Casco Antiguo
This is a guide to the sights within Casco Antiguo, providing short points of interest rather than long-winded histories and explanations. The numbers refer to numbers printed on the map.
The official website is cascoviejo.org
- Also known as Casco Viejo, and the district is known as San Felipe
- 1671 – Henry Morgan destroyed Panama Viejo so the Spanish built a new city with defensive walls to discourage pirates
- 1673 – 28 block area of Casco Antiguo established
- 1737 – Fire destroyed all but about 20 buildings
- 1756 – Another fire destroyed 90 houses
- 1781 – A third major fire left about 50 buildings
- 1821 – Panama broke from Spain to become part of Colombia
- 1856 – Land-facing defensive walls demolished
- 1882 – 7.9 earthquake damaged buildings
- 1887 – First proper fire brigade established which went on to avoid another total loss to fire in 1906
- 1903 – Panama gets independence
- 1997 – Casco Antiguo becomes UNESCO World Heritage Site
Get started with Plaza de la Independencia or follow these links:
1. Plaza de la Independencia – 2. Catedral Metropolitana – 3. Palacio Municipal & History Museum – 4. Museo del Canal Interoceánico – 5. Iglesia de la Compañía de Jesus – 6. Canal House – 7. Iglesia de Santo Domingo & Arco Chato – 8. Museo de Arte Religioso Colonial – 9. French Embassy – 10. Plaza de Francia – 11. INAC – National Institute of Culture – 12. Las Bovedas – 13. Paseo Esteban Huertas – 14. Club de Clases y Tropas (Union Club) – 15. Ministerio de Gobierno y Justicia – 16. Teatro Nacional – 17. Iglesia y Convento de San Francisco de Asís – 18. Plaza Bolívar / Parque Bolívar – 19. Palacio and Salon Bolívar – 20. Hotel Colombia – 21. Iglesia San Felipe de Neri – 22. Palacio Presidencial – 23. Casa Gongora – 24. Hotel Central – 25. Iglesia de San José (Golden Altar) – 26. Plaza Herrera – 27. American Trade Hotel – 28. Casa Boyacá – 29. Mano de Tigre – 30. Iglesia la Merced – 31. Plaza Santa Ana