| Buenos Aires | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires Autonomous City of Buenos Aires | |||
| Clockwise from top: skyline on the Rio de la Plata, 9 de Julio Avenue with the Obelisk, the Church of Nuestra Señora del Pilar in Recoleta, Argentine National Congress, the Casa Rosada, and Caminito in La Boca | |||
| 
 | |||
| Coordinates: 34°36′12″S 58°22′54″W | |||
| Country | Argentina | ||
| Established | 1536, 1580 | ||
| Government | |||
| - Type | Autonomous city | ||
| - Chief of Government | Mauricio Macri | ||
| - Senators | María Eugenia Estenssoro,Samuel Cabanchik, Daniel Filmus | ||
| Area | |||
| - City | 203 km2 (78.5 sq mi) | ||
| - Land | 203 km2 (78.5 sq mi) | ||
| - Metro | 4,758 km2 (1,837.1 sq mi) | ||
| Population (2009 est.) | |||
| - City | 3,050,728 | ||
| - Density | 15,005/km2 (38,862.7/sq mi) | ||
| - Metro | 13,356,715 | ||
| - Metro density | 2,807.2/km2 (7,270.54/sq mi) | ||
| Demonym | porteño (m), porteña (f) | ||
| Time zone | ART (UTC-3) | ||
| Area code(s) | 011 | ||
| HDI (2010) | 0.953 – very high | ||
| Website | buenosaires.gov.ar (Spanish)bue.gov.ar (English) | ||
Buenos Aires (Spanish : [ˈbwenoˈsaiɾes]) is the capital and largest city of Argentina, and the second-largest metropolitan area in South America, after São Paulo.It is located on the western shore of the estuary of the Río de la Plata, on the southeastern coast of the South American continent. Greater Buenos Aires conurbation, which also includes several Buenos Aires Province districts, constitutes the third-largest conurbation in Latin America, with a population of around 13 million.
The  city of Buenos Aires is not a part of the Buenos Aires Province, nor is  it its capital; rather, it is an autonomous district. In 1880, after  decades of political infighting, Buenos Aires was federalised and  removed from Buenos Aires Province. The city limits were enlarged to  include the towns of Belgrano and Flores (both are currently  neighbourhoods of the city). The 1994 constitutional amendment granted  the city autonomy, hence its formal name: Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos  Aires (English: Autonomous City of Buenos Aires). Its citizens first  elected a Chief of Government (i.e. Mayor) in 1996; before, the Mayor  was directly appointed by the President of the Republic.
Buenos  Aires is considered an Alpha World City as listed by the Loughborough  University group's (GaWC) 2008 inventory People from Buenos Aires are  referred to as porteños (people of the port).
History
First European settlement
Seaman  Juan Díaz de Solís, navigating in the name of Spain, was the first  European to reach the Río de la Plata in 1516. His expedition was cut  short when he was killed during an attack by the native Charrúa tribe in  what is now Uruguay.
Buenos Aires shortly after its foundation 1536
Depiction of Juan de Garay and the second founding of Buenos Aires, 1580
The  city of Buenos Aires was first established as Ciudad de Nuestra Señora  Santa María del Buen Ayre (literally "City of Our Lady Saint Mary of the  Fair Winds") after Our Lady of Bonaria (Patron Saint of the capital of  Sardinia, Cagliari) on 2 February 1536 by a Spanish expedition led by  Pedro de Mendoza . The settlement founded by Mendoza was located in what  is today the San Telmo district of Buenos Aires, south of the city  center.
More  attacks by the indigenous peoples forced the settlers away, and in 1541  the site was abandoned. A second (and permanent) settlement was  established in 1580 by Juan de Garay, who arrived by sailing down the  Paraná River from Asunción (now the capital of Paraguay). He dubbed the  settlement "Santísima Trinidad" and its port became "Puerto de Santa  María de los Buenos Aires."
Colonial history
From  its earliest days, Buenos Aires depended primarily on trade. During  most of the 17th and 18th centuries, Spanish ships were menaced by  pirates, so they developed a complex system where ships with military  protection were dispatched to Central America, cross the land, from  there to Lima, Peru and from it to the inner cities of the viceroyalty.  Because of this, products took a very long time to arrive in Buenos  Aires, and the taxes generated by the transport made them prohibitive.  This scheme frustrated the traders of Buenos Aires, and a thriving  contraband industry developed. This also instilled a deep resentment in  porteños towards the Spanish authorities.
Sensing  these feelings, Charles III of Spain progressively eased the trade  restrictions and finally declared Buenos Aires an open port in the late  18th century. The capture of Porto Bello by British forces also fueled  the need to foster commerce via the Atlantic route, to the detriment of  Lima-based trade. One of his rulings was to split a region from the  Viceroyalty of Perú and create instead the Viceroyalty of the Río de la  Plata, with Buenos Aires as the capital. However, Charles's placating  actions did not have the desired effect, and the porteños, some of them  versed in the ideology of the French Revolution, became even more convinced of the need for Independence from Spain.
The May Revolution was a turning point in the politics of Buenos Aires.
During  the British invasions of the Río de la Plata, British forces attacked  Buenos Aires twice. In 1806 the British successfully invaded Buenos  Aires, but an army from Montevideo led by Santiago de Liniers defeated  them. In the brief period of British rule, the viceroy Rafael Sobremonte  managed to escape to Córdoba and designated this city as capital.  Buenos Aires became again the capital after its liberation, but  Sobremonte could not resume as viceroy. Santiago de Liniers, chosen as  new viceroy, armed the city to be prepared against a possible new  British attack, defeating the invasion attempt of 1807. The  militarization generated in society changed the balance of power  favourably for the criollo peoples, as well as the development of the  Peninsular War in Spain. An attempt by the peninsular merchant Martín de  Álzaga to remove Liniers and replace him with a Junta was defeated by  the criollo armies. However, by 1810 it would be those same armies who  would support a new revolutionary attempt, successfully removing the new  viceroy Baltasar Hidalgo de Cisneros. This is known as the May  Revolution, which is in present day celebrated as a national holiday.  This event started the Argentine War of Independence, and many armies  left Buenos Aires to fight the diverse strongholds of royalist  resistance, with varying levels of success. The government was held  first by two Juntas of many members, then by two triumvirates of only  three members, and finally by an unipersonal office, the Supreme  Director. Formal independence from Spain was declared in 1816, in the  Congress of Tucumán. Buenos Aires managed to endure the whole Spanish  American wars of independence without falling again into royalist rule.
Historically,  Buenos Aires has been Argentina's main venue for liberal and free-trade  ideas, while many of the provinces, especially to the northwest,  advocated a more conservative Catholic approach to political and social  issues. Much of the internal tension in Argentina's history, starting  with the centralist-federalist conflicts of the 19th century, can be  traced back to these contrasting views. In the months immediately  following the 25 May Revolution, Buenos Aires sent a number of military  envoys to the provinces with the intention of obtaining their approval.  Many of these missions ended in violent clashes, and the enterprise  fueled the tensions between the capital and the provinces.
In  the 19th century the city was blockaded twice by naval forces: by the  French from 1838 to 1840, and later by a joint Anglo-French expedition  from 1845 to 1848. Both blockades failed to force the city into  submission, and the foreign powers eventually desisted from their  demands.
1854: Enactment of the Buenos Aires Constitution.
