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Centro de Comercio Internacional

Buildings and structures in BogotáLandmarks in ColombiaOffice buildings completed in 1977Skyscraper office buildings in ColombiaTourist attractions in Bogotá
Torre Centro de comercio Internacional, costado suroeste
Torre Centro de comercio Internacional, costado suroeste

Centro de Comercio Internacional is an office skyscraper located in Bogotá, Colombia. The building is 190m/623 ft, 50 floors. The building is another neighbor of the second largest skyscraper in Colombia, Torre Colpatria. Located inside this building are some of the offices of Davivienda Bank which recently obtained the rights of the building. When it was built, it was called Centro Las Americas.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Centro de Comercio Internacional (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Centro de Comercio Internacional
Calle 28, Bogota Localidad Santa Fé

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Wikipedia: Centro de Comercio InternacionalContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 4.6161111111111 ° E -74.070833333333 °
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Address

Calle 28

Calle 28
110311 Bogota, Localidad Santa Fé
Colombia
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Torre Centro de comercio Internacional, costado suroeste
Torre Centro de comercio Internacional, costado suroeste
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Colombian National Museum
Colombian National Museum

The National Museum of Colombia (Spanish: Museo Nacional de Colombia) is the National Museum of Colombia housing collections on its history, art, culture. Located in Bogotá downtown, is the biggest and oldest museum in Colombia. The National Museum of Colombia is a dependency of the Colombian Ministry of Culture. The National Museum is the oldest in the country and one of the oldest in the continent, built in 1823. Its fortress architecture is built in stone and brick. The plant includes arches, domes and columns forming a sort of Greek cross over which 104 prison cells are distributed, with solid wall façade. It was known as the Panóptico (inspired by the Panopticon prison) and served as a prison until 1946. In 1948, the building was adapted for National Museum and restored in 1975. The museum houses a collection of over 20,000 pieces including works of art and objects representing different national history periods. Permanent exhibitions present archeology and ethnography samples from Colombian artefacts dating 10,000 years BC, up to twentieth century indigenous and afro- Colombian art and culture. Founders and New Kingdom of Granada room houses Liberators and other Spanish iconography; the round room exhibits a series of oleos from Colombia painting history. Paintings by masters Débora Arango, Fernando Botero, Enrique Grau, Ignacio Gomez Jaramillo, Santiago Martinez Delgado, Alejandro Obregón, Omar Rayo, Andrés de Santa María, and Guillermo Wiedemann are part of the Permanent Collection.