Miriam

Wherever you travel, wherever you roam, you’ll never find what you left behind: your loved ones and your home.

My old house February 29, 2008

Filed under: mexico — mitzyg @ 2:57 pm
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Old, because I’ve moved!! Yay.

Queretaro map

As you can see above, the red arrow shows my old house, on a street called 16 de septiembre in the old centre. The purple arrow shows my work (both of these were on the other map, marked by green dots) on Bernardo Quintana. The blue arrow shows my new place! I now live in a neighborhood called Carretas. It’s one of the first suburbs of Queretaro and it’s quite a ritzy, old money type place. It’s very green and leafy and shady and there’s a beautiful park in the center that is actually clean. I think it might be one of the first truly clean places I’ve seen in Qro.

But before we close the chapter on my old apartment, I wanted to share some pictures of the street where I lived for five months. Here’s a link to the pictures on Flickr (you don’t need an account to view them; you can click on each picture to see a larger version).

 

Queretaro: a Guided Tour February 6, 2008

Filed under: mexico — mitzyg @ 3:00 pm
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This is the start of a (hopefully semi) regular feature here: a tour of my city through maps and photos, so you can see where I live and where I go and the things I see. Today is simple. Only a map of the centre and a general orientation of the city.

Queretaro large map with highlighted streets

Ok, so let’s start with the main streets. In purple, we have 5 de Febrero, a large highway. This is the main highway that goes north out of the city. The street in red is another huge divided highway called Bernardo Quintana. The northern part of B Quintana has a bunch of big box stores and shopping malls. The highway on the bottom in green is called the Autopista. It’s the main road east and west out of the city. The road in yellow is Zaragoza, but east towards where it meets B Quintana it becomes Los Arcos, so called because that’s where the famous aqueduct is. The road (unhighlighted) between Zaragoza and the Autopista is Constituyentes. Zaragoza and Constituyentes are large streets, but only four or six lanes at most and with crosswalks (5 de Febrero and B Quintana only have pedestrian bridges overhead; it would be impossible to use a crosswalk on these highways). The blue line is a small highway (four lanes at most) called Universidad. It runs along the Queretaro River.

The whole area bounded by the highlighted streets is older Queretaro. The city is much much bigger than this, but has only grown so big in the last twenty years or so. In the 70s, this area was the city.

The area in between the purple, blue, yellow, and red is the historical center, a UNESCO world heritage site. This is where I live. In fact, I’ve marked my apartment with a big green dot. My work (also marked with a big green dot) is directly off the big highway Bernardo Quintana, but luckily there’s a pedestrian bridge located right in front of it which takes me from my side of the highway to the east side. To give you a sense of distance, it takes me 35 minutes to walk from my house to work and about an hour to walk from my house to the intersection of 5 de Febrero and Universidad (purple and blue).

Okay, so there’s a brief overview of my city. Next installment, I’ll have some pictures to show you some of the major features. Also, please let me know if this is totally incomprehensible or if you’re able to understand the directions. Hopefully, all these streets and things will have more meaning when I have time to add pictures.