1920: Bustling Florida Street
1920: Leandro Alem business district
Standard Bank's local headquarters (formerly BankBoston's)
Modern history
During  most of the 19th century, the political status of the city remained a  sensitive subject. It was already capital of Buenos Aires Province, and  between 1853 and 1860 it was the capital of the seceded State of Buenos  Aires. The issue was fought out more than once on the battlefield, until  the matter was finally settled in 1880 when the city was federalised  and became the seat of government, with its Mayor appointed by the  President. The Casa Rosada became the seat of the President.
1900: Eduardo Madero's new docklands
An aerial view of the city's northside; two out of three Porteños live in apartment buildings.
In  addition to the wealth generated by the fertile pampas, railroad  construction in the second half of the 19th century increased the  economic power of Buenos Aires as raw materials flowed into its  factories. Buenos Aires became a multicultural city that ranked itself  with the major European capitals. The Colón Theater became one of the  world's top opera venues. The city's main avenues were built during  those years, and the dawn of the 20th century saw the construction of  South America's then-tallest buildings and first underground system.
By  the 1920s Buenos Aires was a favoured destination for immigrants from  Europe, particularly Spain and Italy, as well as from Argentina's  provinces and neighbouring countries. Shanty towns (villas miseria)  started growing around the city's industrial areas during the 1930s,  leading to pervasive social problems which contrasted sharply with  Argentina's image as a country of riches. A second construction boom  from 1945 to 1980 reshaped downtown and much of the city.
Buenos  Aires was the cradle of Peronism: the pivotal demonstration of 17  October 1945 took place in Plaza de Mayo. Industrial workers of the  Greater Buenos Aires industrial belt have been Peronism's main support  base ever since, and Plaza de Mayo became the site for demonstrations  and many of the country's political events; on 16 June 1955, however, a  splinter faction of the Navy bombed the Plaza de Mayo area, killing 364  civilians (see Bombing of Plaza de Mayo). This was the only time the  city was attacked from the air, and the event was followed by a military  uprising which deposed President Perón, three months later (see  Revolución Libertadora).
In  the 1970s the city suffered from the fighting between left-wing  revolutionary movements (Montoneros, E.R.P. and F.A.R.) and the  right-wing paramilitary group Triple A, supported by Isabel Perón, who  became president of Argentina in 1974 after Juan Perón's death.
The  military coup of 1976, led by Jorge Rafael Videla, only escalated this  conflict; the "Dirty War" resulted in 30,000 desaparecidos (people  kidnapped and killed by the military during the years of the junta). The  silent marches of their mothers (Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo) are a  well-known image of Argentines suffering during those times.
The  dictatorship also drew up plans for a network of freeways intended to  relieve the city's acute traffic gridlock. The plan, however, called for  a seemingly indiscriminate razing of residential areas and, though only  three of the eight planned were put up at the time, they were mostly  obtrusive raised freeways that continue to blight a number of formerly  comfortable neighborhoods to this day.
The  city was visited by Pope John Paul II twice: in 1982, due to the  outbreak of the Falklands War (Spanish: Guerra de las Malvinas/Guerra  del Atlántico Sur), and a second visit in 1987, which gathered some of  the largest crowds in the city's history. The return of democracy in  1983 coincided with a cultural revival, and the 1990s saw an economic  revival, particularly in the construction and financial sectors.
On  17 March 1992 a bomb exploded in the Israeli Embassy, killing 29 and  injuring 242. Another explosion, on 18 July 1994 destroyed a building  housing several Jewish organizations, killing 85 and injuring many more,  these incidents marked the beginning of Middle Eastern terrorism to  South America.
Following  a 1993 agreement, the Argentine Constitution was amended to give Buenos  Aires autonomy and rescinding, among other things, the president's  right to appoint the city's mayor (as had been the case since 1880). On  30 June 1996, voters in Buenos Aires chose their first elected mayor  (Chief of Government).
On  30 December 2004 a fire at the República Cromagnon nightclub killed  almost 200 people, one of the greatest non-natural tragedies in  Argentine history.
The Chinese Arch in Buenos Aires' Chinatown reflects the continuing importance of immigration in Argentina
Corrientes Avenue, reflective of a second construction boom between 1945 and 1980
Galerías Pacífico is one of numerous city landmarks restored since 1990
Panoramic view of Puerto Madero at sunset, a section developed over former docklands over the past decade
Government and politics
Government structure
The  Executive is held by the Chief of Government (Spanish: Jefe de  Gobierno), elected for a four-year term together with a Deputy Chief of  Government, who presides over the 60-member Buenos Aires City  Legislature. Each member of the Legislature is elected for a four-year  term; half of the legislature is renewed every two years. Elections use  the D'Hondt method of proportional representation. The Judicial branch  is composed of the Supreme Court of Justice (Tribunal Superior de  Justicia), the Magistrate's Council (Consejo de la Magistratura), the  Public Ministry, and other City Courts. The Article 61 of the 1996  Constitution of the City of Buenos Aires states that "Suffrage is free,  equal, secret, universal, compulsory and non-accumulative. Resident  aliens enjoy this same right, with its corresponding obligations, on  equal terms with Argentine citizens registered in the district, under  the terms established by law."
Legally,  the city enjoys less autonomy than the Provinces[citation needed]. In  June 1996, shortly before the City's first Executive elections were  held, the Argentine National Congress issued the National Law 24.588  (known as Ley Cafiero, after the Senator who advanced the project) by  which the authority over the 25,000-strong Argentine Federal Police and  the responsibility over the federal institutions residing at the City  (e.g., National Supreme Court of Justice buildings) would not be  transferred from the National Government to the Autonomous City  Government until a new consensus could be reached at the National  Congress. Furthermore, it declared that the Port of Buenos Aires, along  with some other places, would remain under constituted federal  authorities.
Beginning  in 2007, the city has embarked on a new decentralization scheme,  creating new Communes (comunas) which are to be managed by elected  committees of seven members each.
Recent political history
In  1996, following the 1994 reform of the Argentine Constitution, the city  held its first mayoral elections under the new statutes, with the  mayor's title formally changed to "Head of Government". The winner was  Fernando de la Rúa, who would later become President of Argentina from  1999 to 2001.
De  la Rúa's successor, Aníbal Ibarra, won two popular elections, but was  impeached (and ultimately deposed on 6 March 2006) as a result of the  fire at the República Cromagnon nightclub. Jorge Telerman, who had been  the acting mayor, was invested with the office. In the 2007 elections,  Mauricio Macri won the second-round of voting over Daniel Filmus, taking  office on 9 December 2007.
National representation
Buenos  Aires is represented in the Argentine Senate by three senators (as of  December 2007: María Eugenia Estenssoro, Samuel Cabanchik and Daniel  Filmus). The people of Buenos Aires also elect 25 national deputies to  the Argentine Chamber of Deputies.
City Hall
The Municipal Legislature
The Palace of Justice
Argentine Congress
Demographics
Population growth since 1740
: Demographics of Argentina
Census data
In  the census of 2001 there were 2,129,819 people residing in the city and  31 surrounding districts, making metro Buenos Aires home to one in  three Argentines. The population density in Buenos Aires proper was  13,680 inhabitants per square kilometer (34,800 per mi2), but only about  2,400 per km2 (6,100 per mi2) in the suburbs. The racial makeup of the  city is 88.9% White, 7% Mestizo, 2% Asian and 1% Black.
The  population of Buenos Aires proper has hovered around 3 million since  1947, due to low birth rates and a slow migration to the suburbs. The  surrounding districts have, however, expanded over fivefold (to around  10 million) since then.
The  2001 census showed a relatively aged population: with 17% under the age  of fifteen and 22% over sixty, the people of Buenos Aires have an age  structure similar to those in most European cities. They are older than  Argentines as a whole (of whom 28% were under 15, and 14% over 60).
