Cementerio de la Recoleta (Recoleta Cemetery)

Dee
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Recoleta Cementery

  • October 2, 2007
  • Rated 5 of 5 by SeenThat from Tel Aviv, Israel
Recoleta Cementery

A list of a city’s attractions can serve as a gauge of its health. The Recoleta Cemetery appears high on any such list of Buenos Aires. Greek temples, pyramids, and chapels coexist peacefully in the La Recoleta Cemetery, the most fashionable place for rich Argentineans to be buried in. Ornate mausoleums in a myriad of styles and separated by streets, avenues and trees create an eerie and intriguing sight. Few would argue this cemetery is one of the most extraordinary ghost cities in the world. However, they are a macabre reminder that Buenos Aires splendor is buried away in a remote past.

Surroundings
Still alive citizens favor the neighborhood as well, as the many French style buildings, large green spaces and first class boutiques, shopping centers, pubs, cafes, and restaurants testify. The neighborhood is widely considered to be one of the most exclusive ones in Buenos Aires and is an interesting addition to a visit at the cemetery.

Strangely, many night clubs find this background a stimulating one and the area is completely alive till the small hours of the night. On weekends, there is a large handicrafts market and many street performers display their crafts.

The Village Mall is a nearby upmarket shopping center with excellent coffee shops, and many cinema theaters.

History
The Recoletos Catholic Order founded the Nuestra Señora del Pilar Church and its attached Convent in 1706; much later – in 1822 – they added the cemetery and in 1871 many rich families moved into this area and transformed it into an exclusive residential one as a result of a yellow fever epidemic in the city.

Main Sights:

The most celebrated Argentineans are buried here and walking the cemetery streets makes a fascinating history lesson, as well as offers an architectural feast.

Basílica Nuestra Señora del Pilar: 1892, Junin Street. One of the oldest churches in Buenos Aires, strangely, there is an Inca Style sun made in silver in front of the main altar.

Recoleta Cultural Center: 1930, Junín Street. The old convent was transformed in 1886 into a home for aged people and in 1979 it became a cultural center. Young and avant-garde exhibits prevail at the center.

Famous Mausoleums: Eva Duarte's (also known as Evita Peron, an Argentinean dictator’s worshipped wife), Federico Leloir's (Medicine Nobel Prize), Luis Angel Firpo's, and others.

From journal Buenos Aires: Frozen Tango

Cementerio de la Recoleta (Recoleta Cemetery)

  • April 24, 2007
  • Rated 3 of 5 by panda1 from ., California
Cementerio de la Recoleta (Recoleta Cemetery)

Cementerio de la Recoleta (Recoleta Cemetery) is where the wealthy of one of the fourteen families are entombed in style with one last tribute upon their death. Free admission. Open till 6pm, bell rings 10 minutes prior to let you get yourself out before the gates are locked for the night or you´ll have to find your own way out by climbing a wall, so leave promptly!

From journal EZE

Editor Pick

Cementerio de la Recoleta

  • February 23, 2006
  • Rated 5 of 5 by KJP from Dallas, Texas
Cementerio de la Recoleta

Los porteños generally live with their parents much longer than those of us from the States. Whether the difference is purely a cultural one, an indicator of the economic hard times that have befallen Argentina in recent years, or both, many Argentineans live at home into their late twenties or beyond. Living with family members may provide a much-needed financial buffer, but few would argue it also results in an appalling lack of privacy. Consequently, Buenos Aires has no shortage of "hotels" that cater to those needing an hour or two for the odd clandestine rendezvous.

Few foreigners who visit Buenos Aires are aware the aforementioned establishments operate right under their collective noses, and fewer still know that Recoleta Cemetery, one of the city’s most visited sites, quietly lurks in the shadows of many such hotels. Thus, life in Buenos Aires often proceeds at its most passionate, fervent pitch against the looming backdrop of the city’s grandest symbol of death. Oh, the irony.

Within Recoleta’s massive brick walls and neoclassical front gates lay the richest and most famous among Buenos Aires’ dearly departed, a veritable Who’s Who of the city’s past. Celebrities and scholars, soldiers and captains of industry, statesmen and race car drivers, poets and ex-presidents are among the interned.

Eva Perón (1919-1952), Argentina’s former first lady, is Recoleta’s most famous resident, and one only need follow the largest gaggle of tourists to find the Duarte family mausoleum where she rests. Oddly, Juan Perón, her husband, is buried across town in a different cemetery.

Recoleta is a miniature city unto itself. Above-ground mausoleums stand shoulder-to-shoulder like Upper East Side apartment buildings, laid out amidst a perfect grid of city block-like sidewalks. Unlike Paris’ Cimetière du Père Lachaise, there’s almost no greenery. Virtually every square inch of space is occupied by one of the elaborate mausoleums.

