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DESTINATION GUIDE BUENOS AIRES
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Buenos Aires is probably the most European of South American capitals. A mixture of colonial, neo classic and modern architecture will amaze you every time you walk around its charming streets in the neighborhoods of San Telmo, La Boca, Palermo and even downtown. Portenos provide the atmosphere for a great combination of day and nightlife which can be felt in every single of the cents of restaurants, pubs, bars and night clubs; with all types of international dishes (including the world known argentine beef that is said to be so tender that can be cut with a spoon) and music, from the traditional tango to international deejays performances. Buenos Aires, the base place to visit Patagonia and the rest of Argentina, can easily be labeled as an ideal city for independent travelers, especially when it comes to talk about prices. Art, history, shopping, football, dining, fashion, tango… Welcome to Buenos Aires.
 
 
Weather Getting around
When to come? Restaurants, Bars & Clubs
How long? Museums
How to get there? Tour descriptions
 
 
Weather

In general, the climate in Buenos Aires is mild all year round, with no major extremes of temperature or conditions. However, some people may find the summer months (Dec-Feb; highs of 30 Celsius, lows of 17 Celsius) too hot and humid, or the winter months (Jun-Aug; highs of 17 Celsius, lows of 7 Celsius) too cold, depending on personal taste. Few will argue that spring (Sep-Nov, highs of 25 Celsius, lows of 10 Celsius) is the best time to visit, closely followed by autumn/fall (Mar-May, highs of 26 Celsius, lows of 10 Celsius).




When to come?

You can visit Buenos Aires all year long; it depends on your personal taste the right time to come. Some people say that the best time to come is between the months of September and December when the weather is mild, but these months are chosen as well for Congress purposes and accommodation can be difficult to find. Activities can be done everyday during the entire year, except for football which has it break from December to March.


How long?

We recommend staying in Buenos Aires for at least three nights, the time that will allow you to enjoy the main tours of the city (city tour, gaucho tour and tango show) and other activities such as dining or walking around. In order to have a complete experience in this city, we would stay one entire week.


How to get there?

Major airlines fly to Buenos Aires’ International Airport (Ezeiza) from all over the Americas, Europe, Australia and South Africa. You can access Buenos Aires by land (7h), plane (1h) or boat (1 to 3h) from Uruguay. By plane from Santiago de Chile (2h), Rio de Janeiro (5h), Lima (5h), Iguazu Falls (1:45h), Puerto Madryn (Trelew, 2h), Mendoza (2h), Salta (2h), Ushuaia (3:25h), El Calafate (3h) and Bariloche (2h), among others. By land, most of the cities in Argentina have services here. Several Cruise Lines get to Buenos Aires.


Getting around

Transportation in Buenos Aires is efficient and offers different options:

· Taxi; you can identify them by their colors, black with yellow top. They charge a fix fee of $0.70 for using the service plus a rate of $0.07 every two blocks that you cover or one minute that the car does not move. The safest way to take taxi is calling a call center of any Radio-Taxi company. When taking taxis, try to pay with small bills in order to avoid getting fake ones as a change and try to always pretend that you know where you are going to avoid being provided a “city tour” by the driver.

· Colectivo (Bus); several lines identified with numbers cover the whole city with connections to Buenos Aires province sometimes. The fee can go from $0.25 to $0.45 for local trips, depending on the number of blocks you will travel. You can only pay with coins, so make sure you have enough before getting into the bus. The easiest way to know what line you should take is by buying a small guide ($1 the cheapest one) with a city map and the coverage and stops of each line.

· Subte (Subway); the easiest, cheapest and fastest way of traveling from one place to another in the city, however during hot days it can be quite annoying. The ticket costs $0.25 and you can make combinations between the five available lines, identified by letters and colors: A or Blue (the oldest one, it goes from Once to Plaza de Mayo), B or Red (it goes from Chacarita to Puerto Madero), C or Light Blue (it goes from Retiro to Constitucion), D or Green (it goes from Belgrano to Plaza de Mayo) and E or Violet (it goes from Plaza de Mayo to Plaza de los Virreyes).

· Train; there are several lines, mainly departing from Retiro. The best and most known is the one to Tigre and San Isidro. The tickets vary from $0.15 to $1.



Restaurants, Bars & Clubs

Palermo
Restaurants (prices are indicative of a starter and main course with a non-alcoholic drink, most of the restaurants listed below require booking):
Palermo
Osaka  Japanese & Peruvian. $22. Soler 5608. Tel: 4775-6964.
La Cabrera Parrilla. $13. Cabrera 5099. Tel: 4831-7002.
Jangada

River Fish.$13. Honduras 5799. Tel: 4777-4193.

