Parque

Tres De Febrero Park

Recomendado por 28 habitantes locales,

Consejos de residentes locales

Alessandro
December 28, 2020
The Tres de Febrero Park is the heart of the Bosques de Palermo. Filled with beautiful trees and a fenced rose flower park, this park is a sanctuary hidden in the middle of Palermo Chico's two busiest avenues. Either in need of exercising or breathing in fresh air, this park is perfect for a quick getaway from the weight of a big city like Buenos Aires. It's also got a strip of restaurants, coffee shops, bars, and ice cream stands sitting beneath an elevated brick-built train rail. Stop for a coffee and a croissant at Le Pain Quotidien, a beer at Avant Garden, crêpes at Santa Crepa, or have a light colorful lunch at Möoi. Perfect to relax on a sunny, hot afternoon under the shade of a bouquet of trees!
The Tres de Febrero Park is the heart of the Bosques de Palermo. Filled with beautiful trees and a fenced rose flower park, this park is a sanctuary hidden in the middle of Palermo Chico's two busiest avenues. Either in need of exercising or breathing in fresh air, this park is perfect for a quick g…
Aida
December 29, 2019
The huge Tres de Febrero Park, often known as Los bosques de Palermo (The Forests of Palermo), is one of the city's most popular open spaces. It's the perfect place to relax and unwind, walk, run, cycle, rollerskate, or have a picnic with friends. Opened in 1875 as an initiative by president Domingo Faustino Sarmiento, the park was named after the date of a decisive battle in the Argentine and Uruguayan civil wars (the Battle of Caseros on the third of February 1852; a battle that led to the defeat and exile of Argentine president Juan Manuel de Rosas, whose lands were confiscated by the state and used to create the park). The original project was led by the architects Ernesto Oldendorf, Fernando Mauduit and Jordan Wysocky, and completed by Jules Dormal, who also worked on the Teatro Colón and the National Congress building. The subsequent extensions and remodelling was carried out between 1892 and 1913 by the lanscape architect Charles Thays, who also designed the Botanical Garden, the Parque Centenario and many of the city's other parks. The park features two lakes with pedalos for hire, a planetarium and the Rosedal de Palermo, a rose garden with more than 8,000 roses from 93 different species. The rose garden also has an Andalucian patio donated by the Spanish city of Seville in 1929 and a poets' garden where you can find the busts of various literary figures, from Dante Alighieri to Buenos Aires' own Jorge Luis Borges. There are many other sculptures including a marble image of Little Red Riding Hood which was acquired by the city authorities in 1937.
The huge Tres de Febrero Park, often known as Los bosques de Palermo (The Forests of Palermo), is one of the city's most popular open spaces. It's the perfect place to relax and unwind, walk, run, cycle, rollerskate, or have a picnic with friends. Opened in 1875 as an initiative by president Doming…
Ricardo
October 12, 2018
UN OASIS EN BUENOS AIRES
Julieta
July 16, 2018
Es nuestro Central Park
Santiago
October 3, 2020
Parque al aire libre con lagos y mucho verde para disfrutar en la ciudad

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Ubicación
110 Av. del Libertador
Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires