(Redirected from Parque tres de febrero)
View of one of the park's lakes

Rosedal park
'Parque Tres de Febrero', also known as the 'Bosques de Palermo' ("Palermo Woods"), is a green zone of 25 hectares located in the
neighborhood of
Palermo in
Buenos Aires,
Argentina. Located between the ''Casares'' and ''Libertador'' avenues. It is known for its groves, lakes, and rose gardens (''El Rosedal'').
The architects
Carlos Thays and
Julio Dormal participated in the design of the park in the
19th century following an idea of President
Sarmiento. The park was named in celebration of
Tres de Febrero or
3 February in 1852 when Sarmiento's rival General
Juan Manuel de Rosas was defeated.
Many people use the park everyday, both on foot and bicycle, and this number increases greatly at the weekends. Boat rides are available on the three artificial lakes within the park. Close to the boating lake is the Poets' Garden, with stone and bronze busts of major poets, including
Borges and
Shakespeare.
The city
planetarium, ''Planetario Galileo Galilei'', is located inside the park. Its architecture is distinctive—a sphere supported by three arches. In the projections that take place inside, the planets and the stars of the galaxy can be observed. Facing the rose garden across an
Edwardian-style bridge, is the
Eduardo Sívori Plastic Arts Museum.
Also located in this area of the city are the
Japanese Gardens, the
Zoological Gardens and the
Botanical Gardens, which meet at ''Plaza Italia'', the center of the Palermo neighborhood located on Avenida Santa Fe.
In recent years, the ''Bosques de Palermo'' have become popular with
transvestites at night
[1].