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Cuenca: Tastes of an Ecuadorian City
Panama hats, colonial heritage, Andean culture, the U.S. dollar
By Nadine Godwin
Ecuador’s Cuenca, a city of 300,000, sits in what passes
for a valley in the Andes: It is 8,200 feet above sea level and flanked by still
higher mountains.
It carries the legacy of Spanish occupation in its lovely
Old Town, now a Unesco World Heritage Site.
And it is renowned as the home of the Panama hat — yes, the
Panama hat.
But first: Tourism centers on the Old Town, and the
starting point for sightseers must be the central Plaza Calderon, which was
restored in 2002.
The most appealing building here is the 16th century Old
Cathedral which was also restored, but for use as a cultural space.
Its replacement as a house of worship is the New Cathedral
across the square. Built between 1885 and 1960, it is less appealing, but there
is plenty to appreciate inside nevertheless, including a prodigious application
of gold above the altar. Also, stained-glass windows reflect local pre-Hispanic
culture by featuring Andean people, the sun (worshipped by the Incas) and the
moon (worshipped by the indigenous people who got here before the Incas).
After
these de rigueur church viewings, it is time to walk the Old Town. Restoration
projects have produced a particularly charming outcome for visitors, the
creation of boutique hotels that are tourist attractions themselves.
The two-story, family-owned Santa Lucia was built as a
private home in 1859 and debuted as a hotel in 2002 at the completion of an
award-winning restoration that preserved the character of the original. Its 20
rooms surround a central patio, which is now the setting for the Trattoria, one
of two Santa Lucia eateries (per room, including breakfast: $65-$100).
The Carvallo, with 30 suites, is a beautifully refurbished
1917 home with an entry atrium showing off wooden balustrades on the second and
third floors; at the back, a second courtyard is surrounded by more rooms (per
room, including breakfast: from $50).
A restoration across the street produced the very popular
Cafe Eucalyptus, which serves more than 60 tapas items, averaging only a few
dollars each.
The Hotel Victoria, is one of the Old Town’s “hanging
houses.” These are huge homes built on bluffs overlooking the Tomebamba River.
The Victoria dates from the 17th century and was recently converted to a hotel
(per room, including breakfast: from $35).
These blufftop homes seem to spill down the side of the
riverbank, as well; therefore, to get to the restaurant at the Victoria, we
entered the building at city-street level and walked downstairs. We ate in
Victoria’s El Jardin, where a big glass windows afforded grand views of the city
across the river (three-course meal: $15-$20, without drinks; choosing lobster
bumps the price up).
Finally, the best of the hotel conversions, tour operators
say, is the 19th century Mansion Alcazar, which in 2001 debuted its
antiques-filled drawing room and 14 rooms positioned around the traditional
courtyard (per room, including breakfast and English tea: $65-$155).
Services charges and taxes of 22% are added to all hotel
rates, as well as to restaurant bills, eliminating the need for tipping.
Shopping
choices vary: The celebrated flower market is just off Plaza Calderon. The
city’s Thursday fair offers plenty of Andean handicrafts, not to mention a
chance to look over medicinal drugs brought in from Ecuador’s rain forest.
For something quite different, the workshop/gallery/store
of ceramic artist Eduardo Vega offers a choice of colorful works in traditional
and modern styles.
Finally, there are the hats. Teddy Roosevelt dubbed these
Ecuadorian toppers “Panama hats” after seeing them on construction workers at
the Panama Canal site.
Although the hats originated in the jungle and are still
made in Ecuadorian villages, Cuenca is home to the big factories, and the Homero
Ortega P. & Hijos factory is the biggest exporter. Travelers can tour the
facility (call ahead for an appointment), or skip the factory tour and drop in
at the Homero Ortega hat shop.
There are other Cuenca hat factories plus numerous shops in
Cuenca and elsewhere in Ecuador for buying this local specialty.
The hats come in many styles and colors. The prices (based
on a survey in the capital Quito, as well) cover an astonishing range, from $10
to something in four figures. The variation reflects the quality of the fiber
and the weave, and the very finest hats can be rolled into tubes without damage
to their underlying shape.
Finally, a couple of good-news tidbits deserve noting:
Travel to Ecuador is considered long-haul, but there is no
jetlag because the country is in the same time zone as the U.S. East Coast;
there is a one-hour time difference in summer because the U.S. has Daylight
Savings Time, but a country on the Equator does not need it.
And there’s no need to change money. A few years ago,
Ecuador adopted the U.S. dollar as its national currency.
by Nadine Godwin
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