Recoleta, Buenos Aires

More Images

Recoleta, Buenos Aires

4.00 1 reviews | Write a review | Ask a question | Add product to list

... One of the most popular barrios for visitors is exclusive Recoleta, a thoroughly well-heeled area which fronts onto the Rio Plata. Porteños, the residents of Buenos Aires, seem to have three great passions in life - tango, football and Evita, and it is in this district, in the vast Recoleta ... Read review





Please wait ....
Rate this product:  
 
This action can only be made by logged in members.
10 out of 49 similar offers for Recoleta, Buenos Aires  
Display all 49 similar offers for Recoleta, Buenos Aires
Etoile Hotel Recoleta, Buenos Aires Etoile Hotel Recoleta, Buenos Aires
Buenos Aires
£ 198.00

InformationPrice is per double room per night and may vary depending on date booked...
Lastminute.com
Etoile Hotel Recoleta, Buenos Aires Etoile Hotel Recoleta, Buenos Aires
£ 72.00

InformationPrice is per double room per night and may vary depending on date booked...
easytobook.com
Blue Tree Hotels Recoleta, Buenos Aires Blue Tree Hotels Recoleta, Buenos Aires
£ 72.00

InformationPrice is per double room per night and may vary depending on date booked...
easytobook.com
Ayres de Recoleta, Buenos Aires Ayres de Recoleta, Buenos Aires
Centrally located in the charming Recoleta district, the Ayres de Recoleta provides easy ... more
access to tourist and cultural attractions, green
areas and to a lively nightlife in Buenos
Aires.The studios are tastefully furnished,
air-conditioned and about 33 m² in size, including
a fully-equipped kitchen and a dining area.As a
guest of Ayres de Recoleta, you are also invited
to enjoy a swimming pool, Jacuzzi, sauna and gym,
as well as to surf the net for free in the
lobby.Breakfast is served between 7:30 and 11:00
AM in the rooms.
£ 51.70

InformationPrice is per double room per night and may vary depending on date booked...
booking.com (high)
Hotel Recoleta, Buenos Aires Hotel Recoleta, Buenos Aires
The 2 star Hotel Recoleta owes its' namesake to the elegant and luxurious neighbourhood of ... more
Recoleta, one of the posher areas in the city of
Buenos Aires. This is a residential zone
surrounded by embassies, museums and high-end
boutiques. The hotel offers all of the perks
necessary to assure a luxury get-away in the
Argentine capital. It is furthermore located near
the Avenida del Libertador, one
£ 14.47

Rate it now
InformationPrice is per double room per night and may vary depending on date booked...
budgetplaces.com
Blue Tree Hotels Recoleta, Buenos Aires Blue Tree Hotels Recoleta, Buenos Aires
Blue Tree Hotels Buenos Aires Recoleta, as well as boasting a strategic location, offers ... more
friendly, personal service. This 4 star hotel is
situated in the Recoleta neighbourhood, one of the
most sophisticated areas of the city with a great
deal of cultural heritage.Blue Tree Hotels Buenos
Aires Recoleta is located close to important
tourist centres such as the Pilar Basilica,
Recoleta Cemetery,
£ 48.23

Rate it now
InformationPrice is per double room per night and may vary depending on date booked...
budgetplaces.com
Howard Johnson Boutique Recoleta, Buenos Aires Howard Johnson Boutique Recoleta, Buenos Aires
£ 72.00

InformationPrice is per double room per night and may vary depending on date booked...
easytobook.com
Sudamerika Hostel&Suites Recoleta, Buenos Aires Sudamerika Hostel&Suites Recoleta, Buenos Aires
The Sudamerika Hostel & Suites Recoleta is a 1-star lodging located in the Recoleta ... more
neighbourhood, one of the most elegant of the city
of Buenos Aires, and close to the main streets of
the capital such as the Santa Fe, Las Heras,
Callao and Pueyrredon Avenues.This lodging will
feel just like home and you will be able to enjoy
the most from your stay in the Argentine capital.
This old house has
£ 15.07