Two-thirds  of the city's residents live in apartment buildings and 30% in  single-family homes; 4% live in sub-standard housing. Measured in terms  of income, the city's poverty rate was 8.4% in 2007 and, including the  metro area, 20.6%. Other studies estimate that 4 million people in the  metropolitan Buenos Aires area live in poverty.
The  city's resident labor force of 1.2 million in 2001 was mostly employed  in the services sector, particularly social services (25%), commerce and  tourism (20%) and business and financial services (17%); despite the  city's role as Argentina's capital, public administration employed only  6%. Manufacturing still employed 10%.
Districts
 Barrios of Buenos Aires
The  city is divided into 48 barrios or, districts, for administrative  purposes. The division was originally based on Catholic parroquias  (parishes), but has undergone a series of changes since the 1940s. A  newer scheme has divided the city into 15 comunas (communes).
Palermo: the city's most populous area
Recoleta: the 2nd-most populous area
Caballito: the 3rd-most populous area
Origin
The Spaniards' Club in the city's Montserrat section is one of many founded by immigrants.
 Immigration in Argentina
The  majority of porteños have European origins, with Italian and Spanish  descent being the most common, from the Calabrian, Ligurian, Piedmont,  Lombardy and Neapolitan regions of Italy and from the Galician,  Asturian, and Basque regions of Spain.
Other  European origins include German, Swedish, Dutch, Greek, Irish,  Norwegian, Portuguese, French, Russian, Croatian, English and Welsh. In  the 1990s there was a small wave of immigration from Romania and  Ukraine. There is a minority of old criollo stock, dating back to the  Spanish colonial days. The Criollo and Spanish-aboriginal (mestizo)  population in the city has increased mostly as a result of immigration,  from countries such as Bolivia, Peru and Paraguay, since the second half  of the 20th century.
Important  Syrian-Lebanese and Armenian communities have had a significant  presence in commerce and civic life since the beginning of the 20th  century.
The  Jewish community in Greater Buenos Aires numbers around 250,000, and is  the largest in Latin America. Most are of Northern and Eastern European  Ashkenazi origin, primarily Russian, German and Polish Jews, with a  significant Sephardic minority, mostly made up of Syrian Jews.
The  first major East Asian community in Buenos Aires was the Japanese,  mainly from Okinawa. Traditionally, Japanese-Argentines were noted as  flower growers; in the city proper, there was a Japanese near-monopoly  in dry cleaning. Later generations have branched out into all fields of  economic activity. Starting in the 1970s there has been an important  influx of immigration from China and Korea.
British and American expatriates
The Metropolitan Cathedral
Since  2004 an increasing number of American and British citizens are moving  to Buenos Aires, possibly due to the lower cost of living, many of them  opening up businesses and some restaurants have become English-speaking  favourites.
Religion
Most  inhabitants are Roman Catholic, though studies in recent decades found  that fewer than 20% are practicing. Buenos Aires is the seat of a Roman  Catholic metropolitan archbishop (the Catholic primate of Argentina),  currently Jorge Cardinal Bergoglio. There are Protestant, Orthodox  Christian, Muslim, and Jewish minorities. The Metropolitan Cathedral  holds the coffin of General José de San Martín, a hero of independence  wars, inside a mausoleum under military guard. The church has a E.  Walcker pipe organ from the 19th century in pristine condition that is  used daily. The retable was manufactured by Indians under the direction  of Jesuits. The church has venetian floors and walls decorated with  baroque themes. The Sancta-Sanctorum is a copy of St.Peter's baldaccino  on a minor scale, and reserved for prayer, and made of pink marble and  bronze. This church is one of the principal touristic attractions in  Buenos Aires.
Geography
1888 German map of Buenos Aires
Satellite image of Río de la Plata
The  limits of Buenos Aires proper are determined in the eastern part and  north-east by the Rio de la Plata, in the southern part and southeast by  the Riachuelo and to the northwest, west and Southwest by Avenida  General Paz, a 24 km (15 mi) long highway that separates the province of  Buenos Aires from the 203 km2 that form the city.
The  city of Buenos Aires lies in the pampa region, except for some zones  like the Buenos Aires Ecological Reserve, the Boca Juniors (football)  Club "sports city", Jorge Newbery Airport, the Puerto Madero  neighborhood and the main port itself; these were all built on reclaimed  land along the coasts of the Rio de la Plata (the world's largest  river).
The  region was formerly crossed by different creeks and lagoons, some of  which were refilled and others tubed. Among the most important creeks  are Maldonado, Vega, Medrano, Cildañez and White. In 1908 many creeks  were channeled and rectified, as floods were damaging the city's  infrastructure. Starting in 1919, most creeks were enclosed. Notably,  the Maldonado was tubed in 1954, and currently runs below Juan B. Justo  Avenue.
Panorama of Downtown Buenos Aires seen from the Río de la Plata
Climate
Further information: Climate of Argentina
The  city has a humid subtropical climate ("Cfa" by Köppen classification)  with four distinct seasons and an annual temperature of 17.2 °C (63.0  °F). The warmest month is January, with a daily average of 24.1 °C (75.4  °F). Relative Humidity tends to be high throughout the year (around  72%), making summer's heat index to be higher than actual temperature.  The highest temperature ever recorded was 43.3 °C (109.9 °F) on 29  January 1957. Spring (September to November) and autumn (March to May)  are generally mild and volatile, with averages of 17 °C (63 °F) and  frequent thunderstorms (specially in spring). Because of humidity,  Buenos Aires is noted for having moderate to heavy fogs during autumn  and winter.
July  is the coldest month, with 9.6 °C (49.3 °F) on average with cold spells  coming from Antarctica being common almost every year. With the strong  winds of the south (from Antarctica) and the elevated humidity, in  winter in Buenos Aires the temperature feels colder than that of the  real (measured) temperature (if the real temperature is 10°C, it feels  like 6.8°C). The lowest temperature ever recorded in central Buenos  Aires (Buenos Aires Central Observatory) was −5.4 °C (22 °F) on 9 July  1918. The last snowfall (see July 2007 Argentine winterstorm) occurred  on 9 July 2007 when the entry of a massive polar cold snap made as a  result the coldest winter of Argentina in almost thirty years, where  severe snowfalls and blizzards hit the country. It was the first major  snowfall in the city in almost 89 years  (since 22 June 1918). On 17  July 2010 other massive polar entry to the country and made as result  other cold winter, with a snowfall that hit almost all the country and  in the south of the city of Buenos Aires it sees snow again, but not in  the centre of the city like in 2007 or 1918.
