Their goal was to represent our country at the Universal Exposition organized in the French capital.

The building belongs to the housing plans created by the Argentine Catholic Popular Union.

This is a housing complex built by the Municipality of the City of Buenos Aires that is about to celebrate its 100th anniversary (it was inaugurated in 1929). It is a microcosm in the middle of Chacarita, comprising 12 buildings with a total of 157 apartments, a hall, a theater, a library and newspaper archive, walkways, patios, and interior gardens for the common use of its residents.

It's the second newest neighborhood, after Puerto Madero, and the last to be formally declared as such. It has many unique features in its street layout and street names. Its streets are so narrow that buses don't run and there aren't many trees. But social and sporting life is encouraged.

The Barolo Palace (also called Barolo Passage or Barolo Gallery) is an office building located on Avenida de Mayo, in the Monserrat neighborhood, in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

It's a three-block area in Barracas, between Brandsen and Avenida Suárez. The artist Marino Santa María transformed the facades of 40 houses.

The Chinatown of Buenos Aires was defined as such thanks to a wave of immigration during the 1980s mainly from Taiwan.

It has been called the mirror street because it is probably the only thoroughfare in Buenos Aires with an absolutely symmetrical appearance in its buildings on both sides.