Rate it now
InformationPrice is per double room per night and may vary depending on date booked...
budgetplaces.com
Loisuites Recoleta Hotel, Buenos Aires Loisuites Recoleta Hotel, Buenos Aires
£ 72.00

InformationPrice is per double room per night and may vary depending on date booked...
easytobook.com
Loi Suites Recoleta Hotel, Buenos Aires Loi Suites Recoleta Hotel, Buenos Aires
£ 139.20

InformationPrice is per double room per night and may vary depending on date booked...
easytobook.com

Products you might be interested in
Rh Rochester Classic, Buenos AiresRh Rochester Classic, Buenos Aires

Hotel - Esmeralda 542, 1007 Buenos Aires, Argentina

This product has not yet been reviewed. Rate it now

Buy now for only £ 30.41

Concorde Hotel, Buenos AiresConcorde Hotel, Buenos Aires

Hotel - 25 De Mayo 630, 1002 Buenos Aires, Argentina

This product has not yet been reviewed. Rate it now

Buy now for only £ 32.17

Rh Rochester Concept, Buenos AiresRh Rochester Concept, Buenos Aires

Hotel - Maipú 572, 1006 Buenos Aires, Argentina

This product has not yet been reviewed. Rate it now

Buy now for only £ 27.37

Noster Bayres Bed & Breakfast, Buenos AiresNoster Bayres Bed & Breakfast, Buenos Aires

B&B - Brasil, 457, 1154 Buenos Aires, Argentina

This product has not yet been reviewed. Rate it now

Buy now for only £ 14.23

Catalinas Suites, Buenos AiresCatalinas Suites, Buenos Aires

Hotel - Tucuman 313, 1049 Buenos Aires, Argentina

This product has not yet been reviewed. Rate it now

Buy now for only £ 30.16

Grand King Hotel, Buenos AiresGrand King Hotel, Buenos Aires

Hotel - Lavalle, 560, 1047 Buenos Aires, Argentina

This product has not yet been reviewed. Rate it now

Buy now for only £ 29.65


Related offers for Recoleta, Buenos Aires

Related offers for Recoleta, Buenos Aires    
 
NH Hoteles
NH Hoteles
NH Hotels, the hotel chain leader in Europe, with more than 300 hotels in 20 countries in Europe, Latin America and Africa. Enter into our web site and find the best available tariff at all times
NH Hoteles


   
"I will return and I will be millions."
A review by VC81 on Recoleta, Buenos Aires
March 9th, 2006


Author's product rating:   

Prices Good 
Is it worth visiting? Good 
Transport links Good 
Family Friendly Average 

Advantages: a fabulous district to visit
Disadvantages: all tourists agree

Recommend to potential buyers: yes 

Full review

Buenos Aires is a chic cosmopolitan city that bristles with sensual elegance - a place of smoke-filled tango halls, wide leafy boulevards and street art of a myriad of genres. The city is divided into districts, or barrios, each with an individual style and character. One of the most popular barrios for visitors is exclusive Recoleta, a thoroughly well-heeled area which fronts onto the Rio Plata.

Porteños, the residents of Buenos Aires, seem to have three great passions in life - tango, football and Evita, and it is in this district, in the vast Recoleta Cemetery, that the remains of Eva Peron found their final resting place. For many people Evita is the only reason to visit Recoleta, for some the only reason to visit Buenos Aries. The popularity of this remarkable lady, still intense a half century after her death, has made the cemetery a mecca for thousands of people every day.


GETTING TO RECOLETA

Buenos Aires is easily negotiated by any method of transport - bus, taxi, underground train - but as most tourists stay downtown around the Centro area, the smart streets of nearby Recoleta, are most simply navigated on foot. Alternatively, all organized city tours tend to terminate outside the cemetery, due to its status as the number one tourist site in the city, and also the high concentration of quality cafés and restaurants nearby.


