Cerro Alegre is one of the most celebrated hillside neighborhoods in Valparaiso, a city built on a natural amphitheater of forty-two cerros (hills) that rise steeply from a crescent-shaped bay on the central Chilean coast. The hill sits adjacent to its twin, Cerro Concepcion, and together they form the heart of what UNESCO designated as a World Heritage Site in 2003. The two hills share a character that is distinct from the rest of Valparaiso, marked by the architecture left behind by European immigrants who settled here in the nineteenth century.
The Centro Historico of Quito is one of the largest and best-preserved colonial city centers in the Americas, a dense collection of churches, convents, plazas, and residential buildings dating from the sixteenth to nineteenth centuries. The neighborhood sits in a narrow valley at approximately 2,850 meters above sea level, flanked by steep hills to the east and west, with the looming bulk of Volcan Pichincha rising to over 4,700 meters directly behind the city to the west.
La Candelaria is the historic core of Bogota, a dense neighborhood of colonial and republican-era buildings wedged between the city center to the west and the steep slopes of the Andes to the east. The barrio rises from the flat plain of the Sabana de Bogota into the foothills at an altitude of roughly 2,640 meters above sea level, making it one of the highest capital-city neighborhoods in the world. The thin mountain air, the frequent changes between sunshine and rain, and the ever-present backdrop of the cerros orientales give La Candelaria a distinctive atmosphere found nowhere else.
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