Panama Casco Viejo

May 30, 2008

Panama Art II: Saint Malo Music Festival at Casco Viejo!

 Panama, Casco Viejo
Casco Antiguo, San Felipe
www.arcoproperties.com

Flash post! The Saint Malo Music Festival just inaugurated. Check it out at:

http://www.asmfestivalpanama.com/en/events.html

MAY 2008
FRIDAY 30  
8 PM
Teatro Nacional de Panamá

Tickets:
$2, $5, $10, $15
Elementary and High School Students: Free
On sale at Ticketcenter

Orquesta Sinfónica Nacional de Panamá
Jorge Ledezma Bradley, Director
Luis Casal, violín
Isaac Casal, cello
Victor Soto, piano

Program:
Beethoven: Sinfonia N° 7, en la mayor
Intermission:
Beethoven: Triple concierto, for violin, violoncello and piano, op. 56

   
SATURDAY 31  
3:30 PM
Museo Antropológico Reina Torres de Araúz

Tickets:
$5
Elementary and High School Students: Free

Cuarteto Cerrud
Pana Bronce

Program:
TBA

   
7:30 PM
Teatro Nacional de Panamá

Tickets:
$2, $5, $10, $15
Elementary and High School Students: Free
On sale at Ticketcenter

Coro Polifónico de Panamá
Electra Isabel Castillo, Directora
Orquesta Juvenil Istmeña
Samuel Robles, Director
César Castillo Thompson, Director

Program:
Coro Polifónico

Intermedio:

Galimany: Panamá: Capricho Típico Panameño

Saint-Saens: Danse Bachanale, de Sansón y Dalilah

Elgar: Nimrod, de las Variaciones Enigma

Mussorgsky/Rimsky-Korsakov: Una Noche en el Monte Calvo

   
JUNE 2008
SUNDAY 1
3 PM
Museo Antropológico Reina Torres de Araúz

Tickets:
$5
Elementary and High School Students: Free

Guitarras Tetracorde
Grupo Vivace

Program:
TBA

   
7 PM
Museo Antropológico Reina Torres de Araúz

Tickets:
$5
Elementary and High School Students: Free

Grupo Clarinón
Program:
Aria: O del mio dolce ardor
moderato
Christoph von Gluck (1714 – 1787)
Solist:
Prof. Benedicta Jiménez – contralto

Cuarteto K.V. 160 allegro
Wolfgang A. Mozart (1756 – 1791)

Arabesque nº1 en Mib Mayor
andante
Claude Debussy (1862 – 1918)

Concierto Op. 1 en Re Mayor
II mov. Andante moderato (5:00)
III mov. Rondo (4:00)
Karl Stamitz (1745 – 1801)
Solist:
Prof. Ariadna G. Núñez P. – viola

Generosa (“Tierra – Mujer”)
punto
Rómulo Cástro (1958 – )

Tico Tico no fubá
chorinho
Brasil Zequina Abreu (1881-1935)

Special Guest :
Sr. Alexis Dixon, drums

Grupo Mixturas

   
MONDAY 2
7:30 PM
Museo de Arte Contemporáneo

Tickets:
$5, $10
Elementary and High School Students: Free

Baylor Piano Trio

Program:
Piano Trio No. 43 in C major Joseph Haydn
Allegro (1732-1809)
Andante
Finale: Presto

Piano Trio No. 1 in D minor Felix Mendelssohn
Molto allegro agitato (1809-1847)
Andante con moto tranquillo
Scherzo: Leggiero e vivace
Finale: Allegro assai appassionato

Intermission:
Piano Trio in A minor (1914) Maurice Ravel
Modere (1875-1937)
Pantoum (Assez vif)
Passacaille (Tres large)
Final (Anime)

   
TUESDAY 3
7:30 PM
Teatro Nacional de Panamá

Tickets:
$2, $5, $10, $15
Elementary and High School Students: Free
On sale at Ticketcenter

