Panama Casco Viejo

October 23, 2009

Cinta Costera´s new extention benefits Casco Viejo, Panama

Filed under: Uncategorized — panamacascoviejo @ 3:55 pm

Everyone talked about it, no one knew whether the project left behind by Martin Torrijos would be continued. However, Ricardo Martinelli´s Presidential term has actually started to go for it: extending the current Cinta Costera to Casco Viejo.

The project itself had been controversial. Many feared the design wouldn´t be in compliance with the UNESCO World Heritage regulations. However, the government seemed to have worked it out and had started to make the first movements in the area bringing materials to the site. Yesterday, the plans where made public.  The extention would add not only an easier connection through two new lines but also 120 underground parkings and a brand new multipurpose pier. An outdoors theatre, basketball fields and green areas.

Cinta Costera extension

June 16, 2009

Panama Growth at 2.5% during 2009

Filed under: Uncategorized — panamacascoviejo @ 1:17 pm
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A bit under the estimated 3% but definately better than other countries in Latin America (Mexico is at -8.2% according to La Prensa, Costa Rica at -4.8%), Panama seems to be holding its ground during this difficult period. Hope is on the way: Raúl Moreira from the Colegio de Economistas de Panama told La Prensa that there can still be an important recovery through the Colon Free Trade Zone on the second half of the year.

The country continues to receive foreign investors. According to a note at Martes Financiero, the Colombian company Ferrasa S.A. is expanding operations. They acquired the steel plant Aceros Transformados Panama and converted it into a distribution center, an investment of 10 million dollars. According to Juan Fernando Botero, the company´s marketing director, Panama would serve as a hub, an entrance door into Central America. They would also participate in the Panama Canal expansion.

March 10, 2009

Feminas at Casco Viejo!

This post is only for women with good sense of humor!

In celebration of Women´s Day (or week… or should we make it a year?) a friend just sent me one of these forwards with feminist jokes (which I happened to enjoy a lot by the way!)  to give a laugh at the eternal extremes of the “battle of the sexes”. In Casco Viejo, however, we celebrated with a significant event. Probably for the first time (at least since I´ve been here) an event gathered women artists to show their craft. It took place last Friday at La Casona, and it showed photography, dance, handcrafts, dsc01143painting and performance.  A big congratulations to Blanca and Yiyi for organizing it!

And by the way, here are some of the jokes I enjoyed…. don´t feel offended! smile!

One day my housework-challenged husband decided to wash his
> Sweat-
> Shirt. Seconds after he stepped into the laundry room, he shouted to
> me, ‘What setting do I use on the washing machine?’
> ‘It depends,’ I replied. ‘What does it say on your shirt?’
> He yelled back, ‘ Liverpool ‘
> And they say blondes are dumb…

_ .._

> ‘It’s just too hot to wear clothes today,’ Jack says as he stepped out
> of the shower, ‘honey, what do you think the neighbours would think if
> I mowed the lawn like this?’
> ‘Probably that I married you for your money,’ she replied.

October 6, 2008

Travel Panama: Jazz Fest 2009 at Casco Viejo!

Panama, Casco Viejo – Casco Antiguo, San Felipe

The Event:

The dates are set: the 6th edition of the Panama Jazz Fest to be held in 2009 will take place from January 12th to the 17th. This mega music event is a wonderful moment to enjoy the best of Panama´s culture, which is more Caribbean than Central America (as geography might suggest. Panama´s flavor is more like Cuba than Costa Rica, for example) along with international jazz starts.  Paralel to the concert, the Fundacion Danilo Perez also runs workshops and gives music scholarships to Panamanian and latin american students to study in highly recognized music schools like the New England Conservatory, Berklee College of Music and the Conservatorio de Puerto Rico.  Even more, the Foundation is working hard to found its own music school in Panama. Where? …. in Casco Antiguo! of course. But where in Casco Viejo? hum…. I think I´ll save that for my next posting…. stay tuned!

If you are interested in participating at the auditions or know more about the festival, please go to their official website. You´ll find application documents and other details. You´ll find also ways to volunteer in the Foundation.

Where to Stay During the Panama Jazz Fest:

If you are interested to travel for those dates, make your reservations in advance! there is nothing like staying in Casco Antiguo, where you can walk to the concerts and events and then just crawl back to bed. Here are your options for acomodations (hotels and private apartments on short term rentals) in Casco Viejo:

The Canal House: beautiful 3 room hotel. Can sleep a group of 8. The best is to rent the entire house! steps away from where the main closing concert will be.

