Base to obelisk •
Luna Park, former
boxing ring, currently used for other sports and entertainment events • The back of the
Buenos Aires Central Post Office •
Comega Building • The downtown
microcentro banking district ("La City") • Pedestrian
Florida Street •
Teatro Gran Rex •
Teatro Opera • Many of the country's most important
theater companies. • Numerous traditional and historical restaurants, including
Argentine cuisine,
Spanish cuisine and
Italian cuisine. • The
Obelisk of Buenos Aires, at the intersection with
9 de Julio Avenue and the
Plaza de la República.
“The street that never sleeps” •
Heladería Cadore ice cream shop. •
Los Inmortales pizzeria, previously the
Café de los inmortales, ("Café of the immortals") with photos of the historic figures that visited it. •
Güerrín pizzeria •
Café La Paz, historic meeting place for
leftist activists and intellectuals •
Bar Ramos •
La Giralda Cafeteria, serving Spanish-style
hot chocolate and
churros •
El Gato Negro, historic café known for its spices •
General San Martín Theater, state theater which concentrated modern drama and ballet during the later half of the 20th century (as opposed to the
Colon Theatre) •
Teatro Broadway •
Paseo La Plaza, an
urban oasis with theaters, retail stores and restaurants •
Hernández,
Liberarte, and many other famous
bookstores
Off-Corrientes "Off-Corrientes" refers to the alternative playhouse scene, much of it literally concentrated on surrounding streets – although also widely distributed elsewhere in city neighbourhoods. The
Rojas Cultural Center of the
University of Buenos Aires, which promotes experimental art, and like-minded venues such as Gandhi and Liberarte (which blend bookstore and cultural centre) although catering to "off-Corrientes" crowds, are themselves located on Corrientes.
Once Further down, Corrientes traverses the
Balvanera borough (popularly known as
Once) the traditionally
Jewish neighborhood known for its many synagogues and the
wholesale and
retail sale of clothing (now home to merchants of other nationalities, including
Koreans,
Bolivians and
Peruvians).
Abasto Beyond Pueyrredón Avenue is the neighbourhood of
Abasto, named thus for holding the once cavernous
Art Deco Mercado de Abasto, the city's former central fruit and vegetable market (whose front faces Corrientes Avenue) and for being the home of
Carlos Gardel, Argentina most famous tango singer – popularly known as
"el morocho del Abasto" (the dark-haired from Abasto). In disrepair not many years ago, the neighborhood is slowly making a comeback, after local developer
IRSA turned the imposing old market into what is today, the city's largest shopping center.
Almagro Further down Corrientes is
Almagro, a calm residential neighborhood inhabited by apartment-dwellers, with the centre of activity at the intersection of Medrano and
Rivadavia Avenues.
Villa Crespo Villa Crespo is another traditionally Jewish neighborhood traversed by Corrientes Avenue. Unleavened bread is available for
passover, as are other seasonal specialties. It is in this area (formerly called "Triunvirato") that the greater part of the 1948
Leopoldo Marechal novel,
Adán Buenosayres, takes place; Marechal also wrote
Historia de la Calle Corrientes in 1937. The neighborhood is home to the
Atlanta football club. The
barrio was home to tango great
Osvaldo Pugliese.
Chacarita Corrientes ends at the
Estación Federico Lacroze train station next to
Parque Los Andes, where fairs were held until September 2005. Just west of the park is
La Chacarita Cemetery; the largest in Argentina. The cemetery is at times referred to colloquially and in tango lyrics as
La Quinta del Ñato (a
lunfardo term referring to a person's
last dwelling). File:Corrientes Buenos Aires at Night.jpg|Corrientes Avenue at night File:Teatro Broadway (Buenos Aires).JPG|The
Broadway Theatre. Corrientes Avenue has long been Buenos Aires'
Broadway. File:Buenos Aires - Avenida Corrientes - Abasto shopping.jpg|
Abasto shopping center. The city's wholesale market until 1984, investor
George Soros had it converted in 1998. File:Avenida Corrientes y Callao.jpg|Intersection with upscale
Callao Avenue ==Corrientes in tango music==