Orquesta Sinfónica Nacional de Panamá
Ricardo Risco, Director
Misha Dacic, piano

Program:
Beethoven:  Symphony N° 1
Intermission:
Rachmaninov:  Concert N° 1, for piano and orchestra

   
WEDNESDAY 4
7:30 PM
Teatro Nacional de Panamá

Tickets:
$20, $55, $65, $75
On sale at Ticketcenter

Paquito D’Rivera y su Quinteto de Jazz Celebra su Cumpleaños en Panamá
Alexander Brown, piano
Mark Walker, drums
Oscar Stagnaro, bass
Diego Urcula, trumpet
   
THURSDAY 5
7:30 PM
Museo de Arte Contemporáneo

Tickets:
$5, $10
Elementary and High School Students: Free

Baylor Woodwind Quintet

Program:
TBA

   
FRIDAY 6
8 PM
Teatro Nacional de Panamá

Tickets:
On sale at:
Sociedad Nacional de Conciertos and Ticketcenter

Youth Orchestra of the Americas (YOA)
Carlos Miguel Prieto, Director

Program:
Revueltas: Homenaje a Garcia Lorca
Stavinsky: Pulcinella – Suite
Dvorak: Symphony No. 9 (“From the New World”)

   
SATURDAY 7
3:30 PM
Museo Antropológico Reina Torres de Araúz

Tickets:
$5
Elementary and High School Students: Free

Baylor Brass Quintet

Program:
Prelude and Fugue in g minor J.
S. Bach (1685-1750)
Arr. Ted Blumenthal

Four Movements for Five Brass (1957)
Collier Jones
I. Introduction and March
II. Pretentions
III. Waltz
IV. Finale – allegro

Epigrams
Richard Willis (1929-1997)
I. Preludium – Flowing
II. Scherzino – Playful
III. Declamation – Dramatic
IV. Pantomime – Brash

Intermission

Sonata, “Saint Mark”
Tomaso Albinoni (1634-1709)
Arr. David Hickman
I. Grave
II. Allegro
III. Andante
IV. Vivace

Three Preludes
George Gershwin (1898-1937)
Arr. Alex Shuhan
I. Allegro ben ritmato e deciso
II. Andante con moto e poco rubato
III. Allegro ben ritmato e deciso

Suite for Brass Quintet
Herbert Haufrecht (1909-1998)
1. Intrada – Moderato
2. Ceremonial – Allegro moderato
3. Passacaglia – Slow
4. Fugue – Allegro non troppo e ritmico

   
7:30 PM
Teatro Nacional de Panamá

Tickets:
$2, $5, $15, $10 Elementary and High School Students: Free
On sale at Ticketcenter

Orquesta Juvenil Istmeña
Samuel Robles, Director
César Castillo Thompson, Director
Anna Noggle, Soprano

Program:
Ginastera: Obertura para el “Fausto” Criollo

Bizet: “Je dis que rien ne m’epouvante”, de Carmen

Floyd: “Ain’t it a pretty night”, de Susannah

Rachmaninov: Zdes’ khorosho, Op. 21, No. 7

Rachmaninov: Ne poy, krasavitsa, pri mne, Op. 4, No. 4

Bernstein: “Glitter and be Gay” de Candide

Intermission:
Ginastera: Danzas del Ballet Estancia, Op. 8A

Márquez: Danzón No. 2

   
SUNDAY 8
2:30 PM
Museo de Arte Contemporáneo

Tickets:
$5, $10
Elementary and High School Students: Free

Tim Deighton, viola
Tanya Aparicio, piano
María Inés Rodríguez,
piano
Graciela Núñez, violin

Program:
Sonata for Viola da Gamba and Harpsichord in G major, BWV 1027
Adagio
Allegro ma non tanto
Andante
Allegro moderato
J.S. Bach (1685-1750)

Cadenza (2007)
Martin Lodge (b. 1954)

Litany for All Soul’s Day
Franz Schubert (1797-1828)
Arr. William Primrose (1904-1982)

