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Aguas Calientes, Peru

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Machupicchu Pueblo
Q'uñiyaku
Aguas Calientes
Statue of Pachacutec and the cathedral
Statue of Pachacutec and the cathedral
Machupicchu Pueblo is located in Peru
Machupicchu Pueblo
Machupicchu Pueblo
Coordinates: 13°9′17.4″S 72°31′31.2″W / 13.154833°S 72.525333°W / -13.154833; -72.525333
Country  Peru
Region Cusco
Province Urubamba
District MachuPicchu
Settled 1901
District Capital October 1, 1941
Government
 - Mayor Edgar D. Miranda Quiñones
Elevation 2,040 m (6,693 ft)
Time zone PET (UTC-5)
Website (Spanish) http://www.munimachupicchu.gob.pe/

Aguas Calientes is the colloquial name for Machupicchu Pueblo, a town in Peru on the Urubamba (Vilcanota) River. It is best known as the closest access point to the the sacred Incan city of Machu Picchu (in Quechua: old mountain), which is 6 kilometres (3.7 mi) away, about 1.5 hours walk. It has many hotels and restaurants for tourists, as well as natural hot baths, which give the town its name ("hot waters" in Spanish). The baths were destroyed by floods several years ago, but have been rebuilt.

Contents

[edit] History

Originally settled by a few farm families in 1901, the tiny settlement was transformed into a busy railway worker's camp, called Camp Maquinachayoq, during the construction of the railroad through there in the late 1920's. The town was the central hub for worker lodging and their equipment up until the railway was finished in 1931.[1]

[edit] Transport

Aguas Calientes serves as a terminal for the PeruRail passenger train service from Cusco. Trains serve locals and tourists arriving from Cusco and Ollantaytambo to visit Machu Picchu. A sheltered souvenir market is adjacent to the train station. Avenue Pachacutec is the town's main and only thoroughfare, connecting the baths to the town's main square.

[edit] Industry

The Central Machupicchu Hydroelectric Plant is nearby on the Vilcanota. It generates about 90 MW for the regions of Cusco, Puno and Apurimac. It was first constructed between 1958 and 1965 and expanded between 1981 and 1985. The plant was damaged by a landslide on February 28, 1998 and ceased operations until July 13, 2001.[2]

[edit] Twin towns

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Coordinates: 13°9′17.4″S 72°31′31.2″W / 13.154833°S 72.525333°W / -13.154833; -72.525333

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