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La Rambla is Montevideo's defining public space — a 4-kilometre coastal promenade that runs along the Río de la Plata from the Ciudad Vieja at the western tip of the city through Parque Rodó, Pocitos, and beyond. The Rambla is the place where all of Montevideo comes together: morning joggers, afternoon families, evening couples, mate-drinking groups of friends, cyclists, and the full social mix of a city whose public culture is built around outdoor life by the water. The gay-friendly character of the Rambla is the character of the city itself — Uruguay's social environment means that LGBTQ+ couples and groups use the promenade as naturally as any other Montevideans, without the self-consciousness or calculation about safety that would be necessary in many other South American cities. The Pocitos stretch of the Rambla, behind Playa Pocitos, is particularly associated with LGBTQ+ gathering, especially on summer weekend afternoons. The view across the Río de la Plata — which at Montevideo is so wide that the opposite Argentine shore is invisible — creates the sensation of being on a coast rather than a river bank. Evening mate sessions on the Rambla wall, watching the sun set over the water: this is the quintessential Montevideo experience, and it is freely available to every visitor.
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