The city gets 1,242.6 mm (49 in) of rainfall per year. Rain can be expected at any time of year and hailstorms are not unusual.
| Climate data for Buenos Aires, Argentina (1981–1990 period) | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Month | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | Year | 
| Record high °C (°F) | 43.3 (109.9) | 38.7 (101.7) | 37.9 (100.2) | 36.0 (96.8) | 31.6 (88.9) | 28.5 (83.3) | 30.2 (86.4) | 34.4 (93.9) | 34 (93) | 34 (93) | 36.8 (98.2) | 40.5 (104.9) | 40.6 (105.1) | 
| Average high °C (°F) | 29.4 (84.9) | 27.9 (82.2) | 26.4 (79.5) | 22.5 (72.5) | 16.0 (60.8) | 14.9 (58.8) | 13.9 (57) | 15.2 (59.4) | 17.9 (64.2) | 22.5 (72.5) | 25.3 (77.5) | 27.1 (80.8) | 21.5 (70.7) | 
| Daily mean °C (°F) | 24.1 (75.4) | 23.0 (73.4) | 21.7 (71.1) | 18.2 (64.8) | 13.1 (55.6) | 11.3 (52.3) | 9.6 (49.3) | 11.5 (52.7) | 13.9 (57) | 17.7 (63.9) | 20.6 (69.1) | 22.7 (72.9) | 17.2 (63) | 
| Average low °C (°F) | 18.9 (66) | 17.4 (63.3) | 17.0 (62.6) | 13.7 (56.7) | 10.3 (50.5) | 7.6 (45.7) | 5.4 (41.7) | 7.9 (46.2) | 9.9 (49.8) | 13.0 (55.4) | 15.9 (60.6) | 18.4 (65.1) | 12.9 (55.2) | 
| Record low °C (°F) | 5.9 (42.6) | 4.2 (39.6) | 2.8 (37) | -2.3 (27.9) | -4 (25) | -5.3 (22.5) | -5.4 (22.3) | -4.0 (24.8) | -2.4 (27.7) | -2 (28) | 1.6 (34.9) | 3.7 (38.7) | -5.4 (22.3) | 
| Precipitation mm (inches) | 110.6 (4.354) | 122.6 (4.827) | 153.9 (6.059) | 106.9 (4.209) | 92.1 (3.626) | 59.0 (2.323) | 77.9 (3.067) | 70.2 (2.764) | 77.7 (3.059) | 139.3 (5.484) | 129.2 (5.087) | 103.2 (4.063) | 1,242.6 (48.921) | 
| Source: Servicio Meteorológico Nacional | |||||||||||||
| Construction in Buenos Aires | ||
|---|---|---|
| Year | Construction permits (m²) | Percent residential | 
| 1994 | 2,228,085 | 70.8 | 
| 1995 | 1,157,746 | 57.3 | 
| 1996 | 1,266,305 | 66.5 | 
| 1997 | 2,154,130 | 65.0 | 
| 1998 | 2,236,126 | 66.7 | 
| 1999 | 1,736,821 | 69.0 | 
| 2000 | 1,636,295 | 72.2 | 
| 2001 | 1,027,069 | 59.2 | 
| 2002 | 297,867 | 71.8 | 
| 2003 | 1,284,977 | 86.8 | 
| 2004 | 1,382,557 | 84.3 | 
| 2005 | 2,160,872 | 83.1 | 
| 2006 | 3,103,450 | 86.0 | 
| 2007 | 3,088,901 | 80.1 | 
| 2008 | 2,713,597 | 67.7 | 
| 1Source: City statistics | ||
 Buenos Aires Stock Exchange
Buenos  Aires is the financial, industrial, commercial, and cultural hub of  Argentina. Its port is one of the busiest in South America; navigable  rivers by way of the Rio de la Plata connect the port to north-east  Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay and Paraguay. As a result it serves as the  distribution hub for a vast area of the south-eastern region of the  continent. Tax collection related to the port has caused many political  problems in the past.
The  economy in the city proper alone, measured by Gross Geographic Product  (adjusted for purchasing power), totalled US$ 84.7 billion (US$ 28,200  per capita) in 2006 and amounts to nearly a quarter of Argentina's as a  whole.Metro Buenos Aires, according to one well-quoted study,  constitutes the 13th largest economy among the world's cities. The  Buenos Aires Human Development Index (0.923 in 1998) is likewise high by  international standards.
The  city's services sector is diversified and well-developed by  international standards, and accounts for 76% of its economy (compared  to 59% for all of Argentina's). Advertising, in particular, plays a  prominent role in the export of services at home and abroad. The  financial, business and real-estate services sector is the largest,  however, and contributes to 31% of the city's economy. Finance (about a  third of this) in Buenos Aires is especially important to Argentina's  banking system, accounting for nearly half the nation's bank deposits  and lending. Nearly 300 hotels and another 300 hostels and bed &  breakfasts are licensed for Tourism in Buenos Aires, and nearly half  the rooms available were in four-star establishments or higher.
Manufacturing  is, nevertheless, still prominent in the city's economy (16%) and,  concentrated mainly in the southside, it benefits as much from high  local purchasing power and a large local supply of skilled labor as it  does from its relationship to massive agriculture and industry just  outside the city limits themselves. Construction activity in Buenos  Aires has historically been among the most dramatic indicators of  national economic fortunes (see table at right), and since 2006 around 3  million m² (32 million ft²) of construction has been authorized  annually.
To  the west of Buenos Aires is the Pampa Húmeda, the most productive  agricultural region of Argentina produces wheat, soybeans and corn (as  opposed to the dry southern Pampa, mostly used for cattle farming and  more recently production of premium Buenos Aires wines). Meat, dairy,  grain, tobacco, wool and leather products are processed or manufactured  in the Buenos Aires metro area. Other leading industries are automobile  manufacturing, oil refining, metalworking, machine building and the  production of textiles, chemicals, clothing and beverages.
The  city's budget, per Mayor Macri's 2009 proposal, will include US$4.4  billion in revenues and US$4.6 billion in expenditures. The city relies  on local income and capital gains taxes for 61% of its revenues, while  federal revenue sharing will contribute 11%, property taxes, 9%, and  vehicle taxes, 6%. Other revenues include user fees, fines and gambling  duties. The city devotes 26% of its budget to education, 22% for health,  17% for public services and infrastructure, 16% for social welfare and  culture, 12% in administrative costs and 4% for law enforcement. Buenos  Aires maintains low debt levels and its service requires less than 3% of  the budget.
Culture
Strongly influenced by European culture, Buenos Aires is sometimes referred to as the "Paris of South America".
Argentine cultural icon Geniol head in vintage advertising poster by Lucien-Achille Mauzan.
Buenos  Aires is the site of the Teatro Colón, an internationally-rated opera  house. There are several symphony orchestras and choral societies. The  city has numerous museums related to history, fine arts, modern arts,  decorative arts, popular arts, sacred art, arts and crafts, theatre and  popular music, as well as the preserved homes of noted art collectors,  writers, composers and artists. The city is home to hundreds of  bookstores, public libraries and cultural associations (it is sometimes  called "the city of books"), as well as the largest concentration of  active theatres in Latin America. It has a world-famous zoo and  Botanical Garden, a large number of landscaped parks and squares, as  well as churches and places of worship of many denominations, many of  which are architecturally noteworthy.
Every  April in the city is celebrated the Buenos Aires International Book  Fair, it is one of the top-five book fairs in the world, oriented to the  literary community as well as to the general public. "La Noche de los  Museos"  (Night of Museums) also takes place every November. This day  most of the museums of the city are opened all night long.
Regina Theatre, on Santa Fe Avenue.
Teatro Colón (Columbus Theatre)
The National Symphony Orchestra performs at the University of Buenos Aires Law School
Language
Known  as Rioplatense Spanish, Buenos Aires' Spanish (as that of other cities  like Rosario and Montevideo, Uruguay) is characterised by voseo, yeísmo  and aspiration of s in various contexts. It is heavily influenced by the  dialects of Spanish spoken in Andalusia and Murcia. A phonetic study  conducted by the Laboratory for Sensory Investigations of CONICET and  the University of Toronto showed that the prosody of porteño is closer  to the Neapolitan language of Italy than to any other spoken language.
In  the early 20th century, Argentina absorbed millions of immigrants, many  of them Italians, who spoke mostly in their local dialects (mainly  Neapolitan, Sicilian and Genoan). Their adoption of Spanish was gradual,  creating a pidgin of Italian dialects and Spanish that was called  cocoliche. Its usage declined around the 1950s.