THE CEMETERY

Since its establishment in 1822, an estimated 350,000 people have been interred at La Recoleta Cemetery. The name Recoleta derives from the meditation and "recollection" which occurred at the Franciscan monastery which stood on the site in the 1720s. The cemetery was began when the Argentine government banned burials in churches and convents, and its unusual origins means that Recoleta is quite extraordinary. Not only is it one of the finest architectural marvels in the city, it is the resting place of some of the most important figures in Argentine history.

Grand neo-classical gates guard the entrance to the cemetery, and an eerie peace welcomes you as you step through. A long paved avenue stretches out transecting the length of the cemetery, passing through a central plaza. To either side, seemingly never-ending rows of large stone mausoleums stand to well above head height. These are the family tombs of Buenos Aires' wealthy elite and favoured sons.

The central plaza is a restful place with grand old trees shading a prominent statue of Jesus. It's the perfect place to take a break from the stresses of city life on the cool stone benches, while the scrawny feral cemetery cats wind about your feet. From here numerous sun-drenched bricked streets radiate off like spokes in wheel, and in turn lead into grids of tiny alleys which are barely wide enough to squeeze between the tombs. All manner of architectural styles can be found here on the 5,000 or so tombs, from neoclassical to art nouveau and neo-gothic. The layout of the cemetery gives it the feel of a mini-city within a city.

So who is there to see? Well, unless you are an Argentine history and elite society buff, there will not be that many names to recognise. Presidents, politicians, writers, artists, sports stars, Nobel Prize winners, architects, etc. are interred here by the dozen, but very few are known to the average tourist. There are a few familiar faces, including Susan Barrantes, (mother of Fergie, Duchess of York) and the F1 Champion Juan Manuel Fangio. Otherwise the main draw for me, and the majority of visitors, was the grave of Eva Perón.

María Eva Duarte de Perón, rose from an illegitimate birth to a cook, through acting and modelling, to become one of the most powerful South American women in history. As the wife of President Juan Perón, she became the highly influential "Spiritual Leader of the Nation" in 1946, and became famous for championing the rights of the underprivileged. A vast cult grew around her, which since her passing from uterine cancer in 1952 at the age of 33, has never faded.

However, the interest around this burial site, lies not only in the living Evita, but also the controversy surrounding her burial. During a period of hysterical mass mourning across Argentina, a military coup overthrew Perón's government. Evita's body was stolen and defiled to prevent rebellion, and then secretly buried in Italy. Once this was revealed, her exiled husband had the corpse dug up and placed in his house in Spain. When, in 1974, he was reinstated as President, Evita was brought home to Argentina and eventually buried in the tomb of her father's family, the Duartes, where we find her today.

The small art deco tomb is by no means the grandest in the cemetery, being sandwiched between larger tombs in a densely-packed side alley. Subsequently, the narrow space is permanently packed with groups of tourists jammed like sardines between the towering mausoleums. However, the atmosphere is respectful, and every visitor gets the opportunity to have a good peer, pay respects or take a photo. Many people choose to bring small floral tributes to fix to the heavy, ornate bronze grill door. A plethora of remembrance plaques adorn the ornamental black marble façade. Unlike many of the other tombs, the view of the interior is completely obscured, and not wanting to lose her a second time, the government are rumoured to have made the mausoleum able to withstand a nuclear bomb attack.


So, is it worth a visit?

Recoleta must be counted as one of the 'great cemeteries of the world', and is a must-see in Buenos Aires for that reason alone. It is unique in style, but most easily comparable with Père Lachaise, the formidable cemetery in Paris. I found Recoleta lacked the magnificent ambience of Père Lachaise. Maybe this was because the names were not so well-known to me and could not compete with the likes of Oscar Wilde or Jim Morrison, or maybe because the atmosphere was far more clinical, it failed to stir my imagination as much as the arty air and rampant decay of its ramshackle, quirky Parisian cousin.