Café de Asis: info@arcoproperties.com. Short term rental apartment on Plaza Bolivar. Few steps away from the National theatre.

Los 4 Tulipanes: short term rental apartments.

Luna´s Castle :   beautiful building and comfortable backpackers. Water view balconies!

Hostal San Felipe:  well located, backpackers.

Where to eat? what else is there?

Check out my Restaurants and Bars review HERE.

August 8, 2008

Panama News: Bay Cleaning Project has been executed in 21%

Filed under: Uncategorized — panamacascoviejo @ 2:39 pm

 Panama, Casco Viejo
Casco Antiguo, San Felipe

While everybody is excited today about Beijing´s dramatic opening for the Olimpics (which, by the way, where simply amazing! wao), another bright sun shined this morning over the newspaper as they announced the bay cleaning project has been completed so far in 21%, with an investment of 35 million dollars so far. According to the note at La Prensa, they are currently working at the collectors at the main city rivers (Juan Díaz, Matías Hernandez, Rio Abajo, Monte Oscuro, Espavé and others). And the most exciting part is that they expect the project to be 90% completed by the ends of 2008, which would represent a total investment of $200 million dollars.

Why am I so excited? because we have waited almost 50 years for this to happen. Meaning, the city was never planned for its growth and now we finally had the good sense to fix the problem, plus create a nice park along the coast to cover all the pipes (Cinta Costera). As I´ve posted before, this will change the city and especially Casco Viejo profoundly. Panamanians lost the habit of going to the beach right in front of the city because it was contaminated. If everything goes well, in less than 8 years, we´ll be able to run around in bikinis and sunbathe right outside our doors without having to go to the country side.

For Casco Viejo this is huge, as we already have sand beach and although locals anyways bathe here and even surf a small wave at the point of Las Bovedas, I wouldn´t call it exactly the cleanest thing you could ever do.  So there you go, even if the fireworks and amazing artists at the Olimpics in Beijing are today´s main event, I would say this one contributes more to my personal happiness and trully raises Panama´s lifestyle for the long term.

 

Casco Viejo Beach Wedding

August 5, 2008

Panama New Restaurant: Indigo opens at Casco Viejo

 

Casco Antiguo, San Felipe

A new business has opened in Casco Antiguo! It is called “Indigo”, an oriental-mediterranean fusion restaurant between 2nd and 3rd street in Central Avenue. Just by the side of the Tourism Police and next to the restaurant Manolo Caracol. They are still on their soft opening week, but Clara and I had the best passion fruit ceviche and some fantastic Greek empanadas with goat cheese and a sundried tomato sweet sauce. The ambiance is mostly Indian mixed with Moroccan, the decoration has lounge spaces to relax, and a bar area and more formal seating if you want to have dinner.

But the best spot is the back patio. Al fresco dinning with the possibility to extend into the Arco Chato ruins, as it has a door connecting the patio with the historical monument. They can arrange for dinners and small private events at the back of Arco Chato.

Talking to Fernando and Katherine, two of the owners of the restaurant, they tell us they can host seating dinners up to 75 people. Cocktails, they can manage so far about a 115. But being able to offer the charm of Arco Chato and the convenience of indoor seating for an event… priceless!

Contact them at: 228-1822  indigo@indigopanama.com

July 8, 2008

Panama Business: E Commerce Start Up in Panama

Filed under: Know Panama, Uncategorized — panamacascoviejo @ 7:04 pm
Tags: , ,

Panama, Casco Viejo
Casco Antiguo, San Felipe

Well, I can´t say it is a new concept. Panama is probably at least 20 years late on this one, but that doubles the reason to celebrate. Finally (and I suspect some companies where already doing it) the government decided to create a law to be able to do commerce online (meaning doing transactions and taking credit cards online). As someone once said: “a small step for a man, a big step for mankind”…

Curiously enough, some years ago a few government visionaries started the process of transforming all physical files in their institutions into digital files. Suddenly, costs where less and efficiency was up to the roof for “government” standards. Of course, you would say… hey, I could have told them that. But you know, it is the government. Finally they are catching up. So they got all excited about it, and the next thing you know there are all sorts of things like websites for each institution with most or at least some of the forms you need to process stuff, and you can even declare your rent online (www.dgi.gob.pa).  They claim you can even start to process your visa online, although if you are reading this… please, get a good lawyer (www.pasaporteordinario.gob.pa ).