Many  Spanish immigrants were from Galicia, and Spaniards are still  generically referred to in Argentina as gallegos (Galicians). Galician  language, cuisine and culture had a major presence in the city for most  of the 20th century. In recent years, descendants of Galician immigrants  have led a mini-boom in Celtic music (which also highlighted the Welsh  traditions of Patagonia).
Yiddish  was commonly heard in Buenos Aires, especially in the Balvanera garment  district and in Villa Crespo until the 1960s. Most of the newer  immigrants learn Spanish quickly and assimilate into city life.
The  Lunfardo argot originated within the prison population, and in time  spread to all porteños. Lunfardo uses words from Italian dialects, from  Brazilian Portuguese, from African and Caribbean languages and even from  English. Lunfardo employs humorous tricks such as inverting the  syllables within a word (vesre). Today, Lunfardo is mostly heard in  tango lyrics; the slang of the younger generations has been evolving  away from it.
 Belgranodeutsch
Tango
 Tango music
 History of Tango
Tango dancers
Tango  music's birthplace is in Argentina. Its sensual dance moves were not  seen as respectable until adopted by the Parisian high society in the  1920s, and then all over the world. In Buenos Aires, tango-dancing  schools (known as academias) were usually men-only establishments.
Tango  consists of a variety of styles that developed in different regions and  eras of Argentina and Uruguay as well as in other locations around the  world. The dance developed in response to many cultural elements, such  as the crowding of the venue and even the fashions in clothing. The  styles are mostly danced in either open embrace, where lead and follow  connect at arms length, or close embrace, where the lead and follow  connect chest-to-chest.
Early  tango was known as tango criollo, or simply tango. Today, there are  many tango dance styles, including Argentine tango, Uruguayan tango,  Ballroom tango (American and International styles), Finnish tango and  vintage tangos.
The National Day of Tango is celebrated on December 11, the birthday of two tango legends, Carlos Gardel and Julio De Caro.
On  September 30, 2009, UNESCO's Intergovernmental Committee of Intangible  Heritage declared tango part of the world's cultural heritage, making  Argentina eligible to receive financial assistance in safeguarding this  cultural treasure for future generations.
 Cinema of Argentina
 Buenos Aires International Festival of Independent Cinema
The  cinema first appeared in Buenos Aires in 1896. The city has been the  centre of the Argentine cinema industry in Argentina for over 100 years  since French camera operator Eugene Py directed the pioneering film La  Bandera Argentina in 1897. Since then, over 2000 films have been  directed and produced within the city, many of them referring to the  city in their titles, such as I Was Born in Buenos Aires (1959), Buenas  noches, Buenos Aires (1964), and Buenos Aires a la vista (1950). The  culture of tango music has been incorporated into many films produced in  the city, especially since the 1930s. Many films have starred tango  performers such as Hugo del Carril, Tita Merello, Carlos Gardel and  Edmundo Rivero.
Architecture of Argentina
Architectural styles converge at Diagonal Norte
The eclectic Bencich building is a Buenos Aires CBD landmark from the prosperous 1920s
Buenos  Aires architecture is characterized by its eclectic nature, with  elements resembling Barcelona, Paris and Madrid. Italian and French  influences increased after the declaration of independence at the  beginning of the 19th century, though the academic style persisted until  the first decades of the 20th century.
Attempts  at renovation took place during the second half of the 19th century and  the beginning of the 20th, when European influences penetrated into the  country, reflected by several buildings of Buenos Aires such as the  Iglesia Santa Felicitas by Ernesto Bunge; the Palace of Justice, the  National Congress, and the Teatro Colón, all of them by Vittorio Meano.
The  simplicity of the Rioplatense baroque style can be clearly seen in  Buenos Aires through the works of Italian architects such as André  Blanqui and Antonio Masella, in the churches of San Ignacio, Nuestra  Señora del Pilar, the Cathedral and the Cabildo.
In  1912 the Basilica del Santisimo Sacramento was opened to the public.  Totally built by the generous donation of Mrs. Mercedes Castellanos de  Anchonera, Argentina's most prominent family, the church is an excellent  example of French neo-classicism. With extremely high-grade decorations  in its interior, the magnificent Mutin-Cavaillé coll organ (the biggest  ever installed in an Argentine church with more than four-thousand  tubes and four manuals) presided the nave. The altar is full of marble,  and was the biggest ever built in South America at that time.
In  1919 started the construction of Palacio Barolo, South America's  tallest building at that time. It was equipped with 9 elevators, a  20-metres high lobby hall with paintings in the ceiling and Latin  phrases embossed in golden bronze letters. A 300,000-candle beacon was  installed at the top (110 metres), making this building visible even  from Uruguay. In 2009 the Barolo Palace gone under an exhausive  restoration, and even the beacon was put operational again. It was the  first Argentine skyscraper built with concrete (1919–1923).
In  1936 the Kavanagh building was inaugurated, with 120 metres height, 12  elevators (provided by Otis) and the world's first central  air-conditioning system (provided by north-American company "Carrier"),  is still an architectural landmark in Buenos Aires.
The  architecture of the second half of the 20th century continued to  reproduce French neoclassic models, such as the headquarters of the  Banco de la Nación Argentina built by Alejandro Bustillo, and the Museo  Hispanoamericano de Buenos Aires of Martín Noel. However, since the  1930s the influence of Le Corbusier and European rationalism  consolidated in a group of young architects from the University of  Tucumán, among whom Amancio Williams stands out. The construction of  skyscrapers proliferated in Buenos Aires until the 1950s. Newer modern  high-technology buildings by Argentine architects in the last years of  the 20th century and the beginning of the 21st include the Le Parc Tower  by Mario Álvarez, the Torre Fortabat by Sánchez Elía and the Repsol-YPF  tower by César Pelli.
Education
The ubiquitous white smock of children at public schools is a national symbol of learning.
See also: Education in Argentina
Primary education
Primary  education comprises the first two EGB cycles (grades 1–6). Because of  the system that was in place until 1995 (7 years of primary school plus 5  or 6 of secondary school), primary schools used to offer grades 1–7.  Although most schools have already converted to teach the 8th and 9th  grades, others chose to eliminate 7th grade altogether, forcing the  students to complete the 3rd cycle in another institution. Nevertheless,  most primary schools in the city still adhere to the traditional 7  years primary school. EGB was never put in practice in Buenos Aires.
Secondary education
Secondary  education in Argentina is called Polimodal ("polymodal", that is,  having multiple modes), since it allows the student to choose his/her  orientation. Polimodal is not yet obligatory but its completion is a  requirement to enter colleges across the nation. Polimodal is usually 3  years of schooling, although some schools have a fourth year.
Conversely  to what happened on primary schools, most secondary schools in  Argentina contained grades 8th and 9th, plus Polimodal (old secondary),  but then started converting to accept 7th grade students as well, thus  allowing them to keep the same classmates for the whole EGB III cycle.
Main hall, University of Buenos Aires Law School.
In  December 2006 the Chamber of Deputies of the Argentine Congress passed a  new National Education Law restoring the old system of primary followed  by secondary education, making secondary education obligatory and a  right, and increasing the length of compulsory education to 13 years.  The government vowed to put the law in effect gradually, starting in  2007.
