Recoleta

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Recoleta
Area 5.4 km²
Population 188,780
Density 34,959/km²/km²
Comuna C2
Important sites

Recoleta cemetery,
Café La Biela,
Recoleta Cultural Centre


Recoleta is a neighbourhood (barrio) in Buenos Aires, Argentina. This typical "French architecture-style" district is known for it's squares, parks, cafés, galleries and the Cementerio de la Recoleta (Recoleta Cemetery), one of Argentina's most important cemeteries. The neighborhood was named after the Convento de los Recoletos Descalzos (The Monastery of Barefoot Franciscan Recoleto Monks).

Recoleta cemetery
Recoleta cemetery

Recoleta is part of the area known as Barrio Norte, together with the neighbouring barrios of Retiro, Palermo and the northern part of Balvanera. Like its neighbours, Recoleta is an affluent residential district, initially populated by citizens escaping the 1871 yellow fever epidemic. Recoleta is one of the most expensive neighbourhoods to reside in Buenos Aires, both in terms of real estate and of the cost of living. Even dying here is costly, as a mausoleum in the Recoleta cemetery is of great expense.

Floralis Genérica, located in United Nations Park in Recoleta. Architect Eduardo Catalano describes it as an environmental structure. Its metallic petals open and close based on the incidence of solar rays.
Floralis Genérica, located in United Nations Park in Recoleta. Architect Eduardo Catalano describes it as an environmental structure. Its metallic petals open and close based on the incidence of solar rays.
Nuestra Señora del Pilar church in recoleta
Nuestra Señora del Pilar church in recoleta

Recoleta centers on a square in front of the Cemetery and the neighbouring Basilica Nuestra Señora Del Pilar church. This was a relatively high point on the banks of the river and served as a hiding place for bandits in the 17th century. In the early 18th century, French Franciscans known as the Padres Recoletos built a chapel and convent in the area. The Jesuits also arrived and built the Basilica, completed in 1732. This colonial-style church is fitted with a magnificent Baroque altar, brought from Peru, decorated with Jujuy silver and pre-Hispanic ornamentation.

The Recoleta Cemetery's status as a tourist attraction is rivaled by few; some compare it to Père Lachaise in Paris. It was designed by Prospero Catelin of France, following a proposal by Bernardino Rivadavia, and opened in 1822 as a public cemetery for ordinary citizens. Now it hosts many former Presidents and, most famously, Eva Perón, in mausolea of marble, bronze and granite.

The neighbourhood has been referred to as the Paris of the Americas, many Fin de Siècle French-style palaces and villas were built in the area, especially on Avenida Alvear with it's sophisticated restaurants, up-scale shopping and mansions built by the afluent families of Buenos Aires, (today some used as embassies), and one of America's most luxurious hotels, the grand five-star Alvear Palace Hotel. Confitería La Biela is one of the city's most famous cafés and is patronized by authors, politicians, and other celebrities. On the square facing the cemetery is an enormous rubber tree; its huge tentacle-like lower branches cast a shade over La Biela's popular terrace. Known as the Gran Gomero, it was planted in 1878 and is 50 metres wide.

Nightlife is also very active and trendy, with the pedestrian passage RM Ortíz (Recoleta Village) known for its outdoor dining, pubs and cinemas.

Next to the Basilica, on the site of the Franciscan convent, is the Recoleta Cultural Centre, a major gallery for contemporary visual art, set in a dark pink chapel. Nearby is the Buenos Aires Design Centre, featuring high design, architecture and interior design shops. The belle époque Palais de Glace, originally an ice rink and ballroom, now serves as an exhibition centre. It was here in 1915 that Carlos Gardel was wounded after being shot by Che Guevara's father, Ernesto Guevara Lynch, as a result of a bar room brawl. Recoleta is also home to the Bar Restaurant Museo Renault, La Biela Bar, The Jockey Club, the National Library, the Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes (Museum of Fine Arts) and the Law School of the University of Buenos Aires.

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Coordinates: 34°35′26″S, 58°23′26″W