Historic center , built between 1535 and 1650. Quito has the largest, least-altered, and best-preserved historic center in
the Americas.
El Gran Desfile de Mariscal (the Great Parade of Mariscal) is held in this area during Quito's Foundation Festivities (
Fiestas de Quito) in early December.
Plaza Foch (La Zona) This area is considered to be the
zona rosa of the city. It hosts various night clubs and bars, and has a great night vibe, complete with street vendors selling gum, cigarettes and other small items. Plaza Foch is heavily frequented from Thursday to Saturday, and draws tourists from all over the world. For this reason, prices for liquor, beer and food are expensive compared to other places in Quito. Due to its small driveways and big sidewalks, it is mostly a pedestrian area.
Parks Metropolitano The Guanguiltagua Metropolitan Park (Parque Metropolitano "Guanguiltagua") is the largest urban park in South America at (as reference, New York's
Central Park is ). The park is in northern Quito, on the hill of
Bellavista behind
Estadio Olímpico Atahualpa. The park is suited for mountain biking, walking, and running. Most of it is
eucalyptus forest with trails, but there also are numerous sculptures on display. The park has four sites that can be used for picnics or barbecues, and the eastern section has a view of
Cotopaxi,
Antisana, and the
Guayllabamba river basin.
Bicentenario Parque Bicentenario is the second-largest urban park in Quito (surpassed only by the Parque Metropolitano), located in the site of the
Old Mariscal Sucre International Airport. It was inaugurated on 27 April 2013. This park has , and is above mean sea level. The former runway has been converted into recreational space with lanes painted for bicycles and pedestrians. There are play structures and games for children. As well, there is outdoor exercise equipment for adults. The park contains a man-made pond and more than one thousand trees, many newly planted. The park also hosts cultural exhibits and outdoor concerts.
La Carolina next to Amazonas Avenue
La Carolina is a 165.5-acre (670,000 m2) park in the center of the Quito main business area, bordered by Av. Río Amazonas, Av. de los Shyris, Av. Naciones Unidas, Av. Eloy Alfaro, and Av. de la República. This park started from the expropriation of the farm La Carolina in 1939. The design of the park was made by the Dirección Metropolitana de Planificación Territorial (DMPT). At the south of the park, the Cruz del Papa (Pope's Cross) was erected on the site where
Pope John Paul II headed a great mass during his visit to Ecuador in 1985.
El Ejido El Ejido is the fourth-largest park of Quito (after Metropolitan, Bicentenario and La Carolina), and it divides the old part of the city from the modern one. This park is known for handicrafts available for sale every Saturday and Sunday, with all pricing subject to negotiation (that is, haggling). Local painters sell copies of paintings by
Oswaldo Guayasamín,
Eduardo Kingman, and
Gonzalo Endara Crow.
Otavaleños sell traditional sweaters,
ponchos, carpets, and jewelry.
Guápulo Set on the side on a cliff with González Suárez Street, one of the most famous in Quito and to the other side the valley and further in the distance, the Amazon Jungle.
Guápulo is a district of Quito, Ecuador, also called an electoral parish (
parroquia electoral urbana). The parish was established as a result of the October 2004 political elections when the city was divided into 19 urban electoral parishes. Set behind Hotel Quito, the neighborhood of Guápulo runs down the winding Camino de Orellana, from Av. González Suárez to Calle de los Conquistadores, the main road out of Quito and to the neighboring suburbs. Often considered an artsy, bohemian neighborhood of Quito, Guápulo is home to many local artists and a couple of hippy cafés/bars. Every year on 7 September the Guapuleños honor their neighborhood with the Fiestas de Guápulo, a fantastic celebration complete with costumes, parade, food, drink, song, dance, and fireworks.