However, the architecture of Recoleta is far grander than other cemeteries I have visited, and it is far better kept. I would absolutely recommend it, even for people who have little interest in Argentine history. La Recoleta Cemetery is certainly a unique place to visit - a huge outdoor art gallery with a deeper significance.


FURTHER INFORMATION

La Recoleta Cemetary, Calle Junín 1760, is open daily, 7am-5.45pm, free admission.

I would recommend one hour minimum to have a good stroll around and to absorb the cemetery's unique character, but if short of time it is worth even a quick ten minute visit.

'Friends of the cemetery' harass visitors to buy a map for Arg$4 (£0.75) and make a donation at the gate, prompting most visitors to break into a fast trot to avoid parting with any unnecessary pesos. However, if there are particular graves you wish to see the maps are detailed and better than aimlessly pottering around the tiny aisles for hours. To find Eva Perón, either follow the tourist hoards, or ask a friendly gardener.


ALSO IN THE AREA

The cemetery may be the most visited site in Recoleta, but this charming district is not just a one horse show.

In front of the cemetery, on Junín 1904, is the 1732 church of Nuestra Señora del Pilar. This tiny whitewashed church was so unlike others I had visited in South America. Its simple airy colonial style, with pretty stain glass windows, made it serenely relaxed and the perfect place to reflect. Whilst still having the massive and stunningly ornate gold and silver baroque altarpieces so popular on the continent, it was far less ostentatious than usual, and definitely one of my favourite churches in South America.
Admission is free, and the church is open 8am-9pm.

In front of the church is the vast grassy Plaza Francia, which hosts la Feria de Recoleta - a large handicraft market on Saturdays. With hippy sing-ins, street tango and buskers entertaining small crowds all around the fringes of the market, there is quite an atmosphere. Well made glass, woodwork and jewellery items can be purchased from the craftspeople reasonably cheaply, alongside incense, casual clothes and hand made toys. The market is popular with locals, and whilst not stocking a vast range of typical souvenirs, many of the items carry a lot of local flavour. I found it far cheaper and less oppressive than the street markets in La Boca, the most popular district with visitors, which are essentially mass market tourist traps.

Recoleta is also home to several art museums, including Museo de Arte Decorativo, Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes, and the Cultural Centre (Centro Cultural) which neighbours the cemetery on Junín 1930, and hosts musical, theatre and creative art exhibits.


RESTAURANTS

Across Plaza Francia from the church, stands a row of good continental-style restaurants, all with umbrella-ed garden seating areas bustling with birdlife.

I was particularly impressed with Buller's, a micro-brewery / pub / restaurant, which offers a large selection of unusual beers, such as honey and Oktoberfest style, and an extensive range of light meals, including spectacular salads complete with inventive homemade breads. It has a relaxed, yet still chic (this is Buenos Aires after all), atmosphere and is highly competitive in price.

The only restaurant to be avoided in the row is the renowned La Biela - hotspot of the rich and famous - which despite its prestigious historic connections and comprehensive, reasonably well-priced Parisian café style menu, has unfortunately developed a rather pompous Parisian style attitude to go with it. I have never before seen customers at such a high-falootin' establishment have to get up and ask their waiters to please come to the table. Even worse, the snooty waiter attending to us nonchalantly picked a large piece of debris out of a hot chocolate with his fingers, before casually slamming the glass down in some manner of presentation. I couldn't quite believe my eyes!


OVERALL OPINION

The district of Recoleta is one of the most elegant and charming in Buenos Aires, and is certainly worth exploring for its refined atmosphere, boutique stores and some of the finest dining in the city. Despite the never ending coaches regurgitating endless hoards of tourists, who have come to tick off Evita's tomb on their "must do in Buenos Aires list", the barrio of Recoleta still retains a gentile, relaxed air, which reminded me a little of the Left Bank in Paris. Any visitor to charming Buenos Aires will no doubt at some point find themselves in Recoleta, and I can certainly recommend it highly.


