View allAll Photos Tagged oldsanjuan

OK, so it's just a side street in Old San Juan at night, but I like this shot, mainly for its noirish feel. Off Calle del Santo Cristo. Calle de la Luna maybe? I dunno.

Old San Juan Puerto Rico

Old San Juan Puerto Rico

Old San Juan Puerto Rico

Old San Juan Puerto Rico

Part of the Fort in Old San Juan

Old San Juan, Puerto Rico @ night from the deck of Royal Carribbean's Serenade of the Seas Cruise Ship.

To read all about my trip, and see some videos, check out the June entries of my blog-

missmondragon.blogspot.com/

 

missmondragon.blogspot.com/2008_06_01_archive.html

Visit to OSJ: December 24-27, 2009

Rogativa backlight silhouettes

The Asilo de Beneficencia (Home for the Poor) was built 1840s for the indigent people. Today houses the Instituto de Cultura Puertorriqueña (Institute of Puerto Rican Culture) offering exhibits galleries every day, features an impressive collection of artifacts from pre-European Puerto Rico, including pottery, stone tools and relics, and a recreation of a Taíno village.

To read all about my trip, and see some videos, check out the June entries of my blog-

missmondragon.blogspot.com/

 

missmondragon.blogspot.com/2008_06_01_archive.html

To read all about my trip, and see some videos, check out the June entries of my blog-

missmondragon.blogspot.com/

 

missmondragon.blogspot.com/2008_06_01_archive.html

Old San Juan Puerto Rico

Old San Juan Puerto Rico

Old San Juan, Puerto Rico

The Cuartel de Ballajá (Ballajá Barracks or Ballajá Quarters) housed Spanish soldiers and their families in the late 1800s, the building could accommodate up to 1,000 people. The construction began in 1854, the main building was completed in 1863 and the chapel was added in 1881. Originally conceived as a solution to the lodging needs of military personnel stationed in San Juan. The Cuartel de Ballajá is a three-story square building with large gates on two ends, ample balconies, designed with a series of arches and a protected central courtyard that served as a plaza and covers a reservoir. The Cuartel de Ballajá was the last and largest building constructed by the Spaniards in the New World. Facilities included officer quarters, warehouses, kitchens, dining rooms, prison cells and stables. After the Spanish American War, the U.S. Army used Ballajá to house its Infantry division. In 1943, it was converted into a military medical facility, known as the Rodriguez Hospital and it was part of the Fort Brooke structure.

Old San Juan and Castillo de San Cristobal

Old San Juan Puerto Rico

Visit to OSJ: December 24-27, 2009

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