Recoleta’s prestigious real estate isn’t doled out to lone individuals. These are family tombs, often spanning generations. Many are incredibly ornate, representing a wide array of architectural styles, often adorned with impressive statues. Some have glass fronts, the caskets inside in plain view, stacked on shelves one atop the other. Almost all have a basement, and occassionally one can see a steep stairway leading down to a crypt housing more caskets.

Some of the monuments are impeccably maintained, their marble and the bronze placard denoting the family name recently polished. Others have fallen into disrepair, either due to a lack of money or because they no longer have descendants to care for their upkeep. Plundering, vandalism, and the elements have taken a toll, with broken glass and locks, bits of trash, and stolen hardware the most glaring remnants.

Taking the term "adding insult to injury" to a new low, we saw one derelict tomb that had become an impromptu janitor’s closet, with cleaning products and other tools of the trade strewn atop a weather-beaten coffin.

Recoleta Cemetery offers a fascinating glimpse into Argentina’s past. Don’t miss it.

From journal Paris of the Pampas: Buenos Aires, Part I

Editor Pick

Cementerio de la Recoleta

  • December 19, 2005
  • Rated 4 of 5 by WitlessWanderer from Bristol, United Kingdom
Guidebooks will tell you that the big sight in the cemetery is Evita's grave. And indeed you can see the plaques on the Duarte Mausoleum (her maiden name) and take the photo. I did. The saga of how her body got here is explained in Palermo's fine Evita Museum.

So you've seen the big sight. Don´t go home yet.

But I enjoyed wandering round the sombre marble streets of this necropolis in the centre of the city. Many of Argentina's greats are here--you´ll recognise the names from major streets: Lavalle, Pueyrredon, and Alem, among others.

As with other public spaces in this city, it's heavily populated by stray cats. It seems porteños keep dogs but lose cats. On that note, watch where you step in this part of town--they love their dogs but hate cleaning up after them.

Of course, Recoleta didn't always used to be in the centre of the city. Indeed, it used to be a country retreat for Buenos Aires' rich and famous. When yellow fever broke out in 1871, they moved out here permanently, abandoning their mansions in La Boca. But the city caught up with them as it expanded and now Recoleta is pretty central (but still outside the public transport system).

The cemetery is open from 7am to 6pm daily and is absolutely free. You don´t really need the guide, but bring your camera, as there are some fine photos.

From journal BA the Best

Editor Pick

Cementerio de la Recoleta

  • December 17, 2005
  • Rated 4 of 5 by Mr. Wonka from Brooklyn, New York
Cementerio de la Recoleta

The hottest ticket in town isn’t for front-row seats at a La Boca Juniors match. It’s not for an opera at Teatro Colon, either. No, here in Buenos Aires, the truly wealthy residents have their sights set on a permanent plot at Cementerio de la Recoleta, a sprawling, eerie resting place for many of Argentina’s most revered (and sometimes controversial) figures.

After wandering through Recoleta’s maze of above-ground tombs for an hour, I left convinced that there’d be nothing creepier than spending a night in the cemetery, alone, with nothing but a gaggle of resident cats stalking the grounds to keep you company. Sounds like a perfectly gory Tales from the Crypt episode to me.

The huge cemetery sits smack-dab in the middle of Recoleta, close to a tasteless strip of touristy restaurants and bars that include the Sports World Café (Hey honey! Let’s check out some dead bodies, then catch a fútbol match on the tube!) Admission to the cemetery is free, and guided tours are available. Just inside the Greek-columned entrance, there’s also a nifty map that shows where graves of interest are located: an invaluable tool, considering just how many plots there are here. Of course, if you’re looking for Eva Peron’s tomb, just follow the tourists.

What makes the cemetery more unsettling than others are the tombs themselves. As is common throughout South America, the caskets lie above ground in plain view of the public, meaning you can literally peer into 80% of the tombs and see inside for yourself. In fact, many of the tombs’ glass windows and chain locks have been broken and gone into disrepair over the years (weather, grave robbery?), so you can practically reach out and touch the specter of death. That’s right—bring the kids! It’s fun for the whole family!

Haunted graveyard thoughts aside, Cementerio de la Recoleta is a mesmerizing “attraction” that shouldn’t be missed. Many of the tombs have incredibly intricate detailing, and the foreboding sense of death is exasperated by the newly finished, empty plots patiently awaiting their future residents. Vacation fun indeed! The roster of deceased at Recoleta includes Peron, heavyweight boxer Luis Ferpo, writer/politician Juan Bautista Alberdi, Nobel Peace Prize winner Carlos Saavedra Lamas, and former president Carlos Pellegrini.

Final resting places don’t get any more prestigious in Buenos Aires than those at grim, captivating Cementerio de la Recoleta.

From journal Buenas Tardes, Buenos Aires

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