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Dominican Republic : Santo Domingo: The Modern City

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Santo Domingo: The Modern City

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  • Beyond the Zona Colonial is a fast-moving metropolis of over two million people, where upmarket suburbs rub shoulders with bleak-looking shantytowns and where quiet parks and museums provide a respite from the capital’s frenetic traffic. The city radiates inland from the river and coastline, moving from compact 19th-century barrios to the spread-out commercial districts of the modern uptown. Spanish and Caribbean influences, expressed in wrought-iron balconies and ornate gingerbread-style woodcarving, give way to functional concrete office blocks and suburbs.

Top 10 Sights
  • 1. The Malecón

    Stretching several miles eastwards from the port, the Malecón also known as Avenida George Washington, is the city’s breezy seafront boulevard, lined with high-rise hotels, restaurants, and bars.

  • 2. Ciudad Nueva

    Next to the Zona Colonial, this low-level neighborhood of narrow streets and plazas contains fine examples of 19th-century architecture and maintains the atmosphere of a traditional barrio .

  • 3. Calle El Conde

    The old town’s main shopping street, the pedestrian-only thoroughfare is lined by stores and offices. The street is renowned for jewelers and shoe shops, and also for Dominican music and Haitian art.

  • 4. Gazcue

    A leafy middle-class suburb dating from the 1930s, Gazcue’s eccentric mix of buildings includes imitation chalets and half-timbered English-style architecture and a number of cafés and galleries.

  • Museo del Hombre Dominicano 5. Museo del Hombre Dominicano
    5. Museo del Hombre Dominicano

    Part of the Modernist 1970s Plaza de la Cultura complex, this collection of artifacts reveals the day-to-day life and rituals of the pre-Columbian Taino people.

  • 6. Palacio Nacional

    Although the presidential palace looks impregnable, you can visit this 1940s exercise in NeoClassical pomp, with its mahogany furniture and hall of mirrors. It houses government departments.

  • 7. Palacio de Bellas Artes

    An austere Neo-Classical façade announces the aesthetic credentials of the city’s Beaux-Arts headquarters. Decorating the stairway are murals by José Vela Zanetti.

  • Botanic Garden 8. Botanic Garden
    8. Botanic Garden

    In the northern suburb of Arroyo Hondo, the 450-acre garden showcases the tropical wealth of the country’s flora, featuring palms, a Japanese garden, and 300 varieties of orchid.

  • Parque Mirador del Sur 9. Parque Mirador del Sur
    9. Parque Mirador del Sur

    A haven for joggers and walkers, this park is set in the affluent diplomatic district. The limestone cliffs on the northern edge contain a series of caves, one of which houses a restaurant and another the vast Guácara Taína nightclub.

  • 10. Columbus Lighthouse (Faro a Colón)

    Inaugurated in 1992 to celebrate the 500th anniversary of Columbus’s arrival, this marble-clad monument attracted fierce criticism as a tasteless waste of money. But the sheer scale of the cross-shaped edifice is impressive.

Practical Information
On the corner of Calle El Conde and Calle Hostos, the Mercure Comercial hotel offers an air-conditioned bar and other facilities for the weary sightseer. To request a free tour of the Palacio Nacional (Mon, Wed, & Fri), call 686 4771, ext 340 . Permission may take a couple of days, and you are expected to look suitably dressed. Museo del Hombre Dominicano: Plaza de la Cultura 688 9700 Open 10am–5pm Tue–Sun; Adm $1 Palacio de Bellas Artes: Máximo Gómez & Independencia; 682 1325; Daily; Free Botanic Garden: Av Jardín Bótanico 565 2860 Open 9am–6pm Tue–Sat; Adm $1 Columbus Lighthouse: Open 9am–5pm daily; Adm $1
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