Buenos AIres isn{t little Paris of South America, Buenos AIres is nicknamed: PARIS OF AMERICA and it/s not coincidence: In mid-19th century Paris was demolished and rebuilt as we know it today, shortly after Buenos Aires was also demolished and rebuilt in the image of Paris, with its architectural styles of that time: beaux arts/academicism-art nouveau/deco and the layout of large avenues/boulevards/diagonals and tons of parks. like Paris. Buebos Aires municipallity has 3,1 M ppl, but whole city with its suburbs reaches around 17,5M, and 6M of them get in municipallity for working 5 days a week.
@@ElsaNavarro-r7p Hi Elsa, thanks for fact-checking me! First of all, I understand you automatically translated my comment - while I cannot thank you enough for engaging with me, it’s an expression that shouldn’t be taken literally. But its gist stands - prices are nowhere near where I expected them to be. Secondly, the video tries to showcase my experience as a first time visitor, mainly compared to other previous visitors’. And the experience should be taken as such: most prices are quite high - especially compared to the past two years or to European prices and neighboring countries prices. In no way do I want a specific example to summarize a whole economy as big as Argentina’s, however, allow me to put here something that has surprised me very much: while in Brazil, Argentina’s neighbor, a kg of tomatoes is 0.5€, in Argentina this costs 3€. We, Romanians, and Europeans in general, eat a lot of tomatoes so obviously this has caught my attention. And to the example discussed here: approx. 26€ to visit Evita Peron’s museum which is basically a house seems a bit exaggerated. Her historical influence is truly unique, but the entrance fees are either an effect of current inflationary pressures or simply a rip-off. I’ll let you decide which one. ☺️
Pero lo que no entiendo como los turistas van a visitar esos lugares peronistas. Ni loco pago por visitar la casa de la prostituta de Eva peron. @@aventurasianxietate
Buenos AIres isn{t little Paris of South America, Buenos AIres is nicknamed: PARIS OF AMERICA and it/s not coincidence:
In mid-19th century Paris was demolished and rebuilt as we know it today, shortly after Buenos Aires was also demolished and rebuilt in the image of Paris, with its architectural styles of that time: beaux arts/academicism-art nouveau/deco and the layout of large avenues/boulevards/diagonals and tons of parks. like Paris.
Buebos Aires municipallity has 3,1 M ppl, but whole city with its suburbs reaches around 17,5M, and 6M of them get in municipallity for working 5 days a week.
Ce tare❤ador Argentina m-am mutat în Buenos Aires nu se mai putea😅am fost de cateva ori în Argentina sunt efectiv îndrăgostitita de aceasta țară
Iif you aré un love of B.A , then stay and love here.😊😊😊
@migueltavernise5620 I stay în Buenos Aires 😅
Argentina 🇦🇷 este într-adevăr o țară foarte frumoasă 😊 iar Buenos Aires este un oraș minunat!
by law, 10% of the bus fleet is renewed everyr year by Okm ones, therefore none of them r 10 years old.
@@nunzioroxlo6147 thanks! That’s good to know - very useful info ✌️
@@aventurasianxietate just an observation, thx 4 ur vid!
Dacă nu ești interesat de istorie, de ce să arăți muzee? Muzeele din Buenos Aires sunt foarte interesante și arăți doar fațada? Prea rău.
131 ron😮asa mult a crescut?
Da, prețurile au crescut mult si cresc pe zi ce trece 😮
@@aventurasianxietate asa este🫣totusi nu renunt😅m-as urca si acum în avion stau liniștită până în decembrie
@@aventurasianxietateIt's a lie, prices don't increase day by day, on the contrary, prices are falling or staying the same.
@@ElsaNavarro-r7p Hi Elsa, thanks for fact-checking me! First of all, I understand you automatically translated my comment - while I cannot thank you enough for engaging with me, it’s an expression that shouldn’t be taken literally. But its gist stands - prices are nowhere near where I expected them to be. Secondly, the video tries to showcase my experience as a first time visitor, mainly compared to other previous visitors’. And the experience should be taken as such: most prices are quite high - especially compared to the past two years or to European prices and neighboring countries prices. In no way do I want a specific example to summarize a whole economy as big as Argentina’s, however, allow me to put here something that has surprised me very much: while in Brazil, Argentina’s neighbor, a kg of tomatoes is 0.5€, in Argentina this costs 3€. We, Romanians, and Europeans in general, eat a lot of tomatoes so obviously this has caught my attention. And to the example discussed here: approx. 26€ to visit Evita Peron’s museum which is basically a house seems a bit exaggerated. Her historical influence is truly unique, but the entrance fees are either an effect of current inflationary pressures or simply a rip-off. I’ll let you decide which one. ☺️
Pero lo que no entiendo como los turistas van a visitar esos lugares peronistas. Ni loco pago por visitar la casa de la prostituta de Eva peron. @@aventurasianxietate