[go: up one dir, main page]

Flamengo Park, also known as Aterro do Flamengo, Eduardo Gomes Park, and Aterro do Brigadeiro Eduardo Gomes, is the largest public park and recreation area within the city of Rio de Janeiro, in eastern Brazil, and the largest urban seaside park in the world. [1]

Flamengo Park
Aterro do Flamengo
Eduardo Gomes Park
Aterro do Flamengo at night
Map
TypeUrban park
LocationRio de Janeiro
Area296 acres (120 ha)
Created1965
Operated byFundação Parques e Jardins
OpenAll year
Infante Dom Henrique Avenue
Eduardo Gomes Park in 2018.

The park is located along Guanabara Bay, in the Flamengo neighborhood of the city, between Downtown Rio and Copacabana.

Design

edit

Flamengo Park was envisioned by Lota de Macedo Soares, while conceived and designed by Affonso Eduardo Reidy with Modernist park gardens and civic landscapes designed by world-renowned landscape designer and artist Roberto Burle Marx. The 296 acres (120 ha) park was completed in 1965.

Features

edit

Flamengo Park is the location of the Rio de Janeiro Museum of Modern Art, the Carmen Miranda Museum, and the Monument to the Dead of World War II with Modernist memorial sculptures.

Sports

edit

Flamengo Park has a strong sports tradition, with many different outdoor recreational facilities available.

Various marathons in the city start and finish in the park. It provides a main segment for Rio's Cycling Race, which is allotted the largest number of points among the Latin American events on the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) world ranking.

2007 Pan American Games

edit

In the 2007 Pan American Games, Marina da Glória was the main venue for the Rio 2007 Sailing competitions. Also during the Games, the Marathon (men's and women's) arrival points were set up at the Flamengo Park, which also staged the Race Walking and Cycling Road competitions.

References

edit
  • "2016 Summer Olympics bid package" (PDF). Rio2016.org.br. p. 18. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 12, 2010.
edit

22°55′16″S 43°10′12″W / 22.921°S 43.170°W / -22.921; -43.170