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Buenos Aires Argentina

This Buenos Aires guide can help you plan your trip to the city, live off the beaten track and save money. It is a wonderful place to escape the bustling city and retreat to one of the largest deltas in the world. There are so many great restaurants, bars, cafes, hotels and restaurants in the area that this is probably why there is so much demand for them.

Known as "Undeveloped Venice," the city has plenty of canals and is home to some of the world's most popular tourist attractions, restaurants, hotels, cafes and hotels. In addition to our guided tours of Buenos Aires, there are also some organized excursions to this city, including a trip to the Punta del Este National Park, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Our tour ends at the Portenos Museum of Art and Design, located in the historic district of La Paz, one of the oldest and most historic cities in Argentina. The Portenos are on display and are called "Portenos" by the inhabitants of Aires. They have a café, a boulevard with a variety of restaurants and bars and a museum of art and history.

The city itself is coextensive with the federal capital district, founded in 1880, and the city received a constitutional amendment in 1994. The quality of life in Buenos Aires is considered one of the best in Latin America, only behind New York City. It is the third most visited city in South America and the third most visited city in the world, behind only Paris and Barcelona. In Argentina, more than a third of the population lives in the capital of the country, with a population of over 1.5 million.

The name goes back to the Argentine capital, which invested in the construction of the Palacio Nacional de Buenos Aires, the national capital of Argentina, in 1884. The economy of the city with its more than 1.5 million inhabitants has been booming since its foundation in 1880.

With an eye to Europe, the umbilical cord that connects America, Buenos Aires has grown into a metropolis with almost 13 million inhabitants.

Today Buenos Aires combines its cosmopolitan grandeur with a thriving creative scene, which in 2005 made it the world's first UNESCO design city. The city is located on the southern edge of Argentina, at the crossroads of the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, and consists of two large urban areas: the greater Buenos Aires area (which includes several of its provincial districts) and its suburbs. Both cities, with their contrasting landscapes and climates, have grown and emerged from widespread districts that were brought together by progress and immigration into one city, while maintaining their characteristic features.

If you get hungry during a visit to La Boca, you should definitely stop off, because Buenos Aires is very Argentine with its delicious grass - fed beef, fresh vegetables and fresh fruit. The Argentine capital is known for its good food and sultry dance tango. You can choose to go for one of the outdoor barbecues to get on board with the Argentine love of asado (which means "barbecue"), or you can take a trip to the city's most famous restaurant, La Cumbre, for a more traditional, intimate experience.

You should go to Colonia del Sacramento, which is a little more than an hour by ferry from Buenos Aires and is one of the most popular tourist destinations in the city.

International flights mainly come from the Aeropuerto Internacional and Ministro Pistarini, but you can also take a bus from Buenos Aires International Airport to Colonia del Sacramento. There is no subway in Buenos Aires, so you have to use the city's free bicycle program, EcoBici. With its huge city bed, Buenos Aires Argentina is best suited for long-distance travel by bus, train or car.

Argentina is known as the home of Eva Peron or Evita, and the museum examines her childhood and career as an actress, as well as what ultimately ended in her death. Miranda, who moved to South America from France in 1933, settled in Buenos Aires, where she felt completely at ease - the dusty air of the city. Galerias Pacifico is home to the Museum of Fine Arts, one of the oldest and most important cultural institutions in Argentina. The old building that it once was was declared a national historical monument and later converted into a train that runs from Aires to the Pacific. It contains a monument with the names of the Argentines killed in four months in the Falkland Islands (known as Argentina in Argentina).

Buenos Aires, which calls itself the City of Libraries, offers a rich intellectual atmosphere and is also known as the Bronca. Each district in Buenos Aires behaves and behaves with its own unique personality; there are historic districts full of Portuguese influences, but none is as lively and vibrant as those in France, as well as working-class districts like La Plata and La Paz. Despite all this, Buenos Aires is a city with a great variety of cultures, from the rich and poor to the middle and working classes.

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