Olsen   Nordic. $15. Gorriti 5870. Tel: 4776-7677.
Casa Cruz Local. $28. Uriarte 1658. Tel: 4833-1112.
Kayoko Japanese. $11. Gurruchaga 1650. Tel: 4832-6158.
La Casa Polaca Polish. $10. Jorge L. Borges 2076. Tel: 4899-0514.

Recoleta
Nectarine  French. $38. Vicente Lopez 1661. Tel: 4813-6993.
La Burgogne

French. $42. Ayacucho 2027. Tel: 4808-2100.

Lola     International. $15. Ortiz & Guido. Tel: 4804-5959.

Puerto Madero
Cabana Las Lilas Parrilla. $28. Alicia Moreau de Justo 516. Tel: 4313-1336.
Siga La Vaca Parrilla (all you can eat). $10. Alicia M. de Justo 1714. Tel: 4315-6801.
Spettus Parrilla (all you can eat). $18. Alicia M. de Justo 876. Tel: 4334-4126.
Buda Bar Japanese. $26. Olga Cossettini 1051. Tel: 4893-9500.

San Telmo
La Brigada

Parrilla. $14. Estados Unidos 465. Tel: 4361-5557.

Café San Juan

Local. $12. Av. San Juan 450. Tel: 4300-1112.

Sr. Telmo Pizza. $7. Defensa 756. Tel: 4300-3883.

Downtown
Dada

International. $31. San Martin 941. Tel: 4314-4787.

Broccolino Italian. $14. Av. Cordoba 820. Tel: 4322-9848.
Las Cuartetas Pizza. $5. Av. Corrientes 838. Tel: 4326-0171.
Empire

Asian. $12. Tres Sargentos 427. Tel: 4312-5706.


Las Canitas / Belgrano
Sucre

Signature Cuisine. $19. Sucre 676. Tel: 4782-9082.

Las Cholas Northern. $7. Arce 306. Tel: 4899-0094.
Frida Kahlo

Mexican. $11. Ciudad de la Paz 3093. Tel: 4544-1927.

El Portugues

International. $8. Baez 499. Tel: 4771-8699.


Bars (most of them open every night, just give them a call to double check):
La Cigale 25 de Mayo 522. Tel: 4312-8275.
The Shamrock Rodriguez Pena 1220. Tel: 4812-3584.
Milion Parana 1048. Tel: 4815-9925.
Gibraltar Peru 895. Tel: 4362-5310.
Carnal Niceto Vega 5511. Tel: 4772-7582.
Freak Roy Freak Roy 1715. Tel: 4771-9926.
Mundo Bizarro Serrano 1222. Tel: 4773-1967.
Soul Café Baez 352. Tel: 4776-3905.
Gran Bar Danzon Libertad 1161. Tel: 4811-1108.
Asia de Cuba P. Dealessi 750. Tel: 4894-1328.
Antares Armenia 1447. Tel: 4833-9611.
Café Tortoni Av. de Mayo 825. Tel: 4342-4328.

Clubs (indicated days are those we recommend attending these places):

Mint Fri. Av. Rafael Obligado & Av. Sarmiento. Tel: 4806-8002.
Pacha
    Sat. Av. Costanera Norte y La Pampa. Tel: 4788-4280.
Rumi
    Wed-Sat. Av. Figueroa Alcorta 6442. Tel: 4782-1398.
Niceto Thu. Niceto Vega 5510. Tel: 4779-9396.
Opera Bay Wed-Sat. Cecilia Grierson 225. Tel: 4777-4781.
La Diosa Sat. Rafael Obligado 3731. Tel: 4806-9443.
Caix
    Fri-Sun(am). Complejo Costa Salguero. Tel: 4805-6069.
Bahrein Tue-Wed-Sat. Lavalle 345. Tel: 4779-1109.
Crobar Fri. Paseo de la Infanta. 4778-1500.
Asia de Cuba Wed-Sat. P. Dealessi 750. Tel: 4894-1328.
Big One Sat. Alsina 960. Tel: 4334-0097.

