Can I see beautiful flowers, plants and trees in or around the Panama City, Panama area of Marbella?
EPA! Espanol Spokesperson - EPA Espanol en Panama
Marbella, Panama City has a park with trees and flowers in the surroundings. In addition to that, there are many small gardens in homes and balconies in private residences and in the commercial buildings.
Marbella, Panama City has a park with trees and flowers in the surroundings. In addition to that, there are many small gardens in homes and balconies in private residences and in the commercial buildings.
Posted May 13, 2013
Lourdes Townshend
The name "Panamá" means "abundance of trees, birds, fishes and butterflies", and you can find them all over the country. There is a time of year when all kinds of animals like whales, turtles, birds, butterflies and fishes migrate from cold weather areas and concentrate in Panamá, offering a beautiful and spectacular view.
Marbella is mainly a small business neighborhood, situated inside the city of...
The name "Panamá" means "abundance of trees, birds, fishes and butterflies", and you can find them all over the country. There is a time of year when all kinds of animals like whales, turtles, birds, butterflies and fishes migrate from cold weather areas and concentrate in Panamá, offering a beautiful and spectacular view.
Marbella is mainly a small business neighborhood, situated inside the city of Panamá. Their residency complexes are mostly high apartment buildings. Marbella also has some offices, especially law firms and accountants, a casino, hotels, the World Trade Center, some small beauty parlors, and shops. Because Marbella is the extension of other neighborhoods, it is very easy to drive from Marbella to Obarrio or Punta Paitilla, where important modern malls and other facilities are located.
Inside Marbella proper it is difficult to find trees or plants, other than the ones in front of any building, or pots of flowers on balconies. But just a few blocks away is the "cinta costera" (a beautiful boulevard by the Panama Bay), the Urracá park and streets with beautiful very old trees, some of them the famous "Guayacán" (like the Japanese ones) that bloom for two weeks in early March, with spectacular flowers. Very close to Marbella, especially with no traffic jam, you can find the main park in Panamá, in Vía Porras, San Francisco, that covers several acres and is an oasis inside the city, similar to Central Park in New York, but smaller, and without horse carriages.
Posted January 6, 2014