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Keeping Your Bearings Straight

 

You can get confused in Costa Rica trying to find your way around especially in San José. Except for the center of San José, most streets have no names or numbers, or they are not in a visible place. People use known landmarks to get around, to locate addresses and give directions. If you are unfamiliar with this system. it is almost impossible to find your way around, and easy to get lost. Don't worry. After you have lived in Costa Rica awhile, you will get used to this system. In the event you get lost, you can always ask Costa Ricans for directions provided you understand a little Spanish or they speak some English.

As you know, Costa Ricans are generally very friendly and are usually happy to help you find the address you are seeking. However, it is always a good idea to ask a second person, because most ticos are embarrassed to admit they don't know an address and will sometimes give you directions whether they know where you want to go or not.

Here are some basic tips on how to get around Costa Rica and understand how the street numbering works. It is somewhat easier to find your way in downtown San José because of the layout of the city. Avenues, or Avenidas, run east west. All the odd-numbered avenues are north of Central Avenue (Avenida Central). The even-numbered avenues are south. Streets, or Calles, run north south, with oddnumbered streets east of Calle Central and even-numbered streets to the west.

If you get lost, looking for a street sign on the side of a building and counting by two's will usually help you get your bearings. Keep in mind that the word avenue is often abbreviated as A and streets as C when you get written directions. To find your way around Costa Rica, you also need to know that 100 meters (cien metros) is another way of saying one block. Likewise, 50 meters (cincuenta metros) is a half-block and 150 meters (ciento cincuenta metros) a block and a half. The word varas (an old Spanish unit of measurement, almost a yard) is slang and often used instead of the word metros (meters) when giving directions.

Landmarks, such as corner grocery stores (pulperías), churches, schools and other buildings, are usually used with this metric block system to locate addresses. For example, in finding a house someone might say, From Saint Paul's Church, 200 meters west and 300 meters south. In interpreting written directions you should also know that M stands for meters.

An old trick Costa Ricans often use for finding the four compass points may make it easier for you to get your bearings straight. The front doors of all churches in Costa Rica face west. So, if there is a church nearby, imagine yourself with your back to the entrance of the church you are facing west.

If you live in San José, there is another method for finding the compass points. Poás Volcano is north, the Cruz de Alajuela mountain approximately south, the direction of Cartago is east and the general direction of the La Sabana or Rohrmoser is west. This system of using landmarks should make it easier for you to find your way around the city.

The time wasted searching for a house or building in Costa Rica may be a thing of the past. The Costa Rican postal system plans to initiate a new plan that will introduce a uniform system of street and house numbers.

Signs will be posted on street corners following a coordinated system of colors, sign sizes and symbols. Blue signs will mark international thoroughfares, yellow will be used to indicate inter-provincial highways and white will denote interurban roads. Homeowners will be told where to place their number signs. This system will be tested in several areas with the hope of extending it to all parts of the country within three years. Let us hope this system becomes a reality to make everyone's life easier.

From "The New Golden Door to retirement and Living in Costa Rica" by Christopher Howard.
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. No part of this article may be reproduced without written permission of the authors and copyright owner.
 

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