Museums

Buenos Aires offers important museums of national and international art as well as thematic ones related to football, shoes, puppets, and costumes, among others. One of the newest museums founded in the city is Malba: Museum of Latin American Art of Buenos Aires. This museum exhibits artworks made by Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, Tarsilia do Amaral, Wilfredo Lam and the main Argentine artists. The Evita Museum possesses testimonies of this emblematic figure of the Argentine history. In Retiro, the Fernández Blanco Museum is located at the Noel Palace. This building has a typical neoclassical style of the 20’s. The museum exhibits one of the major silverware collections in the world that dates from colonial times. The Spanish art, mainly of XVI and XVII centuries, is gathered at the Larreta Museum, located in an old country house in Belgrano neighborhood with an Andalusian style garden of 7,000 square meters. The Argentine popular art can be seen at the José Hernández Museum. This museum collection includes more than 8,000 art objects which represents the old and contemporaneous Argentine handcrafts.

These are some of the most important museums in Buenos Aires:

- Spanish Art Museum Enrique Larreta.
- Hispano-American Art Museum Isaac Fernández Blanco.
- Latin American Art Museum of Buenos Aires (MALBA).
- Modern Art Museum of Buenos Aires.
- Popular Art Museum José Hernández.
- Fine Arts Museum of La Boca Quinquela Martín.
- Museum of the Pink House (Government House).
- Museum of the Pink House (Government House).
- Museo de la Pasión Boquense (at Boca Juniors Stadium).
- Museum of the Shoa (Holocaust).
- Evita Museum.
- Museum of National History.
- Cabildo Museum.
- Jewish Museum of Buenos Aires.
- World Tango Museum.
- Decorative Art Museum.
- Fine Arts National Museum.
- Che Guevara Historic Museum



Tour descriptions

Buenos Aires City Tour

Departures: Everyday, 9am and 2pm.
Length: 3 to 4 hours.
Difficulty: Easy.
Lunch:  Not included.


This three hour sightseeing tour departs from the hotel, and quickly moves on to the widest boulevard in the world, the 9 de Julio Avenue, where you will pass by the Colon Opera house and the Obelisk commemorating the founding of the city before arriving at the famous Plaza de Mayo. Bordering the square you will see the town hall, the Casa Rosada—the seat of the Argentine government—and the Cathedral where Argentina’s greatest national hero, General San Martin, is interred. From there the tour progresses to La Boca, a bright and colorful neighborhood founded by Italian immigrants, and then on to the city docks and the San Martin Square. Next on the tour are Palermo Chico and the beautiful Palermo Park, a quiet residential area and an historic park. From there, the tour will go on to the elegant Recoleta district where you will visit the Recoleta Cemetery, where Argentina’s rich and famous are buried in the same opulent style in which they lived. You will then return to the hotel via the stylish Alvear Avenue.

Tigre, Coastline Train & Delta Navigation

Departures:

Everyday, 9am and 2pm

Length: 3 to 4 hours.
Difficulty: Easy.
Lunch: Not Included.


Just to the north of Buenos Aires is the city of Tigre and the Paraná river delta. This half day tour takes you to visit the stylish riverside neighbourhoods of San Isidro, Olivos, and San Fernando via the coastal train before arriving in Tigre proper. Once in Tigre you will take an hour long cruise through the channels amongst the many islands, yacht clubs, elegant summer mansions, and restaurants before returning to Buenos Aires for the evening.

Gaucho Life Tour, day in an Estancia

Departures: Everyday, 10am.
Length: 6 to 8 hours.
Difficulty:

Easy.

Lunch: 

Included.

 


You will leave Buenos Aires for the grassy Pampas surrounding the city that extend into the interior for hundreds of miles. When the Spanish began colonizing the area, they harnessed the wealth of the Pampas by ranching them, eventually resulting in vast estancias with grand and boldly designed architecture. The men upon whom it fell to take care of the animals came to be called Gauchos, the Argentine cowboys. This excursion will allow you the opportunity to enter into the romantic world of these gauchos, you will be able to participate in their traditional dances and music during an authentic gaucho festival. The party takes place at a beautiful old ranch and includes horseback riding, hayrides, a typical “asado criollo” (argentine barbeque), wine, and a folklore show of dancing and gaucho horseback skill demonstration.

Tango Show

Departures: Everyday, 9.30pm.
Length: 2 hours.
Difficulty:

Easy.

Argentina is famous for its Tango dancing. This tour offers a spectacular demonstration of local dancing accompanied by dB&B/Inner.

DB&B/Inner & Tango Show

Departures: Everyday, 8 am.
Length: 4 hours.
Difficulty:

Easy.

DB&B/Inner:

Included.

Argentina is famous for its steaks, wine, and Tango dancing. This tour combines them, offering a spectacular demonstration of local dancing accompanied by dB&B/Inner.

 
 
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