Finally. A peaceful nights rest.
Our first night in Sao
Paulo was much quieter than Rio, and even quieter than the little town of
Paraty. Fresh and alert – our first day in Sao Paulo we decide to take in
their famous Ibirapuera Park, as we’d planned 2 walking tours for the following
2 days. A short walk from our hotel, we arrive at Ibirapuera amidst the
glorious sunshine.
Surprisingly, Sao Paulo was even hotter than Rio, reaching
temperatures of 37°C, with little wind. Ibirapuera was a lovely large, lush
park, which I found to resemble Hyde Park in London. Within the gated grounds
we found a planetarium (closed), a Latin America History Museum (seemingly in
all Portuguese), and a large adventure playground (we couldn't resist). With a
small river running through the park – we watched all the water fowl
swimming in the shallows, including the native ‘Rio’s, which were crane-like
birds.
Exiting the park, we headed toward the affluent neighbourhood of Jardins Europa and Paulistano – a complete change from the
neighbourhoods of Rio. Here there were large, detached houses, with long front
drives and gated surroundings. Grand, overhanging trees and verdant bushes
lined the side walks, creating a quiet, unpolluted atmosphere – far removed from
the dusty brown, broken streets of Rio. Strolling through Jardins we came
across ritzy car dealerships – Maserati, Rolls-Royce, Aston Martin – before we
discovered a massive, boat shaped building – which only later were we told, was
the ‘Unique Hotel’, proffering some of the best views of down town Sao Paulo. Oh
well.
We walked further and further through the somewhat winding somewhat structured streets – discovering more oddities like the omnipresent ‘street art’ found ubiquitously throughout Sao Paulo - as well as the Igreja Nossa Senhora do Brasil church – which was apparently the most sought after wedding venue in Sao Paulo – with bookings required 2 years in advance.
We walked further and further through the somewhat winding somewhat structured streets – discovering more oddities like the omnipresent ‘street art’ found ubiquitously throughout Sao Paulo - as well as the Igreja Nossa Senhora do Brasil church – which was apparently the most sought after wedding venue in Sao Paulo – with bookings required 2 years in advance.
With the day-light waning, we decided to visit the
famous Sala Sao Paulo – a symphony hall renowned for some of the best acoustics
in the world. We took a bus for 30 minutes and arrived at Sala – which
evidently is a diamond in the rough – as the neighbourhood surrounding the
venue was filled with closed down buildings, rough looking shops, and many
homeless. The symphony hall used to be a grand train station in its glory years
– and is today still impressive in its size and stature. We were fortunate to get
tickets to see Paul Lewis that night – where he serenaded us to the dulcet
tones of Schumann and Liszt. After a blissful hour-and-a-half piano concerto,
and getting our tickets signed by the man himself, we grabbed a taxi home and
called it a night, ready for our full day of tourism tomorrow.
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