Palermo
@turistearteba offers tours around the city of Buenos Aires that allow you to explore the idiosyncrasy of each neighborhood.
If you sign up for the night tour through Palermo Soho you will find an explosion of color, accompanied by good stories about the neighborhood, its art and its people (the old and the new).
It's not just about capturing some funny pictures of the interesting murals, but to assimilate and understand their background, the message they contain, sometimes literally and sometimes a bit hidden.
Digging deeper into these cultural testimonies also allows us to understand the reason why Palermo is often pointed out as the trendy neighborhood of the city that lost its identity when it received its new residents and to which a frivolous profile is insinuated, a stereotype of calculated avant-garde.
Beyond the criticism that the "palermitano" may face, the district today is 100% enjoyable, for its wide gastronomic offer, for its tempting shopping tours -design, clothes, deco- and for the remarkable artistic expression that its streets contain.
Están las escenas futboleras del Gordo Pelota, o las obras de Proyecto Persianas, esa iniciativa que puso en valor las cortinas de metal dando un lugar a la inspiración. ¡Qué decir del valor que aflora del testimonio de Pinta Argentina! Una propuesta que revaloriza la inclusión e integración de todas las personas y brega contra la discriminación.
There are the soccer scenes of Gordo Pelota, or the works of Proyecto Persianas, that initiative that gave value to the metal curtains giving a place to inspiration. What to say about the value that emerges from the testimony of Pinta Argentina! A proposal that revalues inclusion and integration of all people and fights against discrimination.
The joint work of the Argentine Martin Ron with the Dutch Nase Pop -a consequence of Duo Project-, although a bit damaged by the passage of time, still transmits energy through its message, an admirable symbiosis of deep sarcasm with geometric perspectives.
By the time you reach the Russel Passage, the guide offers a few craft beers to continue awakening the senses through the narrow alley.
The end of the experience takes place in the Santa Rosa Passage, as if to corroborate the best for last.
After the tour, nothing better than a "milanesa de bife de chorizo" with tomato salad at El Preferido, a perfect synthesis of the "porteño", the neighborhood typical restaurant "bodegón", with a great vibe. Palermo style.