Category talk:Paisaje Cultural Cafetero

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“Coffee Cultural Landscape” in Colombia. (Only the villages and municipalities that were inscribed on the World Heritage List of UNESCO in 2011 are known as "Coffee Cultural Landscape".)

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1. The Coffee Cultural Landscape, does not include the departments of Caldas, Quindio and Risaralda. Only the villages and towns that were declared by UNESCO.

2. The Coffee Cultural Landscape meets specific areas of 47 municipalities and 411 villages in the departments of Caldas, Quindio, Risaralda and Valle del Cauca located in the central and western foothills of the Andes, This landscape is made up as follows: 2.1. Composed of certain villages in rural areas: Aguadas, Anserma, Aranzazu, Belalcazar, Chinchiná, Philadelphia, La Merced, Manizales, Neira, Pácora, Palestine, Riosucio, Risaralda, Salamina, San Jose, Supía and Villamaría; belonging to the department of Caldas. 2.2. Composed certain path in rural areas of Armenia, Buenavista, Calarca, Circassia, Córdoba, Finlandia, Genoa, Montenegro, Pijao, Quimbaya and Salento (except La Tebaida, because this does not cover the foothills of Quindio river); and the urban area of Montenegro; belonging to the department of Quindio. 2.3. Composed of certain villages in the rural areas of Apía, Balboa, Belen de Umbria, Dosquebradas, Guática, La Celia, Marseille, Pereira, Quinchía, Santa Rosa de Cabal and Sanctuary; and urban areas Apía, Bethlehem of Umbria, Marseille and Sanctuary; belonging to the department of Risaralda. 2.4. Composed of certain villages in the rural areas of Alcalá, Ansermanuevo, Argelia, Caicedonia, The Eagle, Cairo, Riofrio, Sevilla, Trujillo and Ulloa; and the urban area of Cairo; belonging to the department of Valle del Cauca.

3. “The coffee axis” and “The coffee triangle”, is different from the “Coffee Cultural Landscape” in Colombia. The “Coffee Cultural Landscape”, inscribed on the World Heritage List by UNESCO, 2011, is different from “The coffee axis” and “The coffee triangle”. See accompanying drawings.

“Coffee Cultural Landscape”.
“The coffee axis”.
“The coffee triangle”.

comment added by User talk:Hoako

Hoako, thank you very much for your very good explanations! Now to me remains the question: Is the Parque Nacional del Café part of the Paisaje Cultural Cafetero or not? Best, --Achim (talk) 20:55, 16 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Mr. Achim

When reading the respective page in English or Spanish from (en: National Coffee Park) or (es: Parque Nacional del Café), it is clear that is a theme and amusement center. In my concept is not part of the Coffee Cultural Landscape (es: Paisaje Cultural Cafetero).

You yourself can read on page English en:National Coffee Park, and give it count. The park can be reached from a cable car, offers attractions orchid animatronics colorful, global coffee garden, a roller coaster, food stalls based on coffee, Colombian folk architecture, and other attractions, totaling 22 attractions at the end of 2009.

The Coffee Cultural Landscape of Colombia, is an outstanding example of human adaptation to difficult geographical conditions, on a hillside and mountain coffee growing developed. It is a cultural landscape where there are natural, economic and cultural elements with a high degree of homogeneity in the region, and is an exceptional case in the world. In this landscape combine the human, family and generational effort coffee farmers with permanent support its institutional framework.

Thank you. Hoako.

Hoako, I just wanted to be confirmed that not one should be a subcategory of the other, thank you, this case is closed now, sorry for having caused some inconvenience. --Achim (talk) 19:20, 17 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]