College education
See also: University reform in Argentina and List of Argentine universities
There  are many public universities in Argentina, as well as a number of  private universities. The University of Buenos Aires, one of the top  learning institutions in South America, has produced five Nobel Prize  winners and provides taxpayer-funded education for students from all  around the globe. Buenos Aires is a major center for psychoanalysis,  particularly the Lacanian school. Buenos Aires is home to several  private universities of different quality, such as: Buenos Aires  Institute of Technology, CEMA University, Favaloro University,  Pontifical Catholic University of Argentina, University of Belgrano,  University of Palermo, University of Salvador, and Torcuato di Tella  University.
Tourism
Main article: Tourism in Buenos Aires
According  to the World Travel & Tourism Council, tourism has been growing  in the Argentine capital since 2002. In a survey by the travel and  tourism publication Travel + Leisure Magazine in 2008, travelers voted  Buenos Aires the second most desirable city to visit after Florence,  Italy.
Due  to the increase in the number of tourists to Buenos Aires and its  favourable climate, there are more and more possibilities and activities  to suit every tourist on every budget. These include… sporting events,  (football matches at the famous Boca stadium) tango tours of all calibre  and to suit every audience (including dinner and museum), cultural  tours (learn about Eva Peron, the most quaint cafes, museums, become  familiar with the vast variety of old and modern architecture), pub  crawls in the most popular neighbourhoods of Palermo and San Telmo  (ideal for fellow travellers to meet one another).
The obelisk of Buenos Aires and the City Porteña financial district
Buenos  Aires is extremely accessible, not only because of the integrated  transport system (metro, train and buses), but also because tour  operators have caught onto the tourist’s desire to see the city in  different mediums – getting around with a downloaded MP3 audio guide, on  an organised walking or bike tour, or on a sightseeing bus. English is  widely spoken in Buenos Aires, but in the provinces communication can be  a bit more difficult so nowadays Spanish lessons and courses of all  levels and for varying purposes are readily available to help tourists  really make the most of their stay. Since the city has become a top  tourist destination, the cost of internal flights has drastically  dropped in the last couple of years, and tourists can now enjoy the more  remote, northern areas of Argentina for a good price.
Visitors  may choose to visit a tango show, an estancia in the Province of Buenos  Aires, or enjoy the traditional asado. New tourist circuits have  recently evolved, devoted to famous Argentines such as Carlos Gardel,  Eva Perón or Jorge Luis Borges. Due to the favorable exchange rate, its  shopping centres such as Alto Palermo, Paseo Alcorta, Patio Bullrich,  Abasto de Buenos Aires and Galerías Pacífico are frequently visited by  tourists. Non-traditional tourist options such as downloadable MP3 tours  of Buenos Aires and bike tours have recently gained popularity.
San  Telmo is a frequently visited area south of the city, with its  cobblestoned streets and buildings from the colonial era that attest to  its long history. There are churches, museums, antique shops and  "Antique Fairs" ('Ferias de Antigüedades') in historic Dorrego Square,  where the streets on weekends are filled with performers such as tango  dancers. The city also plays host to musical festivals, some of the  largest of which are Quilmes Rock, Creamfields BA and the Buenos Aires  Jazz Festival.
Puerto Madero and the historic Sarmiento Frigate
Plaza de Mayo and the Cabildo de Buenos Aires
Cafés along Avenida de Mayo
Notable streets
The Rose Garden Lake
Bohemian San Telmo
The British Clock Tower
Avenida  Alvear passes through the upscale Recoleta area, and is the address for  five-star hotels and embassies, many of them former mansions.
Caminito, colorfully restored by local artist Benito Quinquela Martín
Avenida Corrientes, a principal thoroughfare in Buenos Aires, and intimately tied to the Tango and Porteño culture
Avenida  del Libertador connects downtown to upscale areas in the northwest,  passing by many of the city's best-known museums, gardens and cultural  points of interest
Avenida  de Mayo is often compared with those of Madrid, Barcelona and Paris for  its sophisticated buildings of Art Nouveau, Neoclassic and eclectic  styles
Florida Street, a downtown pedestrian street
Avenida 9 de Julio, one of the widest avenues in the world; its name honors Argentina's Independence Day
Neighborhoods
Belgrano (tipa-lined residential streets, Tudor architecture and numerous museums)
La Boca (the old port district still maintains its 19th century ambience)
Palermo (a trendy neighborhood filled with restaurants, shops and clubs called boliches)
Parque Patricios (technology district)
Puerto Madero (these 1880-era docklands are now the city's newest neighborhood)
Recoleta  (the traditionally upscale district combines Parisian architecture with  trendy highrises and a variety of cultural venues)
Retiro (Art Nouveau cafés and restaurants among Art Deco office architecture)
San  Telmo (one of the oldest neighborhoods of Buenos Aires, this area is  characterized by well-preserved 19th century architecture)
Parks
Parque Tres de Febrero (this park, one of the city's largest, is home to a rose garden and paddleboat lake)
Botanical Gardens (among the oldest in Latin America and an easy walk to other Palermo-area sights)
Buenos Aires Japanese Gardens (the largest of its type in the World, outside Japan)
Plaza  de Mayo (surrounded by national and city government offices, this  square has been central to many of Argentina's historical events)
Plaza San Martín (central to the Retiro area, the leafy park is surrounded by architectural landmarks)
Recoleta  Cemetery (includes graves of many of Argentina's historical figures,  including several presidents and scientists, as well many among  Argentina's influential families)
Buenos Aires Zoo (renown for its collection and the Hindu Revival elephant house)
Landmarks
Landmarks in Buenos Aires
Cabildo (seat of government house during colonial times)
Caminito (renowned for Benito Quinquela Martín's pastel hues and wall reliefs)
Casa Rosada (the official seat of the executive branch of the Argentine government)
Central Post Office (soon to be reopened as the Bicentennial Cultural Center)
City Legislature (the monumental neoclassical building also houses two libraries and a museum)
Kavanagh building (the Art Deco residential building was the first true skyscraper in Buenos Aires)
Metropolitan Cathedral (mother church of the Archdiocese of Buenos Aires)
National Congress (Argentine Parliament)
National Library (the largest library in Argentina and one of the most important in the Americas)
National Museum of History (original documents, former presidents' belongings and recreated historical rooms)
The Obelisk (one of the city's iconic landmarks and a venue for various cultural activities and other events)
Teatro Colón (an internationally-renowned opera house opened in 1908)
The Water Company Palace (perhaps the world's most ornate water pumping station)
Landmarks of Buenos Aires
Transport
Local roads and personal transport
Avenida General Paz in Buenos Aires
Buenos  Aires is based on a rectangular grid pattern, save for natural barriers  or the relatively rare developments explicitly designed otherwise  (notably, the neighbourhood of Parque Chas). The rectangular grid  provides for square blocks named manzanas, with a length of roughly 110  meters. Pedestrian zones in the city centre, like Florida Street are  partially car-free and always bustling, access provided by bus and the  Metro (subte) Line C. Buenos Aires, for the most part, is a very  walkable city and the majority of residents in Buenos Aires use public  transport.
Two  diagonal avenues in the city centre alleviate traffic and provide  better access to Plaza de Mayo. Most avenues running into and out of the  city centre are one-way and feature six or more lanes, with  computer-controlled green waves to speed up traffic outside of peak  times.
The  city's principal avenues include the 140-metre (459 ft)-wide 9 de Julio  Avenue, the over-35 km (22 mi)-long Rivadavia Avenue, and Corrientes  Avenue, the main thoroughfare of culture and entertainment.
