Balneario
History
Balnearios may be as simple as a beach or as complex as a planned city. Acapulco and Puerto Vallarta are balneario city-destinations, for example, while San Alfonso del Mar is a more planned resort community and Viña del Mar is a city that also happens to be a balneario. Balnearios are characterized by having beaches, hot climates, being seasonal destinations, attracting foreign tourists, and having boom periods surrounding festivals. The word comes from Spanish, and the difference between a "playa" (beach) and a balneario is the services provided at the balneario.
Some balnearios have been closed in recent years due to high levels of pollution and trash.[1] These popular usually public resorts are often politicized.[2] This is since they provide recreation for the masses at any income level due to their a la carte availability of amenities.[2] Some politicians will even support their expansion during recessions because of how volatile the repercussions would be to not support them.[2] New balnearios of the hot springs kind and others are often touted as job creating business expanding measures by local councils.[3]
Playa versus balneario
A beach is simply a stretch of shoreline, usually sandy, while a balneario has amenities.[4][5] It is a specific recreational destination with features such as bathrooms, lifeguards, changing rooms, and picnic tables.[6]
Famous balnearios
- Mar del Plata, Argentina
- Copacabana/Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
- Central Litoral, Chile
- La Serena, Chile
- Punta Cana, Dominican Republic
- Montañita, Ecuador
- Acapulco, Mexico
- Cancún, Mexico
- Puerto Vallarta, Mexico
- Progreso, Mexico
- Playa del Cármen/Cozumel, Mexico
- La Paz/Cabo San Lucas, Mexico
- San Bernardino, Paraguay
- Máncora, Peru
- Punta del Este, Uruguay
- Isla Margarita, Venezuela
Notes
- ↑ Podrían cerrar el balneario Figueroa, La Mañana Neuquén newspaper, (Spanish)
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Los balnearios y su uso electoral por UPN, Noticias de Navarra (Spanish)
- ↑ Comenzó la obra de la puesta en valor del Balneario Norte, Diario El Argentino (Spanish)
- ↑ balneario entry, Real Academia Española (Spanish)
- ↑ playa entry, Real Academia Española (Spanish)
- ↑ Balneario