fiogf49gjkf0d Arriving
in San JosAŠ is relatively stress-free: all the machinery to get you into town is well oiled and there is less opportunistic theft than at other Central American arrival points. San JosAŠ's compact, frenzied city centre is contained within about fifteen blocks running east-west, and four blocks north-south. To the west, the main approach is the four-lane
Paseo ColA?n
, lined with car-rental agencies, upscale hotels, and office buildings. The centre of town is bisected by the largely pedestrianized
Avenida Central
, a very pleasant place to stroll, while most commercial activity is concentrated in the streets between Avenida Central and Avenida 7. The nondescript
Plaza de la Cultura
is considered to be the centre of town.
Near the post office, in the streets immediately west of Calle 2 is the frantic and sometimes insalubrious
Mercado Central
area, four blocks west of which is the
Coca Cola bus station
. The centre is subdivided into little neighbourhoods (barrios) that flow seamlessly in and out of one another:
Barrios AmA?n
and
Otoya
, in the north, are the prettiest, lined with the genteel mansions of former coffee barons, while further outtoward San Pedro,
La CalifornAa, Escalante
and
Los Yoses
are home to comfortable houses, the odd embassy and the
Toruma
youth hostel.
Further east, Avenida Central widens, heading out to the studenty suburb of San Pedro, home of the cool, leafy campus of the
University of Costa Rica
(UCR), one of the finest in Central America. The three or four square blocks surrounding the university are lined with some of the liveliest bars and restaurants in San JosAŠ, though in most of them you'll feel more comfortable if you're under thirty.
Many of San JosAŠ's residents live in the
suburbs
surrounding the city - many shopping malls and embassies are located in the eastern suburb of
Curridabat
and nearby
EscazA?
, a mountain town to the north and west of San JosAŠ.
Other useful information
for tourists (each section contains more specific sub-sections):
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