Valparaiso was named a UNESCO World Heritage Site for its distinctively spontaneous hills’ neighborhoods and their vernacular architecture.

Founded in 1536, 120 km northwest of Santiago, the port of Valparaiso was named a UNESCO World Heritage Site for its distinctively spontaneous hills’ neighborhoods and their vernacular architecture, including more than a dozen ascensores (funicular cable cars) that connect the port with its surrounding heights.

Specific sites include the Church of La Matriz, Plaza Victoria, the Naval and Maritime Museum, and especially La Sebastiana, one of Chilean poet Pablo Neruda’s many eclectically decorated homes, located high above the harbour; dedicated urban explorers could easily spend several days there. Also consider a visit to Neruda’s home at Isla Negra, on the sandy shoreline south of Valparaiso. (Though it’s called Isla Negra—Spanish for “Black Island“—it’s not an island at all.) The house contains a museum with items belonging to the poet.

Santiaguinos have begun to rehabilitate many of Valparaiso’s historic houses and turn them into stylish hotels, bed-and-breakfasts, restaurants and cafes, so much so that the city now overshadows the traditional holiday destination of nearby Vina del Mar. It has also become a major cruise-ship destination; a sparkling new metro system connects Valparaiso to Vina.



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