Buenos Aires Chinatown is also a very special place. Here you can see many fun things, Chinatown is also very popular, you can see very rich wooden items. Chinatown environment is also very good.
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Barrio Chino Highlights: Must-See Features and Attractions
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Buenos Aires Chinatown, established in the 1990s. It is located in the Belgrano area, and the Asians living in it make up only 0.5% of the population, but many people have Asian ancestry. There are many Chinese restaurants, shops and Buddhist temples here, and it is the main gathering area of Chinese in Argentina. The archway in Chinatown was donated by the Chinese government and was valued at $500,000.
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Barrio Chino Reviews: Insider Insights and Visitor Experiences
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Buenos Aires Chinatown is also a very special place. Here you can see many fun things, Chinatown is also very popular, you can see very rich wooden items. Chinatown environment is also very good.
Chinatown is always overcrowded on weekends, hard to park, but it is worth a visit. There are lots of Chinese and Japanese food, nice supermarkets and lots of shops selling cheap food. It was a good Sunday and free plan... Finally, it is easy to get to by public transport like train and bus..
The taste is good for Shanghainese taste, not spicy, the boss is good, the uncle with the oil head, the environment is very good, dinner is starting at 8 o'clock, eating two meals, there is free wifi, there are still quite a lot of Koreans and Chinese who come to eat, it is the best decorated Chinese restaurant I have eaten outside the United States. A friend said that Chunguang has also been photographed here. Very recommended, Argentina feels not as chaotic as the legend, but this area is a rich area. The security is good. After eating at night, I separated from my friends and walked back to the hotel alone. It was already ten o'clock.
Although there is a archway, Chinatown has no scale, there are several restaurants, and there are fewer real Chinese tastes, mostly improved Argentine tastes.
Chinatown, the farthest from Chinatown, the farthest from my hometown, I think of it as a little sad. It is located in Buenos Aires, known as "Paris of South America". It is also the location of Wang Jiawei's "Spring Lights". How ambiguous and sad.