La Alameda The long triangular La Alameda is at the beginning of street Guayaquil, where the historic center begins. It has an impressive monument of
Simón Bolívar at the apex. There are several other interesting monuments in this park. In the center of the park is the Quito Observatory, which was opened by President García Moreno in 1873. It is used for both meteorology and astronomy. At the north end of the park are two ornamental lakes, where rowboats can be rented.
La Floresta One of the most iconic neighborhoods in the city, with an important cultural and gastronomic offer. The neighborhood has local and international restaurants, a cinema, small theaters, cafes, bars, museums and coworking spaces. File:Puerta de La Circasiana.jpg|La Circasiana door, currently at the north end of El Ejido park. Originally the entrance door to the
Circasiana Palace in La Mariscal neighborhood. File:OBSERVATORIO ASTRONÓMICO DE QUITO.JPG|Astronomic observatory in the Alameda park File:Teatro Nacional Sucre.JPG|Sucre National Theatre
TeleferiQo The Aerial tramway Station at Cruz Loma (part of the Pichincha mountain complex at about ). Since July 2005, Quito has had an
aerial tramway, known as the "Telefériqo", from the city center to the hill known as Cruz Loma on the east side of the Pichincha volcano. The ride takes visitors to an elevation of about . There are also trails for hiking and areas where pictures can be taken of Quito. Because of the increased elevation and the wind on the mountain, it is considerably cooler. Besides the aerial tramway to Cruz Loma, the
Telefériqo as a whole is a visitor center that includes an amusement park (
Vulqano Park), fine-dining restaurants, Go Karts, Paint Ball, shopping malls, an extensive food court, and other attractions.
Outside the city La
Mitad del Mundo (the middle of the world) is a small village administered by the prefecture of the province of Pichincha, north of Quito. It has since been determined, with the use of
Global Positioning System technology, that the actual equator is some north of the monument area. Nearby is the Intiñan Solar Museum, which may be closer to the true equator. The Intiñan Solar Museum provides a demonstration which purports to show the
Coriolis force causing a clockwise rotation of sink water a few meters south of the equator and a counterclockwise rotation a few meters north, but many scientific sources claim that this is implausible.
Pululahua Geobotanical Reserve, located a few miles northwest from La Mitad del Mundo, contains the Pululahua volcano, whose
caldera (crater) is visible from a spot easily accessible by car. It is believed to be one of only a few in the world with human inhabitants. Quito Zoo, located near the rural parish of
Guayllabamba, about outside Quito, has the biggest collection of native fauna in Ecuador, including several kinds of animals that are sometimes targeted in Ecuador in the illegal fur trade. The Zoo works in conservation and education in Ecuador and has successfully bred the endangered Andean condor.
Maquipucuna Reserve is in Quito's rural parish of Nanegal. This 14,000 acre high biodiversity rainforest and cloud forest reserve protects over 1966 species of plants (10% of Ecuador's plant diversity) and close to 400 bird species. This reserve, which is surrounded by a 34,000 acre protected forest, was declared an IBA (Important Bird Area) in 2005 and is the core of the conservation corridor for the
spectacled bear (Andean bear) declared in 2013. The area has an ecolodge located in the northern end of the Reserve where the spectacled bear can be sighted for about two months every year. Some of the other nearby natural attractions are: •
Maquipucuna Reserve Conservation, community projects, bird watching, spectacled bear watching •
Bellavista Cloud Forest Reserve conservation and bird watching lodge •
Cayambe – Coca Ecological Reserve • Papallacta & Oyacachi thermal springs •
Cotopaxi National Park •
Mindo Nambillo cloud forest •
Illiniza volcano •
Pasochoa Wildlife Refuge •
Pichincha volcano with its peaks Wawa Pichincha and Ruku Pichincha
Culture Quito is a city with a mix of modern-day and traditional culture. There is a large
Catholic presence in Quito; most notably, Quito observes
Holy Week with a series of ceremonies and rituals that begin on
Palm Sunday. At noon on
Good Friday, the March of the Penitents proceeds from the
Church of San Francisco. ==Education==