Four Canons for Violin and Viola (world premiere)
Michael Kimber
Resolute (b. 1947)
Sehr langsam
Con grazia ed agilità
Lively

Intermission:
Sonata for Viola and Piano (1919)
Rebecca Clarke (1886-1979)
Impetuoso
Vivace
Adagio-allegro

   
7 PM
Teatro Anayansi
Centro de Convenciones Atlapa

Tickets:
$20, $50, $75, $100
On sale at Ticketcenter

Paquito D’Rivera
Alexander Brown, piano
Mark Walker, drums
Oscar Stagnaro, bass
Diego Urcula, trumpet
Youth Orchestra of the Americas (YOA)
Carlos Miguel Prieto, Director

Program:
Gershwin: Strike Up The Band
Gershwin/D’Rivera: Gershwin Medley
Lecuona: Malagueña and Andalucia
Lecuona/ De Rivera: Lecuona Medley
D’Rivera: Danzón
D’Rivera: Wapango

Encores:
Tico-Tico

Panama Art: 15000 Watts in Casco Viejo

 Panama, Casco Antiguo
Casco Viejo, Plaza Herrera

Last night I went to the opening of the show “15000 Watts” at La Casona de Brujas in Plaza Herrera.  The show is a meditation on the current energy crisis, in Panama, in the world, and how it touches all of us at different levels.

It combined photos and paintings from both artist Miguel Lombardo and Cartooch. Miguel, in a more dramatic tone and Cartooch using their children-like style, it was a good combination on such a serious issue.  Most of the pieces by Cartooch had buttons to “turn on” the lights which iluminated brains, eyes and heart.

There was also a piece on bringing awareness to natural spaces through the use of impossible to miss orange cubes. This experiment started a while ago, I remember driving through Balboa Avenue and pam! suddenly these big orange cubes glowing at night, or “just hanging out” there during the day. I said to myself… what is this??? Then I met Miguel and he explained how the intention was to focus the attention on the bits of nature we take for granted within the city. Later on he did it in one of Casco Viejo´s beaches, and from there on to other places.

Another big piece was made out of photographs of the areas where the energy companies have projects to build dams and hydroelectric plants. Most of these areas are inhabited by indians, so it becomes more of a social issue. On one hand, Panama´s electricity is not only becoming very expensive but also scarce. We have the Canal resources to bring hydro electricity and some other plants, but we are growing as a nation, so electricity becomes a big issue. Panamanians are experiencing the raise of the cost of energy and claim for more plants, which are only feasable in a couple of places. Without the proper integration of the communities to these very necessary projects a huge missunderstanding is caused.  I can see myself in both sides: we need energy and cheaper. They want to stay in the land they´ve been for some years. It is the dynamic tension of our world today.

What about solar? studies say that there is not enough sunlinght in Panama to feed the city, just 5 months a year, maybe. What about winds? we have winds, but not enough. And so the list goes. In the meanwhile, costs raise and availability diminishes.

The other big issue is efficiency of lines. So many times the government isn´t able to repair and organize the cables in the right way.

Back in a corner, there is a very special box. It is, for me, the most important one. A question is written on the wall: “Should we keep allowing this?”  It is our call to action.

The problems were identified a long time ago, but it is only through our actions that we can provoke change.

What am I going to do about this?

Two boxes are provided, one with a yes and another one with a no, and papers so you can provide your input.   But is that enough?

As I´ve come to learn about our recent experiment on the Urban Composter Contest, most of us feel we don´t have the time to take action. We would love to, and we get outraged with the energy crisis or the huge expenses of resources. 

But are we really able to get out of our comfort zone and do something about it?

humm…….

