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Miraflores, founded as San Miguel de Miraflores, [1] is a district of Lima Province, in Peru.A residential and upscale shopping district, it is one of the wealthiest districts that make up the city of Lima, located to the south of the city's historic downtown area, as well as one of its main tourist destinations.
Pages in category "Real estate companies of Peru" This category contains only the following page. This list may not reflect recent changes. G. Graña y Montero
Alfredo Benavides Avenue (Spanish: Avenida Alfredo Benavides) is one of the busiest avenues in the city of Lima, Peru.It runs for 55 blocks through the districts of Miraflores [1] and Santiago de Surco, [2] starting at the Bajada Balta and concluding at the eponymous bridge that crosses over the Pan-American Highway.
Santiago de Surco, commonly known simply as Surco, is a district of Lima, Peru.It is bordered on the north with the district of Ate Vitarte and La Molina; on the east with San Juan de Miraflores, on the west with San Borja, Surquillo, Miraflores and Barranco, and on the south with Chorrillos.
Graña y Montero (BVL: GRAMONC1 [1]) is a company based in Latin America.It originated as a real estate and construction company, now the oldest and largest in Peru.Its many business interests include the construction of buildings and infrastructure, the energy and mining industries, and sanitation and highway services.
San Juan de Miraflores is one of the forty-three districts that make up the province of Lima, located in the department of the same name, in Peru. Is one of the new towns, that have been formed by the massive numbers of people moving from other towns of Metropolitan Lima (such as Miraflores, Surquillo, La Victoria, among others) and from the countryside.
Among the most important locations on this street are: the Hilton and Marriott hotels; the municipal palace of Miraflores, home of the Mayor of Miraflores; the Sala Luis Miró Quesada Garland, a major art gallery; the Parquemar tower, among the tallest buildings in Peru and home to the Dutch, British, and Israeli embassies; and, the Larcomar ...
During the Conquest of Peru, the inhabitants of the area surrounding the La Merced huaca were possibly moved to the Surco reduction due to its proximity. [4]In this period, the conqueror Francisco Pizarro, using a royal decree, on May 22, 1534, transferred the land of a part of the current Surquillo (at that time known as "Las Chacras de Surquillo") to the Convent of Our Lady of La Merced to ...