Caminito

Take a stroll through Buenos Aires' famously colourful street museum.

Present in tours

Located in La boca, the Caminito (little path, in Spanish) is a street museum of colourful painted houses typical of the immigrant dwellings that came to chracterise this portside area towards the end of the 19th and start of the 20th century.

The Caminito followed the route of an old stream that once flowed into the Riachuelo, and later, after the river dried up, formed part of a railroad route. After the closure of the railroad, the street was largely abandoned until in the 1950s a group of neighbours decided to regenerate the area and local artist Benito Quinquela Martín began using the tenements as his canvas.

Today, there are several works by Argentine artists incorporated as part of the street museum and the Caminito has become a favourite with visitors to the city. Several restaurants offer tango and folk dance shows and street fills with artists offering original crafts and paintings.

The tenement buildings made of wood and sheet metal are typical of the conventillos, precarious, communal dwellings built by Genoan immigrants starting in the late 19th century. Many dwellings are built on raised foundations due to frequent floods in the past.

 

VALLE IBERLUCEA del, Dr. y MAGALLANES

National Immigration Museum

The city's former immigrants' hotel.

National Museum of Decorative Art

A window into the opulence of Argentina's upper classes in the early 20th century

Palais de Glace - National Palace of the Arts

Inaugurated in 1910, this palace of art originally housed an ice rink

Quinquela Martín Museum of Fine Arts

Explore the legacy of La Boca's most celebrated artist

Rogelio Yrurtia House Museum

Home and workshop of the great Argentine sculptor Rogelio Yrurtia.

The Cabildo

Admire this colonial town hall dating back to 1580.

Wax Museum

Historic building with wax models of some of Argentina's most famous characters.

Xul Solar House Gallery

Former home of one of Argentina's most eccentric artists