 

May 29, 2008

What to do in Casco Viejo, Panama

Remember to always check our Casco Antiguo Event Calendar
This weekend:
Thursday 29 May:

7:30 p.m. At La Casona: Photographic Art Show about the Energy Crisis. Artists: Miguel Lombardo and Cartooch. You can see more of Miguel´s work at http://alquimiagroup.org/Alquimia/alquimia.pr.bunde.03.html and Cartooch´s work at: http://www.cartooch.com/

9:00 p.m. Jazz night at Platea, with Carlos Garnet

Friday 30 May:

5:30 p.m. Wine Tasting at Super Gourmet
9:00 p.m. Salsa with Andy Bush (not THAT Bush…although that would be pretty funny! ) at Platea

Saturday 31 May:

10 p.m. Rock Concert at La Casona: Señor Loop Tickets $7 gents $5 ladies. Señor Loop is one of the most interesting rock bands in Panama, with an inteligent fusion of different styles with a hint of humor.
10 p.m. Rock Revivals 60 & 70 at Platea with Frank Gutierrez

Sunday 1 June: Flea Market!

June 9th: Casa Cor Interior design show at the San Francisco de Asis convent. This show will run for almost a month.

May 27, 2008

Casco Viejo´s Urban Composting Contest Results

 Panama, Casco Antiguo … or Casco Viejo
San Felipe

Almost a month ago we launched an Urban Composting Contest aimed to provide the comunity of Casco Antiguo with a system to not only recycle their organic trash but also to be able to grow food that would balance their diet and ultimately even sell to restaurants. 

The results so far are very interesting: it is by far our most visited post, one of the most read, clicked, both in spanish and english… but only until a week ago did we get our first (and so far only!) application. I can only guess the fast pace of our lives bury all of our good intentions to do something about the environment, but not our thoughts: meaning we all think about it, but most likely we just don´t have the time to do it.

We even got calls from journalist and got two articles: one online from EFE and another one on a local magazine (Ellas).  But only one application: “The Rodrigo”.

The system received promises to be a fun project to engage comunity kids. It was submited by Beth Ihle, Tamara, Nathalee and Jen Hanna who are currently working in Costa Rica, at a eco-friendly wellness retreat. We are currently working on the technical details of how to fit them in our balconies, Spencer had some great ideas that could improve the system. Also, painted by kids, it will become a great masterpiece of Casco Viejo´s urban art.

To Beth, Tamara, Nathalee and Jen… thank you!!!! thanks for taking the time for all of us and thanks for your enthusiastic pictures.

May 26, 2008

Panama, Casco Viejo: Art , Tomatoes and San Felipe´s Aniversary

It almost sounds like the title of an experimental movie! but well, I had so many little pictures and happenings this weekend and upcoming week I couldn´t just “cluster” them in a theme.

First, of course, the tomatoes.  For those of you following my little composting mission, well, my balcony has has started to provide tomatoes! It has been so easy, it is unbelievable. And more is sprouting, I can´t wait to see what is what!

Now, second, but no less important, our friend and artist Miguel Lombardo will have a good photographic exhibition starting this Thursday at La Casona de Brujas. Inaugurates May 30th to June 22nd. The show is a meditation on today´s energy crisis.

Finally, this weekend was the aniversary of the district of San Felipe. It was celebrated out loud with a big fair at Plaza Catedral, a folk music concert and (today) the procesion of Saint Felipe Neri. Of course, with tons of music, yellow balloons and dancing. This town is fun!

 

 

 

May 22, 2008

The Panama Art Bienale is here!

Filed under: Uncategorized — panamacascoviejo @ 11:36 pm

Every year, around September, a group of artists present their work at the Contemporary Art Museum. This year, several “Casco Viejo Addicts” are competing: film directors Abner Benhaim and Enrique Castro Ríos. Other years have had photographer Rachelle Mozman, who is also a Casco resident.

