It was a short flight from El Chalten to Buenos Aires and since we thought we only have one morning in the city we had not planned anything. But then we learned at the last minute that Air Canada had cancelled our flight home and we have an extra day in this city that I had visited for several days in 2017. My travel companion had not really seen the city so we took a Hop-on Hop-off tour of the city. Although we only really hopped off at La Boca we did get a quick tour of a good part of the city.
I wasn't going to write a post on this because I thought I had covered a lot of ground in my first visit and had some leisurely intimate experiences at ground level, including a dance at a tango club. But this time around, the bus tour gave me a bird's eye view that I didn't get when I walked the city in 2017, so there were not a lot of duplication other than in La Boca. I was also able to dig up a lot of background on the images I took, thanks to Google AI. Technically this should be Buenos Aires 3. I highly recommend that you check out the other two earlier posts: https://travelswithrarecat.blogspot.com/search?q=buenos+aires
One thing I noted on the bus tour was the large number of corner buildings in the city. Many of these are historical buildings. I practically have a collection of them but only showing a few here - you can see the wide variety of architectural styles. While I captured images of tango dancers in La Boca the last time I visited, this time we missed that as we visited in late afternoon and most of the tourists were gone - but I got a local kid playing basketball...😀 We were tired and eager to go home after 3 weeks on the road, but the extra day was still a treat in such a vibrant, colourful city.
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| Monument of Julio Roca, former president |
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| 1926 building Edificio Sud America - Neo-Louis XVI style, austere lines and minimal decoration |
Edificio Banco Comafi, formerly Palacio Italia America. Venetian Neo-gothic by renowned architect Francesco Gianotti
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| An iconic art deco building - Edificio La Equitativa del Plata 1930s architectural landmark |
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Art nouveau landmark from 1916 also designed by Francesco Gianotti
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| SOMISA building - first building in the world constructed entirely of folded steel plate 1966-77 |
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| Obelisco de Buenos Aires |
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Ministry of Public Works with massive iron mural of Eva Peron |
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| Another historical building neo-classical and art deco blend by French Architect Eduardo Le Monnier 1928 |
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| Buenos Aires Metropolitan Cathedral with a distinctive neoclassical face columns that resemble a Greek temple rather than a traditional church, no spire, no dome - rather unusual |
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| Casa Rosada - office of the President |
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Don Quixote sculpture - a gift from Spain for Buenos Aires' 400th Anniversary |
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We saw these all over the city - they look like comfy benches but in fact are very hard metal or concrete |
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Blue jacaranda tree with violet flowers
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| National Congress in a Neo-classical building |
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| The stunning swing bridge Puente de la Mujer (Woman's Bridge) by architect Santiago Calatrava |
This is in the Puerto Madero district, with other contemporary buildings like the ones below

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The historic ansporter bridge inaugurated in 1914 in the La Boca neighbourhood
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| La Bombonera stadium - homeground for the Boca Juniors football team |
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| Typical La Boca buildings in vibrant colours |
This wraps up our 3 week Patagonian Roadtrip. It was exhausting but the variety of experiences we encountered was thoroughly worth it! Thank you for coming along for the ride.
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