At www.panamaemprende.gob.pa you can open a company. If you have requested a work permit you are supposed to be able to follow up your status at www.mitradel.gob.pa, and believe it or not you can even check on what the government is buying at www.panamacompra.gob.pa. This is a huge improvement for the government, especially with the many complaints on lack of transparency and corruption. But what about the private sector?

Panama bursts with websites. All of them offering information, but they don´t tend to be able to do transactions in them. Some companies found ways to “loop” by being able to take your request and charge you then by phone. You are able to order all your groceries at the online Riba Smith supermarket, but you can´t pay online. The bookstore Exedra Books will take your order and deliver to wherever you are, but they can´t charge you through their website. Until now.

Although notice banks have been using online commerce for a long time now. Everyone except Banco Nacional which still has a shamefull archaic method. You can´t even check your account online. You have to physically go to one of their agencies, do a huge line and finally talk to an agent which will look at you really nasty if your bank account was open in Chiriqui but you are requesting  your status printed at the Panama agency. I´ve personally been through this.  They actually require you to request it in writting. Really…  as ridiculous as this sounds to you, this is how things used to work before internet. Shame they haven´t realized that was at least 30 years ago.

But one of the main achievements of the law is to recognize and have a protocol for e signatures. Airlines like Copa has been doing business online for a long time now, although I suspect they use a US website and system since they were connected to Continental Airlines until a while ago.

One of the big private companies that has jumped in first is El Rey, one of Panama´s main supermarket chains. They are implementing a system for all their providers, which is a complicated net of really huge companies and Aunt Maria home businesses. The challenge is to get everyone on the same page so the communication can actually get done. Because El Rey has posts all throughout the country, providing equipment and trainning to every provider will be a crazy process, but will force a big part of the country to jump into the new technology fast. And once you are there, you become an addict, as we all know.

The one handicap of all this is that most websites are still in spanish, except the tourism and real estate websites. So much to get done!

If you would like to know more about the E commerce law, you can download it here: http://www.asamblea.gob.pa/APPS/LEGISPAN/PDF_NORMAS/2000/2004/2004_537_1641.PDF

and about e signatures:

http://www.asamblea.gob.pa/APPS/LEGISPAN/PDF_NORMAS/2000/2001/2001_301_7341.PDF

July 4, 2008

Panama Art: Folk Art at Casco Viejo: Paluula´s Feathers

Filed under: Uncategorized — panamacascoviejo @ 4:27 pm

Panama, Casco Antiguo
Casco Viejo, San Felipe



Paluula’s Feathers Painting at Casco Viejo

Blog Contribution by Robert (Bob) Hardin
Pictures by Iranovy Grenald

He paints feathers.   Beautifully.   Delicately. 

    Arguably Casco Viejo’s most popular artist with tourists, Hercilo Tejada–whose Kuna Indian name is Paluuala (pronounced Paw-WAL-ah)–has another talent, too.

      He plays beautiful music on the tiny clay ocarinas on which he also paints Kuna designs.   His haunting rendition of La Vie en Rose has entranced countless visitors at the beginning of Avenida Central parking lot adjacent to the Government Building you will see a nice Plaza where Paluuala is working with beautiful crafts and paintings.      

       The amazing performance is his Pied Piper’s call to look at his display of feathers.   Most days tourists gather to watch his concentration as he paints feathers from the Darien Provence which he keeps in a small bag alongside his chair.   Few would guess that this artist master has been at it for only three years.

        Painting and music are Kuna talents, and Paluuala (“Spirit of the Living Tree”) learned from family members in the San Blas, though he now lives in a Kuna neighborhood near the Bridge of the Americas. 

 
        A feather from various Darien birds including ducks will take up to an hour to paint in oil, and depending on size, sell for $5 to $15, mounted and ready for framing.   “It took a lot of practice,” he recalls the learning curve.   He started with designs similar to those on molas, but found that”designs from nature were more popular.”

 
         The ocarinas are mostly meant to be displayed as curiosities back home, though he says anyone can learn to play as beautifully as he does.  It ”takes a lot of practice” too.

 

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
Tags: , , , , ,
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. 
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