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The neighborhood is currently considered a very affluent area of Bogotá, both residentially and commercially. [5] A 2014 El Tiempo article stated Chapinero Alto as having "an infinity" of restaurants, stores, theaters, offices, clubs, and public transportation. [6] Vogue has referred to it as "the Williamsburg of Bogotá." [7]
Centro de Comercio Internacional is an office skyscraper located in Bogotá, Colombia. The building is 190 m/623 ft, 50 floors. The building is a neighbor of Torre Colpatria, the second-largest skyscraper in Colombia. Located inside this building are some of the offices of Davivienda Bank, which recently obtained the rights of the building.
Chapinero is also the center of Bogotá's gay community. [4] [5] There are more than 100 bars, discos and clubs that cater to the gay community in Bogotá, many of which can be found in Chapinero. The biggest and most popular gay disco in Bogotá, [6] Theatron, is located in the heart of Chapinero.
The Superintendency of Industry and Commerce (SIC; Spanish: Superintendencia de Industria y Comercio) is the competition regulator in Colombia. It is the statutory body of Government of Colombia in charge of regulating fair business practices, promoting competitiveness and acting as the Colombian patent and registration office.
The Centro Internacional de Bogotá (CIB) is a sector of the center of Bogotá, the capital of Colombia, where several of the tallest buildings in the city and the country in general are located, mainly for offices, adjacent to multiple squares and pedestrian areas.
The Cámara de Comercio de Cúcuta or Chamber of Commerce of Cúcuta is a non-profit entity of the government of Colombia, attached to the Ministry of Industry, Commerce and Tourism. The jurisdiction is the city of Cúcuta and its Metropolitan Area .
Norte de Santander: 5 Putumayo: 2 Quindío: 3 Risaralda: 4 San Andrés and Providencia: 2 Santander: 7 Sucre: 3 Tolima: 6 Valle del Cauca: 13 Vaupés: 2 Vichada: 2 Afro-Colombians: 2 Colombian citizens abroad 2 Indigenous communities 1 Total seats 166
Carrera Séptima (Seventh Street), also known as Eduardo Posada Flórez Avenue, is one of the principal transit arteries which crosses the eastern side of Bogotá north and south. [1] It is the most important thoroughfare of the city in the sense of history, culture, economy, and society.