The Cemetery of La Plata (Spanish: Cementerio de La Plata) is one of the most important cemeteries in Buenos Aires Province, Argentina. It is located on the intersection of Avenue 31, 72 and diagonal 74 in Altos de San Lorenzo, La Plata. It was declared Cultural Heritage and Memorial of Buenos Aires Province.[1]

La Plata Cemetery
Cementerio de La Plata
Main entrance in 2012.
Map
Details
Established1886
Location
131 y 72, La Plata
CountryArgentina
Coordinates34°57′20″S 57°57′06″W / 34.95556°S 57.95167°W / -34.95556; -57.95167
Size32 hectares (79 acres)

It was established in 1886 and designed by Pedro Benoit, who was also responsible for the design of the city. Some of his most remarkable architectural features are its main entrance and its many family vaults, which include neoclassical, Neo-Gothic, Art Nouveau (in its variant of Catalan Art Nouveau), Art Deco and Egyptian revival styles. The main entrance is an impressive neo-classical portico with Doric columns. The Catholic chapel, in Romanesque revival style, was finished in 1950.

Its annex, the Jewish Cemetery, belongs to the Asociación Mutual Israelita Argentina in La Plata and is located on Avenue 72.[2]

Bibliography edit

  • Colombo, Nicolás (2016). Misterios de la ciudad de La Plata. Self-published. ISBN 978-987-42-0135-5.
  • Sempé, María Carlota; Flores, Olga Beatriz (2011). El Cementerio de La Plata y su contexto histórico. Self-published. ISBN 978-987-33-0640-2.
  • Dematti de Alaye, Adelina (2014). La marca de la infamia. Asesinatos, complicidad e inhumaciones en el cementerio de La Plata. Ministerio de Justicia y Derechos Humanos de la Nación. ISBN 978-987-3720-03-1.

References edit

  1. ^ "Declararon Patrimonio Cultural al cementerio de La Plata". www.telam.com.ar (in Spanish). Retrieved 2024-02-21.
  2. ^ Dulout, Luis Noel. "Estudios Preliminares en el Cementerio Judío de La Plata". Archived from the original on 2008-04-14.

External links edit