National Historic Monuments of Argentina - City of Buenos Aires

City of Buenos Aires

  • Café Tortoni (1858/98)
  • Casa Rosada (Government House) (1884/98)
  • Buenos Aires Botanical Garden (1898)
  • Buenos Aires Cabildo (17th century)
  • Buenos Aires Metropolitan Cathedral (18th & 19th century)
  • The 'May Pyramid' monument in the Plaza de Mayo (1811)
  • Obelisk of Buenos Aires (1936)
  • Congressional Palace of Argentina (1906)
  • Enclosure of the old National Congress (1864)
  • Teatro Colón (1908)
  • Our Lady of the Rosary Basilica and Santo Domingo Convent (late 18th century)
  • House of Bartolomé Mitre (18th century)
  • House of Domingo Sarmiento (1860)
  • House of Esteban de Luca (1786)
  • Buenos Aires Central Post Office (1928)
  • Estación Retiro (1997)
  • San Roque Chapel (late 18th century)
  • San Miguel Church (1788)
  • San Juan Church (1797)
  • San Pedro Telmo Church (1734)
  • San Ignacio Church, Manzana de las Luces (1722)
  • Former Jesuit buildings, Manzana de las Luces (1730/1780)
  • Galerías Pacífico
  • Penitenciaría Nacional (Buenos Aires), in former monastic hospital and women's prison
  • San Francisco Basilica (1754)
  • Barolo Palace (1923)
  • San Martín Palace (1909)
  • Montserrat Church (1865)
  • Former Convent of the Mercedarios (first half 18th century)
  • Basilica of Our Lady of Mercy (1779)
  • Casa de la Cultura (before 1993 this building housed La Prensa newspaper since its construction in 1898)
  • Confitería El Molino (1917)
  • Pizzurno Palace (1888)
  • Kavanagh building (1935)
  • Supreme Court of Argentina (1906–42)
  • Avellaneda Bridge
  • Hotel de Inmigrantes (Museum of Immigration) (1906)
  • ARA Presidente Sarmiento (1872)
  • Corbeta Uruguay (1874)
  • Flagship branch the Banco de la Nación Argentina (1938–52)
  • Cervantes Theater (1921)
  • José Tiburcio Borda Municipal Hospital (1863/1949)
  • Seat of the Federación de Asociaciones Católicas de Empleadas (FACE), Calle Sarmiento
  • Federal firing range, Avenida del Libertador
  • National Music Centre (former National Library)
  • Palais de Glace (1911)
  • Museum of the Garment Industry
  • Barracks, buildings and gardens of the General San Martín Regiment of Mounted Grenadiers, Palermo
  • Property known as Los Altos de Elorriaga at Defensa and Alsina, and the house of María Josefa Ezcurra de Ezcurra on Alsina
  • Exhibition Area of La Sociedad Rural (1878)
  • Naval Observatory of Argentina, Avenida España (1947)
  • Embassy of the United Kingdom
  • Flagship branch of the Banco Hipotecario (1966)
  • Naval Station of Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires Port
  • Club de Pescadores (Fishing Club and Pier, 1937)
  • Argentine Yacht Club (1911)
  • Headquarters of the Secular Franciscan Order
  • Our Lady of Balvanera
  • San José School, at Mitre and Perón
  • National Historical Museum (former home of Gregorio Lezama, inside 'Lezama Park)
  • Buenos Aires Customs (1910)
  • Buenos Aires Metro stations: on Line A - Plaza de Mayo, Perú, Piedras, Lima, Sáenz Peña, Congreso, Pasco-Alberti and Plaza de Miserere; Line C - San Juan, Independencia, Moreno, Avenida de Mayo, Diagonal Norte, Lavalle and San Martín; Line D - Catedral, 9 de Julio, Tribunales, Facultad de Medicina, Agüero, Bulnes, Scalabrini Ortiz, Plaza Italia, Palermo; Line E - San José, Entre Ríos, Pichincha, Jujuy, Urquiza and Boedo
  • President Roque Sáenz Peña Teaching School, Avda. Córdoba
  • Buenos Aires Zoo (1875)

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Famous quotes containing the words city of and/or city:

    I hope there will be no effort to put up a shaft or any monument of that sort in memory of me or of the other women who have given themselves to our work. The best kind of a memorial would be a school where girls could be taught everything useful that would help them to earn an honorable livelihood; where they could learn to do anything they were capable of, just as boys can. I would like to have lived to see such a school as that in every great city of the United States.
    Susan B. Anthony (1820–1906)

    The city is always recruited from the country. The men in cities who are the centres of energy, the driving-wheels of trade, politics or practical arts, and the women of beauty and genius, are the children or grandchildren of farmers, and are spending the energies which their fathers’ hardy, silent life accumulated in frosty furrows in poverty, necessity and darkness.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)