- Chacabuco Park
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Chacabuco Park is a public park in the Parque Chacabuco section of Buenos Aires.
Overview
Situated over 3 mi (5 km) west of colonial Buenos Aires, land belonging to Jesuits was expropriated following their 1767 Papal suppression. The extensive plot was sold to a gunpowder maker in 1781, remaining in that use until the municipality purchased it in 1898.[1] A May 15, 1903, city ordinance provided for the demolition of what had become a gunpowder dump, and outlined a future, 20 hectare (50 acre) park at the site. The facility itself was planned by the City Parks Commissioner, the noted French Argentine urbanist Charles Thays, and was opened in 1909. Named in honor of the pivotal 1817 Battle of Chacabuco, it originally featured ornate entry gates, three football fields, as well as selected business installations, such as a dairy, bookstore and tree nursery.[2]
A number of athletic grounds were installed at the park in 1911, including a running track, tennis courts, swimming pools, and a bocce court. A school for special education was installed around 1920 and is still operated there, as are two primary schools and a physical education facility. One of the special education school's noted instructors was the ill-fated poet, Alfonsina Storni.[2]
The park became well-known for its floral variety and selection of decorative sculptures, as well. A rose garden featuring over 3,000 varietals was maintained alongside the nursery, and after 1930, numerous memorial and naturalist sculptures were installed, including monuments to José de San Martín, Domingo Sarmiento and Frederic Chopin, as well as naturalist works evoking the ceremonial Inca maidens (the Ñusta), a jaguar, and others.[3] The park was further complemented by the 1941 opening of the Church of Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal.[4]
The planned construction of a network of intra-city freeways by the last dictatorship's Mayor, Osvaldo Cacciatore, led to the 1978 destruction of a wide, diagonal swath through the park.[1] The damage to the park (the area's principal green space) was only partially remedied by the 1981 opening of a sports complex and the 1984 construction of a cultural center under the freeway, itself.[4] Works initiated in January 2008 on new freeway on-ramps and off-ramps met with steadfast opposition from neighborhood groups, and their construction was suspended pending review.[1]
References
Coordinates: 34°38′04″S 58°26′36″W / 34.63444°S 58.44333°W
Landmarks of Buenos Aires Note: "Buenos Aires" denotes the city of Buenos Aires proper, not the entire Greater Buenos Aires metropolitan area. Public
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InstitutionsEl Ateneo Bookstore · Argentine Automobile Club · Bernardino Rivadavia Natural Sciences Museum · Buenos Aires Museum of Modern Art · Café Tortoni · Fortabat Art Collection · House of Culture · Illuminated Block · Isaac Fernández Blanco Museum · King Fahd Cultural Center · Latin American Art Museum · Museum of Foreign Debt · National Library · National Museum of Decorative Arts · National Museum of Fine Arts · National Museum of History · Opera House · Paz Palace · Planetarium · Recoleta Cultural Center · San Martín Cultural Center · San Martín National Institute · Sarmiento Museum · Eduardo Sívori MuseumSport Bombonera Stadium · River Plate Stadium · Ducó Stadium · Maradona Stadium · Vélez Sársfield Stadium · Argentine Hippodrome of Palermo · Lawn Tennis Club · Polo Stadium · Race Circuit · Arena Obras Sanitarias · CeNARD · Estadio Ricardo EtcheverryTransportation Shopping
& entertainmentAbasto Mall · Avenida Theatre · Cervantes Theatre · Fishermen's Pier · Galerías Pacífico · Gran Rex Theatre · Luna Park Arena · Paseo La Plaza · Patio Bullrich · Opera Theatre · Parque de la Ciudad · La Trastienda ClubStreets
& avenues9 de Julio Avenue · Avenida Alvear · Avenida de Mayo · Avenida del Libertador · Callao Avenue · Caminito · Córdoba Avenue · Coronel Díaz Street · Corrientes Avenue · Figueroa Alcorta Avenue · Florida Street · General Paz Avenue · Leandro Alem Avenue · President Roque Sáenz Peña Avenue · Rivadavia Avenue · Santa Fe Avenue · Scalabrini Ortiz AvenueCategories:- Urban public parks
- Parks and gardens in Buenos Aires
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