So check it out: http://www.bienalpanama.org/

Here is the program of activities announced in their web:

PROGRAM OF ACTIVITIES 2008

Art exhibition of the 8th Biennial

From September 9th to October 21st, the Panama Art Biennial will present works by 13 local and international artists chosen by Mexican curator Magali Arriola. The participating artists are: Abner Benaim, Enrique Castro Ríos, Donna Conlon, Jonathan Harker, Rich Potter, and Ramón Zafrani, all based in Panama, and Humberto Vélez, Panamanian artist resident in London; the U.S. artists Sam Durant and Richard Prince (who was born in the Canal Zone); Francis Alÿs (Belgian based in Mexico) and three artists who reside in Berlin, Germany: Sean Snyder (from the U.S.), Román Ondak (from Slovakia) y Michael Stevenson (from New Zealand).

For the first time, the Biennial will have a specific theme: the former Panama Canal Zone.

The Zone, Revisited: a conversation with the artists and the organizers of the Panama Art Biennial

The Biennial’s participating artists and the event’s organizers will exchange ideas with each other and with the audience about their works, analyzing the way in which the exhibition as a whole develops the proposed curatorial theme.

Exhibition Garden City: Progressive Planning and the Panama Canal

An exhibition produced by Kurt Dillon, Roger Trancik, and Sam Sweezy for the College of Architecture, Art and Planning at Cornell University (New York). The exhibition presents a view of the urban system in the Canal Zone, situating its development within a particular tradition of urban and regional planning, and focusing on the work of North American professionals and intellectuals such as Clarence Stein, Frederick Law Olmsted, and others, whose ideas influenced urban development in the Canal Zone. The exhibition consists of 30 photographs, as well as bilingual text panels (Spanish and English). The exhibition’s creators will present a lecture about the exhibition as part of the Biennial’s conference program

Academic Conferences
The Panama Canal Area: A Cultural Heritage Site of Worldwide Importance

As part of its eighth edition, the Panama Art Biennial is organizing Academic Conferences focused on analyzing the patrimonial values of the urban and regional design in the Panama Canal area, currently considered an endangered cultural heritage site of worldwide importance.

The conference is being organized in collaboration with the World Monuments Fund and three Panamanian universities, and will include a large number of students, professors, and professionals from the fields of architecture, history, and fine arts.

Garden City: Progressive Planning and the Panama Canal
Kurt Dillon, Roger Trancik y Sam Sweezy will present a view of the urban system in the Canal Zone, situating its development within a particular tradition of urban and regional planning, and focusing on the work of North American professionals and intellectuals such as Clarence Stein, Frederick Law Olmsted, and others, whose work had an influence on the urban form of the Canal Zone.

The Panama Canal Area as an Endangered Cultural Heritage Site of Worldwide Importance
Architect Eduardo Tejeira will present a conference about the dossier presented to the World Monuments Fund in 2003 regarding including the area around the Panama Canal in the World Monuments Watch List of the 100 Most Endangered Cultural Sites.

Initiatives in Conservation and Evaluation of the Panama Canal Area sponsored by the World Monuments Fund
Architects Almyr Alba and Kurt Dillon will present information about the projects in Panama that have been developed with the support of the World Monuments Fund: Planning for Gamboa, and the conservation of the monumental sites of Forts San Lorenzo and Portobelo.

The Role of Summit Gardens in Canal Zone Landscaping
Charlotte Elton, an economist and specialist in matters related to sustainable development, will present a lecture about how Summit Gardens (in a manner similar to other colonial botanical gardens in the 19th Century and early 20th Century) introduced to Panama a collection of plants with economic, military, and ornamental uses, from all over the world.

Conference by Panamanian architect Eduardo Tejeira about El Marañón
Eduardo Tejeira, a specialist in Architectural History, will present a lecture about the now defunct neighborhood of El Marañón, which was planned and built during the construction of the Panama Canal for Afro-Antillean immigrant workers.

Cara a Cara – Face to Face: Panama City and the Canal Zone, 1904-1999
Carol McMichael Reese, a Professor at the Tulane University School of Architecture (New Orleans, USA) and Thomas Reese, Director of Tulane University’s Latin American Studies Center, will hold a conference and discussion with the public

The Canal Zone: A Fractured City, an Imagined Nation, and Transnational Culture in Panama (1913-1977)
Luis Pulido Ritter, a Panamanian sociologist and writer who resides in Berlin, Germany, will lecture about themes related to the collective imaginary of Panamanians, in a conference that considers historical, literary and cultural points of view.

