially compared to almost every other country in the world.

Argentina's Top 5 National Parks

Argentina covers an enormous area and therefore has some of the most diverse landscapes and climates in the world within its borders.

Outside BA: Peninsula Valdes

A peninsula on the Atlantic coast in the north east of Chubut Province, Valdes is one of the most important nature reserves in Argentina and since 1999 a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Top 10 best bars in Buenos Aires

The second biggest city in South America is indeed a city that never sleeps. Since clubs normally don’t open before midnight, what better way to start your evening with a visit to one of the 10 best bars in Buenos Aires.

The 5 best wineries to visit in Mendoza

Argentine wine is rightfully famous around the world and most visitors who come to Mendoza try to visit at least one vineyard to see the intricate process of making (and tasting) first class wine with their own eyes.

Thursday, January 5, 2012

Buenos Aires Neighborhood Guide: La Boca


On the south side of Buenos Aires at the estuary of the Riachuelo river and built by early settlers from Genoa in Italy, La Boca is probably the best known barrio in the city. Famous for its football club Boca Juniors and as the birthplace of the tango, it’s the neighborhood not to miss during your stay in Buenos Aires. Read on for the best sights to visit in La Boca.

La Boca’s cultural and touristic heart beats on the few blocks around Caminito. This small street on the waterfront has managed to preserve some of its original houses with their different bright colors for almost every wall. This tradition dates back to the dockworkers bringing back left over ship paint from the shipyards they worked at to use on their walls, normally not being enough to paint the entire house in one color.

Soccer fans can not leave without walking a few blocks more towards La Bombonera, the stadium of the most popular team in Argentina and Diego Maradona’s former club. Though you can try to visit a match on game days, the stadium and its museum are open on all other days of the week as well for a guided tour on the history of the club.

Almost next door to the stadium, a block away, is Eloísa Cartonera. Eloisa Cartonera is a publishing group that produces books that are handmade from cardboard bought from the cartoneros - cardboard pickers who make a living collecting from the city’s streets. Individually painted by hand, each one is unique and founded during the economic crisis in 2001, they are still going strong and are now at a new location at Aristóbulo del Valle 666

Lezama Park to the north of the Bombonera is believed by historians to be the landing site of Pedro de Mendoza during the first settling of Buenos Aires in 1536. The former Lezama family mansion in the park is now the Argentine National Museum of History and well worth the visit. On Avenida Almirante Brown that runs alongside the park, the Ave Tango cultural center has the Flor de Milonga tango lessons on Tuesday night, followed by an evening of showing your newly learned moves on the dance floor.

Foodies lastly will have to pass by 64 Caffarena street to visit El Obrero restaurant. This bodegon serves authentic Buenos Aires or “Porteño” food in a decor that has basically been unchanged since it first opened in 1954.