Author: Facebook_1211049274 and Dylan

  • Parque el Desafío

    Image of Parque el Desafío located in Gaiman, Argentina | Main entrance

    Parque el Desafío

    A retiree’s challenge to build an outdoor wonderland out of trash

    The town of Gaiman, Argentina customarily appears in tour guides as a living example of Welsh colonization of the Chubut river valley in the late 19th century.
    Replete with tea houses, imported poplars, and irrigation channels that weave through the center of town, the visual reminders of this wave of European immigrants remain in this South American town. A couple of blocks from the central plaza and the Welsh flags of the city’s main streets lies a hidden gem called the Parque el Desafío on Calle Almirante Brown.
    In 1980 the park’s creator, then recently retired Joaquín Alonso, began construction of the outdoor gardens with the intent of entertaining his grandchildren. It grew into a giant outdoor space made entirely of recycled trash and found objects, which Alonso opened to the public in 1984 and continued to augment with almost daily work until his death in 2009 at 90 years old.
    The sculptural installations and quotes that line the paths make statements about modern life and current events, recreate foreign locales, and actively endeavor to inspire reflection in the visitor. Flooded for extended periods by the river on whose banks it sits over the park’s three decades of existence, what began as a creative manner by which Alonso could spend his idle time, exists now as an outdoor temple dedicated to a good sense of humor, common sense, and living a rich life.
    Alonso organized the park largely according to the visitor’s experience, as he or she follows the labyrinthine paths lined with sculptural installations dedicated to particular themes like the Falkland Island conflict or miniature models of the Taj Mahal and an Andalusian garden. At nearly ever step of the path, a hanging handmade plaque, made from a piece of scrap wood or the top of an oil can, has a handwritten quote, with sources ranging from Classical philosophers like Epicurus and Seneca to anonymous folkiness. These quotes number in the hundreds, and the park’s current caretakers (Alonso’s daughter and other family members) makes a collection of the quotes available to take as a souvenir.
    Other features of the park include a small tower made of glass bottles, intended as a shrine to Alonso’s Celtic-Spanish ancestors, smaller gardens devoted to Chinese philosophy or the traditions of the Tehuelche, the Patagonian region’s most prevalent indigenous group. Alonso most frequently takes aim at modernity itself with a tongue-in-cheek, dark humor, as in the case of old car chassises with taxonomic names next to pictures of dinosaurs, and using frequent plays on words to condemn television, government bureaucracy, and state-sponsored violence.
    Alonso always used reclaimed materials in his installations, but one only barely takes notice of the shabby materials amongst the many items of clear-headed wisdom Alonso committed to passing on through his many years of work.

    Read more about Parque el Desafío on Atlas Obscura…

    Category: Outsider Art, Follies and Grottoes, Outsider Architecture
    Location: Gaiman, Argentina
    Edited by: Facebook_1211049274, Dylan

  • The Manzana de las Luces

    Image of The Manzana de las Luces located in Buenos Aires, Argentina | Tunnel entrance below Manzana de las Luces

    The Manzana de las Luces

    A Gateway to an Underground Tunnel Network

    The Manzana de las Luces, or “Block of the Lights”, housed the activities of the early Jesuit missionaries in the nascent Buenos Aires, and as a complex comprises the church of San Ignacio, a cloister residence, a large arcaded patio, and colonial-era administrative building.
    Although once housing Argentina’s first national library, college, and even the country’s legislature, Manzana de las Luces’s notoriety derives in part from its function as a central point in Buenos Aires’ mysterious subterranean tunnel system.
    The tunnels likely date from as early as the late 17th century, and given the paucity of any records or mention of the tunnels’ construction remain shrouded in mystery. The first documented report of an uncovered tunnel came in 1865, and interest in the tunnel network reappeared during project to drain the neighborhood of San Telmo, one of the city’s oldest neighborhoods, when engineers discovered more tunnels. The tunnels range in size, and some lead to large, vaulted chambers. Many have caved in, and the city government demolished many more to make way for the “A” line of the Buenos Aires subway system in the early 20th century.
    Opinions as to the tunnels’ functions since their construction remains the stuff of urban legend, and speculation ranges from a defensive or escape network for troops or clergy, to secret chambers for inquisition-style torture, to a clandestine system for smuggling contraband.
    Daniel Schávelzon, author of The Tunnels of Buenos Aires and the head of the Center for Urban Archaeology, says the tunnels likely indicate an incomplete project initiated by the Jesuits to connect the city’s church’s underground. Although chambers and tunnels exist directly under around religious, government, or military buildings, many of these smaller networks do not ultimately connect.
    Many tunnels remain undiscovered, however, and if the more may remain secret for precisely the functions they have served in the centuries that have passed until now.

    Read more about The Manzana de las Luces on Atlas Obscura…

    Category: Subterranean Sites
    Location: Buenos Aires, Argentina
    Edited by: Facebook_1211049274, Dylan