- Under the deep
blue sky of Brazil's central plateau, Brasνlia was built in two thousand
days to be the nation's focus of power. Inaugurated by ex-President
Juscelino Kubitschek on April 21st, 1960, the Brazilian capital is
the best known of the cities that were planned during the 20th century
and is a landmark in contemporary town planning and modern architecture.
The major players in the history of Brasνlia
were ex-President Juscelino Kubitschek, who launched the competition
to select the project for the new city and made huge efforts to see
it built during his term, the town planner Lucio Costa, winner of
the competition and creator of the Pilot Plan for Brasνlia and the
architect Oscar Niemeyer responsible for the city's main architectural
works.
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- Although it
has been in existence for just under forty years, Brasνlia is the
result of long-standing dreams. In 1823, its name had already been
put forward by Josι Bonifαcio to the General Constituent Assembly
of the Empire which was considering installing the Federal Capital
in the Brazilian interior. As well as being that visionary's dream,
the Brazilian capital was also inspired by the prophecy of a saint:
in 1883, Dom Joγo Bosco, a Salesian priest living in Turin, Italy,
revealed that a new civilization would emerge in the centre of Brazil,
somewhere between the 15th and 20th parallels.
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- The new Federal
District attracted workers from all the regions of Brazil; these were
the so-called "candangos" (labourers) who were responsible for the
building of the city. Twenty seven years after the inauguration of
Brasνlia, the efforts of the thousands of workers involved were recognized
by UNESCO when the city was declared as being a Heritage of Mankind
in 1987.
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- Situated in
the Centre-West region in an area ceded by the state of Goiαs, Brasνlia
is bordered by the Rivers Preto to the east and Descoberto to the
west, bringing together in an area of 5,822 km2, a population of 2
million inhabitants. Living together democratically in the city's
squared configuration are politicians of various persuasions, diplomats
from the most far-flung countries and civil servants of all ranks.
However, the fact of their living together does not remove the contrasts:
the satellite towns where thousands live are advancing in a disorderly
fashion around the Pilot Plan with its broad, tree-planted spaces,
the distant horizon, the north and south lakes and the succession
of arches and curves that form the architecture of the city.
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- The visitor
to Brasνlia cannot miss visiting the Esplanada dos Ministιrios and
the Praηa dos Trκs Poderes, location of National Congress (seat of
legislative power), the Planalto Palace (head quarters of executive
administration) and the Supreme Federal Court (judicial authority).
These are often the subject of picture postcards that together with
the Alvorada Palace, the Metropolitan Cathedral, the Palace of Justice
and the Itamaraty Palace, amongst other buildings, have become tourist
attractions.
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- As a complement
to the beauty of the architectural landscape, Brasνlia contains the
highest concentration per square metre of works by the best-known
Brazilian artists. This high density of works of art is on display
in the gardens designed by Burle Marx which lend beauty to the official
buildings; they take the form of statues by Ceschiatti, panels by
Athos Bulcγo, Di Cavalcanti's mural and Bruno Giorgio's sculptures
which adorn the public buildings. Centre stage for Brazil's major
political decisions, the Federal Capital also has 24 museums that
tell its own story and trace Brazil's course through history. Most
notable amongst these museums are the JK Memorial Museum, the Catetinho
Museum, the Museum of the Indian and the Museum of North-Eastern Arts
and Traditions.
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- Much more than
just a parade of palaces and works of art, Brasνlia is also a magical
discovery because of the beauty of the natural world that surrounds
it - the cerrado (scrublands) with its twisted trees, the hidden waterfalls,
grottoes, lakes, natural swimming pools, caverns and nature trails
that constantly surprise the visitor with their rare species of fauna
and flora. A total of 42% of the territory of the Federal District
is of environmental protection areas.
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- Amongst these
natural attractions is the Brasνlia National Park which includes the
basins of the Rivers Torto and Bananal with landscapes formed by open
country, scrublands and ciliary forests, as well as two mineral water
swimming-pools with excellent supporting services. It is an environmental
reserve with a museum containing local species of fauna and flora.
A little further away from the centre of the Federal Capital is the
Poηo Azul ("Blue Pool") with its clear blue waters forming a pool
contained in a rock of quartz; there is also the Mumunhas waterfall
with its natural swimming pools and rocky profile. Both of these are
situated in the Cafuringa Environmental Protection Area which contains
a total of nine caves and grottoes.
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