In  the 1940s and 1950s the Avenida General Paz beltway that surrounds the  city along its border with Buenos Aires Province and freeways leading to  the new international airport and to the northern suburbs heralded a  new era in Buenos Aires traffic. Encouraged by pro-automaker policies  pursued towards the end of the Perón (1955) and Frondizi administrations  (1958–62) in particular, auto sales nationally grew from an average of  30,000 during the 1920–57 era to around 250,000 in the 1970s and over  600,000 in 2008. Today, over 1.8 million vehicles (nearly one-fifth of  Argentina's total) are registered in Buenos Aires.
Toll  motorways opened in the late 1970s by then-mayor Osvaldo Cacciatore  provided fast access to the city centre and are today used by over a  million vehicles daily.Cacciatore likewise had financial district  streets (roughly one square kilometre in area) closed to private cars  during daytime. Most major avenues are, however, gridlocked at peak  hours. Following the economic mini-boom of the 1990s, record numbers  started commuting by car and congestion increased, as did the  time-honored Argentine custom of taking weekends off in the countryside.
Cycling
Cycling  around Buenos Aires is becoming trendy. Several bicycle rental  businesses offer excursions for locals and visitors throughout the city,  generally accompanied by specialized multilingual guides. The tours  include the Southern and Northern Circuits, and themed circuits which  include literary, historical and cultural, ecologist and even tango  related tours or historical tours. For newcomers biking is not  recommended on main arteries and thoroughfares because of the heavy  traffic.
Local public transport
Public transport in Buenos Aires
Caseros Station of new Line H of the Buenos Aires Underground
Buenos Aires Taxi
Colectivo in Buenos Aires
Puerto Madero Tramway
Commuter rail in Buenos Aires
Commuter rail
See also: Rail transport in Argentina
The Buenos Aires commuter rail system has seven lines:
Belgrano Norte Line
Belgrano Sur Line
Roca Line
San Martin Line
Sarmiento Line
Mitre Line
Urquiza Line
The  Buenos Aires commuter network system is very extensive: every day more  than 1.3 million people commute to the Argentine capital. These suburban  trains operate between 4 AM and 1 AM. The Buenos Aires railway system  also connects the city with long-distance rail to Rosario and Córdoba,  among other metropolitan areas. There are four principal stations for  both long-distance and local passenger services in the city centre:  Plaza Constitucion, Retiro, Federico Lacroze and Once de Septiembre.
Subway
 Buenos Aires Subway
Current Underground System map
Buenos Aires Subway entrance on Avenida de Mayo
The  Buenos Aires Subway (locally known as subte, from "subterráneo" meaning  underground or metro), is a high-yield system providing access to  various parts of the city. Opened in 1913, it is the oldest subway  system in the Southern Hemisphere and in the Spanish-speaking world. The  system has six lines, named by letters (A to E, and H) There are 74  stations, and 52.3 km (32 mi) of route. An expansion program is underway  to extend existing lines into the outer neighborhoods and add a new  north-south line. Route length is expected to reach 89 km (55 mi) by  2011. Line "A" is the oldest one (service opened to public in 1913) and  stations kept the "belle-époque" decoration, the trains still sport  incandescent-bulb illumination and doors must be manually closed by the  passengers, as in 1913. Daily ridership on weekdays is 1.7 million and  on the increase. Fares are cheap and are in fact cheaper than the city  buses. The Buenos Aires Metro has six lines which also have links to the  commuter rail.
Line  A – Light Blue: Subte Line A is the oldest line of the Buenos Aires  Metro. This historical line runs from Plaza de Mayo to Carabobo, and is  scheduled to be extended towards Nazca St.
Line B – Red: Line B of the Buenos Aires Metro runs from Leandro N. Alem Station to Los Incas (projected to Villa Urquiza).
Line  C – Blue: The Line C of the Buenos Aires Metro runs from Retiro to  Constitución terminus, opened on 9 November 1934, 4.4 km (2.7 mi).
Line  D – Green: Subte Line D of the Buenos Aires Metro runs from Catedral to  Congreso de Tucumán. The D Line opened on 3 June 1937 and has been  expanded to the north several times. The line is currently 10.4 km (6.5  mi) long and runs approximately parallel to the Buenos Aires coastline.
Line  E – Purple: Subte Line E runs from Bolivar Station to Plaza de los  Virreyes, opened on 20 June 1944, currently with 9.2 km (5.7 mi).
Line  H – Yellow: Line H runs from Once terminus to Caseros. It is also  planned to run from Retiro to Nueva Pompeya once the remaining sections  are constructed.
[edit]Current renovation and expansion
The subway is currently undergoing renovation and expansion
At  Line A two new stations after Carabobo are under construction, being  Nazca the new future terminal while newer metro carriages are slowly  being introduced to handle the increased demand.
On Line B Since 2004, work began to expand the line to Villa Ortúzar and Villa Urquiza.
On  Line H further extensions are planned to run from Retiro to Nueva  Pompeya once constructed. It will connect the Southern part of the city  with the North, thus improving the flow to the centre of the city, and  will be approximately 11 km (6.8 mi) long from end to end. The Line H  will provide cross-connections with almost all the other lines.
On Line E work has begun in 2009 to expand the line up to Retiro.
Planned underground lines
New  underground lines are planned and were presented by the Government of  the City of Buenos Aires on 26 May 2007. There are currently three lines  planned:
Line  F would join Constitución Station with Plaza Italia and would have an  extension of 7.6 km (4.7 mi). It would be transverse-radial, according  to the section, with strong integration with the rest of the network.
Line  G would connect the Retiro Station with the Cid Campeador and would  have a length of 7.6 km (4.7 mi). It would be radial to connect the axes  of high-density residential and commercial areas, and would bring the  underground to the northwest of the city.
Line  I would run from the Emilio Mitre (Line E) Station to Plaza Italia, a  distance of 7.3 km (4.5 mi). It would be the outermost transverse line  of the network and would link the neighborhoods of the north, center and  south of the city and link with the radial lines far from the city  centre.
Tramways
Retiro Rail Terminal
9 de Julio Avenue and Obelisk
Buenos  Aires had an extensive street railway (tram) system with over 857 km  (533 mi) of track, which was dismantled during the 1960s in favor of bus  transportation and is now in the process of a slow comeback. The  PreMetro or Line E2 is a 7.4 km (4.6 mi) light rail line that connects  with Metro Line E at Plaza de los Virreyes station and runs to General  Savio and Centro Cívico. It is operated by Metrovías. The official  inauguration took place on 27 August 1987. The cost of building and  fitting out the line was USD 5.4 million. An additional USD 4.6 million  was allocated to the acquisition of a fleet of 25 light rail vehicles.
A  new 2 km (1.2 mi) tramway (LRT), Tranvía del Este, runs across the  Puerto Madero district. Extensions planned would link the Retiro and La  Boca terminal train stations. Other routes are being studied. A Heritage  streetcar maintained by tram fans operates on weekends, near the  Primera Junta line A metro station in the Caballito neighbourhood.
Buses
There  are over 150 city bus lines called Colectivos, each one managed by an  individual company. These compete with each other, and attract  exceptionally high use with virtually no public financial support. Their  frequency makes them equal to the underground systems of other cities,  but buses cover a far wider area than the underground system. Colectivos  in Buenos Aires do not have a fixed timetable, but run from 4 to  several per hour, depending on the bus line and time of the day. With  very cheap tickets and extensive routes, usually no further than four  blocks from commuters' residences, the colectivo is the most popular  mode of transport around the city.Bus line operators must comply with  city regulations on security and pollution control.
