Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Travel guide - Who can introduce Buenos Aires, Argentina?

Who can introduce Buenos Aires, Argentina?

Buenos Aires, located on the south bank of the La Plata River, is the capital and largest city of Argentina and the third largest metropolitan area in Latin America. This city is the most European city in Central and South America, the birthplace of Argentine tango, and was rated as the third most beautiful city in the world in 2007.

Buenos Aires has beautiful scenery, fresh air and pleasant climate, and is known as "Paris of South America". This is a beautiful, clean and modern city with wide and neat streets and green trees everywhere. Those well-preserved ancient buildings have a strong European classical architectural color, including Gothic churches, Romanesque theaters and Spanish courtyards, which makes people admire the cultural diversity of the city. Buenos Aires, featuring many squares, street gardens and monuments, is a famous tourist city in Argentina with many tourist attractions. The obelisk in Buenos Aires, 79th Street, Columbus Theatre, Plaza de Mayo, Argentine Presidential Palace, Women's Bridge and La Boca are all worth visiting.

Buenos Aires has a large area of green space. This city has not taken off its green clothes for years. Tall kapok trees are all over the city. Those blooming peach blossoms and orange kapok are very beautiful. Green lawns and colorful flower beds extend to every corner of Buenos Aires, and every balcony is covered with green ornamental plants. These potted flowers and trees are various, ingenious and beautiful. Buenos Aires is a very European city. Not only almost all urban residents are descendants of European immigrants, but also the urban layout, street view, lifestyle, customs and cultural interests of residents show European customs everywhere. Most squares, streets, parks, museums, monuments and statues in the city are named after major historical events and famous historical figures. Streets in the city center crisscross. The streets of San Telmo and Montserra in the south are narrow, and the Spanish and Italian-style ancient buildings centuries ago are still well preserved. In the east of the city, there are wide streets and tall buildings, surrounded by lawns and flower beds. Buenos Aires is famous for its street parks, squares and monuments. Crossing the street here, you can see pairs of dancing street tangos, which fascinates the audience. Tango's hometown is Buenos Aires, but no one can tell its exact origin. I only know that it appeared in the era of great immigration at the end of 19, combining the passion of Spanish flamenco dance, the rhythm of African style and the sad melody. Because Buenos Aires is "Paris of South America", beef is not the whole food culture of Buenos Aires. Like Parisians, locals love to visit coffee shops, and new and old cafes abound. The older generation loves to go to a century-old shop to catch up on old gossip, while the new generation loves to kill time in specialty coffee shops. French wine is world-famous. As the fifth largest wine producer in the world, Argentina just hides it, exports less and keeps the best for itself.