Presentation of Canal Zone (1976), a documentary by Frederic Wiseman

This documentary about U.S. citizens who lived and worked in the Canal Zone sheds light on their lifestyle and different aspects of their civilian government, as well as on the work of the military forces, thereby portraying the social structure of the so-called Zonians. Wiseman has been acknowledged over the past three decades as one of the most important filmmakers in the United States.

Brooke Alfaro: Recent Paintings

Within the framework of the Biennial, Panama’s well known artist Brooke Alfaro will present, for the first time in several years, an exhibition of his paintings.

Brooke Alfaro (Panama 1949) graduated in 1976 as an architect from the University of Panama. He studied painting at the Art Students League in New York from 1980 to 1983. Since the early 1990s, his painting evolved from a technique close to the classical masters towards a radical transformation in form with the aim not only of manipulating pictorial space, but of expressing specific spiritual and psychological states. Both in his paintings and his videos (a medium he has worked in since 1999), a major part has been played by Alfaro’s humble neighbors from the historic area of San Felipe, where the artist used to live and continues to visit. In both genres, he employs a caustic sense of humor and deceptive jokes that subvert the possible interpretations of his artwork. (A.Samos)

ACTIVITIES IN 2007

Educational Workshops about Contemporary Art Practices

The 8th Biennial will develop, during 2007 and 2008, a program of educational activities directed at compensating, at least in part, for the lack of opportunities available for learning about contemporary art in Panama. A total of 35 participants took part in the two workshops carried out in 2007, including artists, art professors, and others interested in improving their artistic education. The workshops were:

Art Photography Appreciation Workshop. A one-week course on the theory and history of photography, with the participation of fifteen artists, taught by well-known Panamanian artist and photographer Rachelle Mozman.

Seminar: “Reflections on contemporary Art”. A one-week course on the theory and history of contemporary art, with the participation of twenty artists and art professors, taught by Saidel Brito, Academic Coordinator of the prestigious Instituto Superior Tecnológico de Artes del Ecuador (ITAE), located in Guayaquil.

Premiere presentation of the documentary Curundú by Ana Endara

Produced between 2006 and 2007, with the sponsorship of the Fondo de Fomento al Audiovisual de Centroamérica y el Caribe, Curundú is the opera prima of young Panamanian filmmaker Ana Endara. Its premiere and a round table discussion about the film were held on the 4th of December 2007 at the historic Ancon Theater Guild. Kenneth, the main character, is a charismatic figure who earns his living by taking pictures of his neighbors in Curundú, an overpopulated and precarious community, located not too far from the historic center of Panama City, on the edge of the former Canal Zone. The documentary speaks to us about Curundú through Kenneth and his photos.

May 21, 2008

How to get a historic apartment for $350,000 or less in Casco Viejo, Panama

Filed under: Uncategorized — panamacascoviejo @ 11:59 pm
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Views from apartment at Calle 1era
One of the things we enjoy the most is matching a future neighbor with the right property for his needs and budget. We take pride in showing not only our options, but everything we know is available that fits their requests.
In this issue we decided to review  everything on the market for less than $350,000. As the Casco continues to develop, this price point will get harder to find. We´d like to think that there will always be great apartments available for under $350,000, but based on the performance of other revitalized historic centers, we are not so sure. 
Looking for a studio, a pied á terre, or a comfortable two bedroom with parking? Maybe a commercial space? Now may be a good moment. 

Yahoo Recomends The Canal House Panama in Casco Viejo, Panama

Filed under: Uncategorized — panamacascoviejo @ 11:49 pm
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The Canal House PanamaYahooo!!!!!! literally…. Our Canal House Panama got recomended by Yahoo on today´s cover story on what to do, where to go and most importantly where to stay while in Panama. So go check it out!