Electronic ticketing
Buenos  Aires was affected for several years by an acute coin shortage that  impacted the economy, banking, and transportation. Coins are still  rationed by banks, and a thriving black market has been hoarding to sell  coins illegally to retailers.Merchants have been rounding prices up or  down according to the amount of change a customer actually has, or  bartering, and making up the difference with a menial item.
Argentina's  President announced on 4 February 2009 that Buenos Aires would be  instituting electronic ticketing for the city's bus system. One of the  benefits of this change is that it would help speed passengers on to the  bus. People would no longer have to wait to be issued a printed receipt  as they each enter the bus. Environmentally this should help reduce  emissions of carbon dioxide and nitrogen because buses will not have to  idle as long while passengers load, helping improve air quality in the  city. The electronic ticket will eliminate the printed receipts thus  lowering the amount of littering in the city. The city, in turn, would  no longer have to process, collect, count, and transport coinage  received in payment of some 11 million trips per day. The new ticketing  system is still on implementing stage.
Taxis
File:Buquebus2.gif
Ferry crossing Río de la Plata
Ministro Pistarini International Airport, more commonly referred as Ezeiza International Airport
A  fleet of 40,000 black-and-yellow taxis ply the streets at all hours.  License controls are not enforced rigorously. There have been numerous  reports of organized crime controlling the access of taxis to the city  airports and other major destinations. Taxi drivers are known for trying  to take advantage of tourists. Radio-link companies provide reliable  and safe service; many such companies provide incentives for frequent  users. Low-fare limo services, known as remises, have become popular in  recent years.
Long-distance public transport
High-speed rail
See also: Buenos Aires-Rosario-Córdoba high-speed railway
A new high-speed rail line between Buenos Aires, Rosario and Córdoba, with speeds up to 320 km/h is planned.
Long-distance bus terminal
The  main terminal for long-distance buses is Retiro bus station, near  Retiro railway station, from where buses depart for all parts of  Argentina and for neighbouring countries.
Ferries
Buenos  Aires is also served by a ferry system operated by the company Buquebus  that connects the port of Buenos Aires with the main cities of Uruguay,  (Colonia del Sacramento, Montevideo and Punta del Este). More than 2.2  million people per year travel between Argentina and Uruguay with  Buquebus. One of these ships is a catamaran, which can reach a top speed  of about 80 km/h (50 mph), making it the fastest ferry in the world.
Airports
The  Buenos Aires international airport, Ministro Pistarini International  Airport, is located in the suburb of Ezeiza and is often called  "Ezeiza". The Aeroparque Jorge Newbery airport, located in the Palermo  district next to the riverbank, serves only domestic traffic and flights  to Brasil, Chile, Paraguay and Uruguay. A smaller San Fernando Airport  serves only general aviation.
Mass transit systems in Greater Buenos Aires
Railway Companies in Argentina
Sports
Luna Park Arena
Football  is a passion for Argentines. Buenos Aires has the highest concentration  of football teams of any city in the world (featuring no fewer than 24  professional football teams), with many of its teams playing in the  major league. The best-known rivalry is the one between River Plate and  Boca Juniors watching a match between these two teams was deemed one of  the "50 sporting things you must do before you die" by The Observer.  Other major clubs include San Lorenzo de Almagro and Vélez Sársfield.
View of Estadio Pedro Bidegain, Stadium of San Lorenzo de Almagro
Diego  Armando Maradona, born in Villa Fiorito, a villa miseria in the Lanús  Partido (county) south of Buenos Aires, is widely hailed as one of the  greatest football players of all time. Maradona started his career with  Argentinos Juniors, later playing for Boca Juniors, the Argentina  national football team and others (most notably FC Barcelona in Spain  and SSC Napoli in Italy).
Buenos  Aires has been a candidate city for the Summer Olympic Games on three  occasions: for the 1956 Games, which were lost by a single vote to  Melbourne; for the 1968 Summer Olympics, held in Mexico City; and in  2004, when the games were awarded to Athens. However, Buenos Aires  hosted the first Pan American Games (1951)[40] and was also host city to  several World Championship events: the 1950 and 1990 Basketball World  Championships, the 1982 and 2002 Men's Volleyball World Championships  and, most remembered, the 1978 FIFA World Cup, won by Argentina on 25  June 1978, when it defeated the Netherlands by 3–1.
Juan  Manuel Fangio won 5 Formula One World Driver's Championships, and was  only matched by Michael Schumacher, with 7 Championships. The Buenos  Aires Oscar Gálvez car-racing track hosted 20 editions of the Formula  One Argentine Grand Prix between 1953 and 1998; its discontinuation was  due to financial reasons. The track features local categories on most  weekends.
The 2009 and 2010 Dakar Rally started and ended in the city.
Argentines'  love for horses can be experienced in several ways: horse racing at the  Hipódromo Argentino de Palermo racetrack, polo in the Campo Argentino  de Polo (located just across Libertador Avenue from the Hipódromo), and  pato, a kind of basketball played on horseback that was declared the  national game in 1953.
Buenos  Aires native Guillermo Vilas (who was raised in Mar del Plata) was one  of the great tennis players of the 1970s and 1980s, and popularized  tennis in all of Argentina. He won the ATP Buenos Aires numerous times  in the 1970s. Other popular sports in Buenos Aires are golf, basketball,  rugby, field hockey and cricket.
International relations
See also: List of twin towns and sister cities in South America
Twin towns — Sister cities
Buenos Aires is twinned with the following cities:
La Paz, Bolivia,
Brasília, Brazil (since 2002),
Porto Alegre, Brazil,
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil,
São Paulo, Brazil,
Ottawa, Canada,
Santiago, Chile,
Beijing China (since 1993)
Bogotá, Colombia,
Medellín, Colombia,
Zagreb, Croatia (since 1998),
Prague, Czech Republic,
Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic,
Quito, Ecuador,
Cairo, Egypt ,
Toulouse, France,
Berlin, Germany (since 19 May 1994),
Athens, Greece,
Jerusalem, Israel (cooperation agreement),
Tel Aviv, Israel (since 1976),
Cagliari, Italy,
Calabria, Italy (region),
Genoa, Italy,
Lucca, Italy,
Milan, Italy,
Naples, Italy,
Rome, Italy,
Mumbai, India,
Osaka, Japan,
Beirut, Lebanon (since 2006),
Rotterdam, Netherlands,
Asunción, Paraguay,
Lima, Peru,
Warsaw, Poland,
Lisbon, Portugal,
Moscow , Russia ,
Belgrade, Serbia,
Cape Town, South Africa,
Seoul, South Korea,
Almería, Spain,
Barcelona, Spain,
Bilbao , Spain,
Cádiz, Spain,
Guadix , Spain ,
Madrid, Spain,
Oviedo, Spain (since 1983)
Salamanca, Spain,
Santiago de Compostela, Spain,
Seville, Spain,
Vigo, Spain,
Geneva, Switzerland,
Damascus , Syria ,
Bangkok, Thailand,
Istanbul, Turkey,
Kiev , Ukraine ,
London, United Kingdom,
Miami, Florida, United States,
State of New Jersey, United States,
State of Ohio, United States,
Montevideo, Uruguay,
Mexico City, Mexico,






 
BA has everything you can ask for: food, wine, attractions, museums and every kind of restaurant. People of all ages can enjoy their city there because it is like a paradise. I remember when I travelled, I met a lot of people, I had rented one of those apartment in buenos aires in Palermo and I made a lot of friends. Argentineans are cool and pretty fun! It was terrific! Now I’m planning a trip with my boyfriend!
ReplyDeleteLindsay