La Boca and San Telmo

Time travel does exist in Argentina. Europeans arrived on boats, adapted their way of life and became porteños (people from the port): La Boca and San Telmo tell the story of this development and are the only time capsules in Buenos Aires where life doesn’t appear to have changed one bit. The barrios (neighbourhoods) lie side by side, south of Plaza de Mayo and east of Puerto Madero’s revamped docklands, and are now, quite understandably, a focal point for tourists.

La Boca, an area flanked by the mouth (boca) of the river, is characterized by the tango, multicoloured buildings (on El Caminito) and football. Although the dance was originally developed in the suburbs of Buenos Aires, La Boca is the world centre; sadly, however, it has now become such a tourist attraction that shows and dancing lessons are better in other areas of the city (see PARTY). La Boca is not the kind of place you go for a midnight stroll, but its portside buildings look timeless when the light hits the coloured façades in the morning before the tour buses arrive. This also the place where Diego Maradona, better than Pele at football in the eyes of every Argentine, played for Boca Juniors, a team you must go and watch at their beloved La Bombonera stadium.
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San Telmo is a slightly safer neighbourhood than La Boca, and houses many of the city’s backpacker hostels and larger, cheaper flats inhabited by bohemian porteños keen on turning old buildings into their private nightclubs. Named after Catholic priest Pedro Gonzalez Telmo, San Telmo is a maze of cobbled streets and crumbling mansions that once housed the city’s wealthiest families before the cholera and yellow fever outbreaks in the late 19th century. Buenos Aires, arguably, would not be the architectural jewel it is without San Telmo’s input. The hugely popular weekend antiques fair, Feria de Antiguedades, is held in Plaza Dorrego, although if you really want a taste of San Telmo, arrive during the week, before you are gobbled up by snap-happy tourists bearing ‘fannypacks’.
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Charmingly – or rather, alarmingly – both areas appear to be tumbling down. A few regeneration projects are currently under way to restore San Telmo in particular to its former glory. This is a neighbourhood living in the past, which is why San Telmo should take up at least a morning of your time in Buenos Aires. La Boca is a genuinely poor neighbourhood, and, to be honest, you only need to spend a couple of hours here to be satisfied you have seen everything.

Buenos Aires is a cosmopolitan city, and these two historic neighbourhoods, though rough around the edges, carry enormous significance in terms of Buenos Aires’ cultural identity.


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