Arví Park
The park can be reached from downtown Medellín via the metro station. Line L on the Medellín Metro goes to Arví Station, where there is a direct link to the metrocables that go to the park.
Development
The investment in this huge park, the largest of its kind in the country, is made entirely by regional state agencies, and it has achieved the feat of offering 12 square meters of parkland for each resident of Medellin, where before it was only 4 meters.
Thanks to the joint efforts of many companies Antioquia (EPM, the Metro de Medellín, Comfenalco, and several others) the park is now a reality.
Pre-Hispanic constructions
The park features sections of prehispanic construction, including antique buildings, water works, platforms, roads, gardens and ditches. It has trail called "Camino Cieza de León" or the "Prehispanic Trail", which can be more than 1,500 years old. It is very wide, built of stone, and is still well preserved some of the original parts.
Access via Metrocable
Among the most featured attractions of Arví Park is its access system, which is realized through a metrocable that is oriented towards ecological tourism.
Cable Arví, also called Metrocable Line L, is a section of the cable cars that connects Santo Domingo Savio station with Arví Ecotourism Park. It is the first tourist line of the Metro and the third by cable car System, and began commercial operation in February 2010.
References
- ^ Rough Guides (2 August 2012). The Rough Guide to South America On A Budget. Rough Guides. p. 481. ISBN 978-1-4053-9213-6.
- ^ Lonely Planet Reiseführer E-Book PDF Kolumbien. Lonely Planet. 1 February 2013. p. 207. ISBN 978-3-8297-8863-2.
- ^ Lonely Planet; Regis St Louis; Sandra Bao; Greg Benchwick; Alex Egerton; Bridget Gleeson; Beth Kohn; Carolyn McCarthy; Kevin Raub; Lucas Vidgen (1 July 2013). Lonely Planet South America on a shoestring. Lonely Planet Publications. p. 1327. ISBN 978-1-74321-661-3.
- ^ http://arvi.pacifica.co/ Archived 2014-03-26 at the Wayback Machine Arví Park website