Although
beaten
by
Guayaquil
on the
population
stakes
and in
economic
clout,
Quito is
the
political
and
cultural
hub of
Ecuador.
In this
highly
centralized
country,
there's
no
mistaking
that
this is
where
the
power is
wielded
- by an
elite
class of
politicians,
bankers
and
company
directors,
often
from old,
moneyed
families.
It's not
these
sharp-suited
business
executives
that
grab
your
attention
though,
but the
very
visible
presence
of
indígenas
that
form a
large
part of
the
city's
population.
While
most
other
Latin
American
capitals
have
been
stamped
with the
faceless
imprint
of
imported
US
culture,
Quito is
still a
place
where
Quichua-speaking
women
queue
for
buses in
their
traditional
clothes,
with
metres
of beads
strung
tightly
around
their
necks,
and
where
it's not
uncommon
to see
children
carried
on their
mothers'
backs in
securely
wrapped
blankets,
as they
are in
the
rural
sierra.
All this
makes
for a
slightly
exotic
introduction
to the
country,
though
the
proliferation
of
ragged
shoe-shine
boys and
desperate
hawkers
trying
to sell
miracle
products
is a
sobering
reminder
of the
levels
of
poverty
in the
city,
and of
the
social
inequalities
that
exist
here.
The
key to
orientation
in Quito
is to
see the
city as
a long,
vertical
strip.
At the
bottom,
in the
south,
is the
old
town
,
focused
on three
large
squares:
the
Plaza de
la
Independencia
(also
known as
the
Plaza
Grande),
the
Plaza
San
Francisco
and the
Plaza
Santo
Domingo
. The
grid-laid
streets
around
these
squares
form a
small,
compact
central
core
dominated
to the
south by
a hill
known as
El
Panecillo
,
crowned
by a big
white
statue
of the
Virgin
of Quito
.
Fanning
north
from old
Quito
towards
the new
town is
an "in-between"
stretch
around
Parque
La
Alameda
, while
the
new town
proper
begins a
few
blocks
further
north at
Parque
El Ejido
. Known
by
Quiteños
simply
as El
Norte
, the
new town
stretches
all the
way
north to
the
airport,
but the
only
bits
you're
likely
to visit
are the
central
areas of
La
Mariscal
, just
north of
Parque
El
Ejido,
where
most
accommodation
and
tourist
facilities
are
located,
and the
business
district
further
north,
around
Parque
La
Carolina
.