Thursday, February 21, 2008

Taking an overnight bus to visit La Paz

Because ma Land Roamer does not like to go up and down mountain passes at 4'000 meters ASL, I elected to leave it in a safe campsite in Sucre and I took a night bus to La Paz. 


The buses in South America are very comfortable, fast and much more economical than driving my camper-van over a given distance. Furthemore, it's also nice for a few days, to travel as a "backpacker" and to stay in hostels where I meet other travellers.





La Paz, officially known as “Nuestra Señora de La Paz”, is the de facto capital of Bolivia and is the seat of government of the Plurinational State of Bolivia. With an estimated 1 million residents, La Paz is the third-most populous city in Bolivia. 

The city, 68 km southeast of Lake Titicaca, is set in a canyon created by the Choqueyapu River. It is in a bowl-like depression, part of the Amazon basin, surrounded by the high mountains of the Altiplano. Overlooking the city is the towering, triple-peaked Illimani. Its peaks are always snow-covered and can be seen from many parts of the city. At an elevation of roughly 3,650 m above sea level, La Paz is the highest capital city in the world.

La Paz was founded on 20 October 1548, by the Spanish conquistador Captain Alonso de Mendoza, at the site of the Inca settlement of Laja as a connecting point between the commercial routes that led from Potosí and Oruro to Lima. La Paz was under Spanish colonial rule as part of the Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata, before Bolivia gained independence. Since its founding, the city was the site of numerous revolts. In 1781, the indigenous leader and independence activist Túpac Katari laid siege to the city for a total of six months, but was finally defeated. On 16 July 1809, the Bolivian patriot Pedro Domingo Murillo ignited a revolution for independence, marking the beginning of the Spanish American Wars of Independence, which gained the freedom of South American states in 1821.

La Paz is also an important cultural center of South America, as it hosts several landmarks belonging to the colonial times, such as the San Francisco Church, the Metropolitan Cathedral, the Plaza Murillo and Jaén Street. 











Mi Teleférico is an aerial cable car urban transit system serving the La Paz–El Alto metropolitan area in Bolivia. Mi Teleférico was planned to address a number of problems, including a precarious public transit system that could not cope with growing user demands, the high cost in time and money of traveling between La Paz and El Alto, chaotic traffic with its subsequent environmental and noise pollution, and a growing demand for gasoline and diesel fuel, which are subsidized by the state. 
In 2014, the system was considered to be the longest aerial cable car system in the world. Based on its master plan, the completed system, which is being built by the Doppelmayr Garaventa Group, is intended to reach a length of 33.8 km with 11 lines and 30 stations. 




















Click => here to see the next blog: 
"Lake Titicaca"