© 2006 V.L. Collyer
 


Reviews which might be of interest for Recoleta, Buenos Aires    
The beautiful city of the dead.
Review of Cemetery of the Recoleta, Buenos Aires by  mimi_solei

Advantages: Beautiful cemetery. Key place to visit in Buenos Aires
Disadvantages: Not great if you do not like Cemeteries. Public transport access is not great

...No visit to Buenos Aires would be complete without a trip to the famous Cemetery of Recoleta. Background about the district ('barrio') of Recoleta In the 1870's, a yellow-fever epidemic sent many of the cities elite from their comfortable lodgings of San Telmo to this neighborhood. As a result, Recoleta prospered and is now considered the 'mayfair' of Buenos Aires. The Cemetery is the home of a serveral famous Argentines, the most notable Eva Peron (or Evita). The historic cemetery is adorned with statues that complement the beautiful mausoleums created in a wide variety of architectural styles. The entire cemetery is laid out in sections like city blocks, with wide tree-lined walkways branching into smaller "streets" filled with mausoleums. IMPRESSION: The day I visited the cemetery, it was a clear sunning winter... Read review

Ciao members have rated this review on average helpful

helpful
01.10.2005
Not really fit for an emperor
Review of Emperador Hotel, Buenos Aires by  catsholiday

Advantages: Great position, huge rooms and bathroom
Disadvantages: Little storage in bedrooms and food and drink VERY expensive

...The hotel is on the Avenida del Libertador in the Recoleta district of Buenos Aires and is situated within walking distance of most areas in Buenos Aires and is close to the main railway station. The entrance is modern looking with gold revolving doors and there is at least one doorman at all times to welcome you in. The lobby is quite spacious and very well appointed, there are flower arrangements on tables which are fresh and look welcoming. The reception desk is on the left as you walk in to the hotel and they will also change money at a reasonable rate here. On the right hand side is an open looking bar with comfortable seats and tables. At the back of the hotel, through the lobby is the restaurant which is actually quite small for the size of hotel. This is where we had our breakfasts but we did not eat in the hotel other than... Read review

Ciao members have rated this review on average very helpful

very helpful
12.01.2009
(24.03.2009)
Tango Argentina in BA
Review of Buenos Aires by  notthesailingclub

Advantages: Lively city, Good restaurants and bars, plenty to see
Disadvantages: Hold onto your hats when taking a cab!

...If travelling within South America or if you need to visit Argentina, then a stop in Buenos Aires should definitely be on your itinerary. This vibrant city has the look and feel of a Spanish city though retains its sense of South American location. Culturally and socially, the city embraces all walks of life. From the hard-headed business district and its Hotels such as the obligatory Inter Continental with (frequently Texan oil tycoons) to the bustle of the Boca, Buenos Aires caters for all. The architecture of the Recoleta area as one would expect from this opulent area is fantastic. The layout of the buildings and the parks planned to perfection. It is here in the cemetery that Eva Peron has her shrine. On the other side of the city near the bustling port on the banks of the River Plate is La Boca. This plays host to... Read review

Ciao members have rated this review on average helpful

helpful
06.10.2000

Products similar to Recoleta, Buenos Aires  
nh jousten, buenos aires

claridge hotel buenos aires

lonely planet buenos aires - lonely planet

Non-Fiction - Travel - City Travel Guide - South America - Argentina - ISBN: 8408041452

air compressor

Garden Irrigation - Water Pump

air rifle

Non-Fiction - Sport - Shooting

ryan air

1 CD(s) - British Folk - Label: Gael Linn - Distributor: Proper - Released: 01/1994 - 5098990114208

Compare similar products to Recoleta, Buenos Aires

(*) Reviews by Ciao members

Gift ideas

Similar products and search queries by other users


Recoleta Aires, Recoleta Buenos Aires



Are you the manufacturer / provider of Recoleta, Buenos Aires? Click here