Here is the excerpt:

” Why You Should Go: American tourists haven’t yet caught on to the country’s beaches and exotic wildlife, and historic Panama City is a good jumping-off point.

Where to Sleep: Most of the city’s hotels are in the financial district, where you can find well-known chains. Or try the Canal House (doubles from $135), a restored 19th-century colonial home with just three charming bedrooms, in the cobblestone-lined Casco Viejo section.

Where to Eat: Get ropa vieja at Las Tinajas, where folk dancing serves as dessert. The Hotel DeVille has a modern restaurant with nouveau French food.”

Look for ” Faraway Destinations on a Budget”

http://travel.yahoo.com/p-interests-22914840;_ylc=X3oDMTI4ZzNnM2ViBF9TAzI3MTYxNDkEX3MDMjcxOTQ4MQRzZWMDZnAtdG9kYXltb2QEc2xrA2ZhcmF3YXlkZXN0aW5hdGlvbnMtMjAwOC0wNS0yMA–

And remember, if you want to learn more about Casco Viejo (Casco Antiguo or San Felipe) don´t forget to visit us here!

May 20, 2008

Just meditating this morning… the first rains of the season brought great memories and seagulls

Filed under: Uncategorized — panamacascoviejo @ 11:48 pm
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Do you remember Jonathan Livingston Seagull? in Spanish it is called Juan Salvador Gaviota, the book from Richard Bach. It is one of those books you get to read by the same time you are reading The Little Prince and dreaming about flying to planets and protect beautiful but arrogant roses or learn about life through a feathered friend.

This morning it felt like a scene from Jonathan Livingston Seagull. The sky was a beautiful plomb color, the air felt almost chilli. Hundreds of seagulls flying over the roof catching all sorts of things for breakfast. A bit of rain still falling, but not enough to carry an umbrella. We call that “bajareque”. I stood there, just watching this silent, beautiful dance for a few minutes. It was really peaceful.

I had this literature teacher (almost out of the Dead Poets Society movie) that said that every day was beautiful no matter what and it had to be cherished. She would storm into the classroom on a gloomy day like this (which I naturally enjoy, but others may not) and ask us to write a poem in whatever style we might be studying at the moment about the “beautiful day” we were living at. The idea was to appreciate each day for itself as each day had an inherit beauty that would never be really repeated. I remembered her this morning, while thinking about the seagulls, Jonathan Livingston and how lucky I felt to be here, now.

May 19, 2008

Fundacion Calicanto: Protecting both the Architectural and Human Patrimony of Casco Antiguo

Filed under: Uncategorized — panamacascoviejo @ 11:25 pm
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Back in 1998 things where quite different in Casco Viejo. It was more Viejo than Casco. It was a fragile, run down, un protected site most people in Panama (government and not) had “written off”.  Back then, a group of passionate profesionals stood up and basically made it happen: brought the attention of UNESCO and worked until this endangered species was protected for life.

One of the most important axis of this petition was Fundacion Calicanto. For years, they worked very hard to propose a law to protect these wonderful buildings, creating the foundations for all the appreciation we see today.

Some years have passed and with the buildings protected, Calicanto has changed its focus towards the human patrimony of the Casco Antiguo. They have great programs we can all be part of. From trainning women in hotel skills to art courses for children and urban agriculture, their goal is to attack the roots of poverty through providing tools to the local population that will enable them to be part of the growth of their own neighborhood, and through this, revitalize themselves.

Our Casco Viejo is so small and helping is so easy. Making a real difference takes very little. We welcome you to join the Foundation and be part of their programs. You can volunteer time or resources… or both!

To contact Heriberto Trejos (Calicanto´s Director) , just write to: fcalicanto@gmail.com

To learn more about Casco Viejo, don´t forget to visit us at: www.arcoproperties.com .  Our company donates every year 10% of its income to charity in Casco Viejo, most of it to Fundacion Calicanto. Buying through Arco Properties truly makes a difference.

 

 

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