
Buenos Aires: Between European and Local Influence
Wide avenues. Elegant façades. Balconies with iron details. Buildings that resemble something you might expect to find in Paris or Madrid.

Wide avenues. Elegant façades. Balconies with iron details. Buildings that resemble something you might expect to find in Paris or Madrid.

Over time, it becomes clear that all of this — the diners, the motels, the highways — is connected.

Stalls appear on corners, along sidewalks, next to markets, outside metro stations. Some are permanent, others feel temporary, but all of them are part of the same rhythm.

You’ve seen it — on stages, in videos, in carefully framed performances where everything is precise, dramatic, and controlled.

Driving through the United States feels like entering a space where distance matters, but not in the way you expect.

It’s built on history, shaped by change, and defined by the way those elements continue to exist together.