El Legado del Getsemanicense

Views: 1707

¡Welcome to the neighborhood of a thousand stories!

Getsemaní, a neighborhood steeped in history, culture, and tradition. Let yourself be surprised by the magic and anecdotes that accompany each of these streets, which have marked the lives of its inhabitants for many years.

Today we want you to get to know the memory of the neighborhood of resistance, with vibrant and colorful spaces, love for its people, and joy in every corner.

El legado del Getsemanicense
Calle del Arsenal Calle Larga Calle San Juan Calle San Antonio Calle de la Aguada Calle de las Palmas Calle de las Chancletas Calle del Pozo Callejón Angosto Callejón Ancho Calle del Carretero Calle Lomba Calle del Espiritu Santo Calle de la Media Luna Calle de Guerrero Calle de la Magdalena Calle Tripita y Media Calle San Andrés Calle Pacoa y Concolón Calle de las Maravillas Calle de la Sierpe Calle de las Tortugas Avenida Pedregal Plaza de la trinidad Parque del Centenario Proyecto San Francisco Plaza del Pozo Avenida del Centenario Centro de Convenciones Avenida Daniel Lemaitre

Calle del Arsenal

Calle del Arsenal

Talking about Arsenal Street necessarily means talking about the port, the docks, the sandbank, the wall, the public market and many other things (...)

Learn more

Calle Larga

Calle Larga

A whole book could be written about Larga Street. It has more than four centuries of history and together with Media Luna Street, they were the basis for the layout of the streets of Getsemaní (...)

Learn more

Calle San Juan

Calle San Juan

San Juan Evangelista Street is one of the few that still retains its colonial name. When it was paved around 1967, many items such as weapons and pellets were found during excavation work (...)

Learn more

Calle San Antonio

Calle San Antonio

A memory in a scent. This is how the older people in the neighborhood remember San Antonio Street: the carts of pellets that left the Imperial Bakery at four in the morning to supply so many places in the city (...)

Learn more

Calle de la Aguada

Calle de la Aguada

The name of the street is clear: at the end, near the bay of Las Ánimas, was the waterhole of the Navy (...)

Learn more

Calle de las Palmas

Calle de las Palmas

Its full name is Calle Nuestra Señora de las Palmas Benditas because, it is said, its first residents were very devoted to that devotion of the Virgin Mary (...)

Learn more

Calle de las Chancletas

Calle de las Chancletas

It is said that during colonial times, fishermen left their wet flip-flops on the sidewalk to dry in the sun while they worked (...)

Learn more

Calle del Pozo

Calle del Pozo

Pozo Street has almost as much history as the neighborhood. From its small square, the lancers marched towards the center in 1811 to tip the balance in favor of declaring total independence from Spain (...)

Learn more

Callejón Angosto

Callejón Angosto

 One of the streets with the highest number of residents per square meter, here you can experience neighborhood life like no other (...)

Learn more

Callejón Ancho

Callejón Ancho

Together with the Angosto alley, they are among the blocks with the most neighborhood life in Getsemaní (...)

Learn more

Calle del Carretero

Calle del Carrtero

What a street like Carretero to be in the heart of Getsemaní! Not only because it leads to the Plaza de la Trinidad, but also because of the neighbors and people who lived there before and who still live there (...)

Learn more

Calle Lomba

Calle Lomba

Little is known about the name. It comes from the Colony and traces point to the region of León, in present-day Spain (...)

Learn more

Calle del Espiritu Santo

Calle del Espíritu Santo

The origin of this street dates back to 1603, when the Order of Saint John of God created a hospital called the Holy Spirit, on land adjacent to the current Hermitage of San Roque (...)

Learn more

Calle de la Media Luna

Calle de la Media Luna

Talking about Media Luna Street is placing ourselves in a reference par excellence that the Getsemaní neighborhood has (...)

Learn more

Calle de Guerrero

Calle de Guerrero

We must begin by correcting a misunderstanding: it is not Guerrero Street, but Guerrero Street (...)

Learn more

Calle de la Magdalena

Calle de la Magdalena

The presence of the Obra Pía, built between 1640 and 1650, has gravitated around this street. It occupies a good part of the block and its front faces Media Luna Street (...)

Learn more

Calle Tripita y Media

Calle Tripita y Media

This short street has a very long history. From being one of the least valued streets, it became a large neighbourhood centre and now, a commercial and transit hub between the Centre and the rest of Getsemaní (...)

Learn more

Calle San Andrés

Calle San Andrés

It is one of the few that still maintains a name of Catholic origin, as did almost all the streets and landmarks in cities founded by Spaniards (...)

Learn more

Calle Pacoa y Concolón

Calles Pacoa y Concolón

Both streets have had various names, almost all of them more common or 'formal', so to speak. But those that have survived are the popular ones, which are perhaps signs of a modest origin. (...)

 Learn more

Calle de las Maravillas

Calle de las Maravillas

Popularly, it was also called the street of the Goats, because there was always someone who said something or something happened to a neighbor and everyone came out to defend him (...)

Learn more

Calle de la Sierpe

Calle de la Sierpe

There is no consensus on the origin of its name. Sierpe means “snake” in old Spanish and it is one of the few streets that has kept its original name since the Colonial period (...)

Learn more

Calle de las Tortugas

Calle de las Tortugas

On Turtle Street, the houses were attached to the San Anastasio Canal. Its inhabitants placed mangrove stakes with which they kept confined the four species of turtles that the fishermen brought from other places through the Juan Angola Canal (...)

Learn more

Avenida Pedregal

Avenida el Pedregal

Many people remember that the monument to the Botas Viejas was originally erected there. Today it is the place where pelota de trapo, the traditional sport of the neighbourhood, is played.

Learn more

Plaza de la trinidad

The name Plaza de la Trinidad was given to it in 1643, the year in which the church was completed.

Source: (NotiCartagena)

Parque del Centenario

Its design is based on a French-style park; with an almost quadrangular shape, the park is surrounded by a perimeter fence and eight entrances decorated with an arch.

Source: (El Universal Newspaper)

Proyecto San Francisco

San Francisco

The arrival of the Hotel San Francisco, operated by Four Seasons, allows Getsemaní to open up to luxury tourism, elevating Cartagena's name as a world-class tourist destination.

Source: (Iriante, 2022)

Learn more

Plaza del Pozo

This square was the place where the people gathered to celebrate popular festivals, in which floats were used and the most beautiful girls paraded.

Source: NotiCartagena

Avenida del Centenario

Avenida Centenario

The two streets that border Centenario Park between Media Luna and the old San Felipe hotel have many stories to tell. Today they are an avenue and, on the park side, an informal parking lot and a taxi station.(...)

Learn more

Centro de Convenciones

The Cartagena de Indias Convention Center was created as a project by the Ministry of Commerce, Industry and Tourism in 1978, as a mechanism to generate regional development hubs through the implementation of broad-based activities, such as congresses, events and conventions. It was designed by the firm Esguerra, Sáenz and Samper Ltda. and built by the Cartagena firm Civilco.

Source: Convention Center - Cartagena de Indias

Avenida Daniel Lemaitre

Avenida Daniel Lemaitre

It was the last flank of the neighborhood to be closed. It was so recently that many Getsemaní residents remember it as the baseball and soccer field of their childhood. (...)

Learn more

Getsemaní is your neighborhood, it's mine, it's ours!

en_USEN