Christmas decoration in the twelve cities that will host the World Cup

Although Brazil is a tropical country where palm trees are a constant, the traditional Christmas trees can be seen all over. Majority of cities - no matter if they are in the coast or in the countryside - prepare the Christmas decoration as part of the season celebration.

Have a look at the Christmas decoration at the twelve cities that will receive the matches for the 2014 World Cup.

Belo Horizonte - lighting at Liberty Square
photo by Wellington Pedro, Imprensa MG 

Brasilia - lighting at  Ministries Esplanade
photo by Daniel Ferreira, DA press


Cuiabá - House of Noel
photo by Michel Alvim - SECOM/Cuiabá

Curitiba - Show at Avenida Palace, headquarters of HSBC

Fortaleza - Christmas tree at Ferreira Square,
photo by Tatiana Fortes

Manaus - Christmas tree at Ponta Negra beach 
photo by Evandro Seixas

Natal - main entrance of the city, The Three Kings


Porto Alegre -  musical show at Santander Cultural Center 
photo by Andrea Graiz, Agencia RBS

 Recife -  Christmas tree at wharf
photo by NE10

Rio de Janeiro - the amazing floating tree  with three million micro lamps at Lagoa district
photo by Alexandre Durão, G1

 Salvador - Christmas tree at Campo Grande Square 
photo by Telma

São Paulo - one of the scenes of the video reproduced in the lake of  the lightened Ibirapuera Park
with the phrase "Live the moments"


Eliana Souza - SPin Brazil Tours

Contemporary Sao Paulo takes shape

In BrazilArts & ArchitectureBy Daniel Allen, BBC Travel 


From the elevated rooftop of São Paulo’s Unique Hotel, the city is a sea of identikit apartment buildings, office blocks and single storey villas. Seen from afar, the hard-edged urban sprawl appears haphazard and devoid of creative flair. It is an underwhelming landscape that compares poorly with the more sensual architecture of Rio de Janeiro, about 430km to the north.                  
      
Yet those who look a little closer will find that São Paulo’s contemporary architectural charms are actually a joy to behold. At the start of the 20th Century, this city was home to a mere 239,000 inhabitants – it now houses more than 11 million. Despite the whirlwind urban growth, and in many ways because of it, the São Paulo of recent decades has become a hotbed of talented Brazilian architects, including Ruy Ohtake and Paulo Mendes da Rocha. It is their cutting edge structures that now define the city’s landscape and enhance residential life.

“After Brasilia was made the Brazilian capital in 1960, São Paulo became an architectural desert,” explained Eliana Souza, an architectural enthusiast and founder of SPin Brazil Tours. “Buildings were constructed with little thought to their design, to how they fitted into neighbourhoods. Rapid development destroyed the soul of the old city. It was out of this barren environment that the Paulista School of Architecture was born. The Paulista architects wanted to build for the people. The chunkier concrete forms of their buildings mixed with the curvilinear buildings of Oscar Niemeyer, and gradually this helped to improve how the city looked and worked.”

Oscar Niemeyer, the doyen of Brazilian contemporary architecture, may be more famously connected with the architecture of Brasilia, but his imprint can also be seen in São Paulo. Together with the nearby Museu de Arte Moderna by the legendary Paulista architect Lina Bo Bardi, Niemeyer’s striking Ibirapuera Auditorium embodies São Paulo’s love of modern architecture and the avant garde.

Ibirapuera auditorium, photo by Daniel Allen

Belatedly completed in 2005, the auditorium is part of a group of buildings inside Ibirapuera Park that all belong to a 1950s Niemeyer masterplan. Today the park has become São Paulo’s equivalent of New York’s Central Park, a green focal point where residents can relax, exercise and commune with friends, all while enjoying architecture by two of Brazil’s finest creative minds.

The auditorium’s most dramatic exterior feature is a sinuous awning of crimson painted metal – known officially as the labareda (“flame” in Portuguese) – which juts out over the main entrance like an extended fiery tongue. The building’s beautifully simplistic trapezoidal structure comes to life at night when the unblemished white exterior is illuminated by banks of floodlights. A wide back door opens to an interior stage, allowing for al fresco summer concerts.

Inside the auditorium, red and white is also the dominant colour theme. An imposing, organic sculpture by Japanese-Brazilian artist Tomie Ohtake winds around much of the wall and ceiling of the foyer, its deep red lines accentuating the foyer’s curved white staircase. The auditorium also features art by Tomie and graphic artist Luís Antônio Vallandro Keating.

Ibirapuera Auditorium, Tomie Ohtake sculpture, ´photo by Daniel Allen

More work by Tomie can be viewed at the Instituto Tomie Ohtake in Sao Paulo's Pinheiros neighbourhood. Dedicated to showcasing her work, the institute occupies the first two floors of a wildly flamboyant office tower designed by her son Ruy Ohtake, a Niemeyer protégé and one of São Paulo’s leading architects. The curving metallic magenta and violet façade is particularly eye-catching, while basement restaurant Santinho is well worth checking out for its Brazilian cuisine, with typically paulistanodashes of Italian, Japanese and Arab.

 Tomie Ohtake Institute, photo by Daniel Allen


Tomie Ohtake Institute, curved structures, photo by Daniel Allen

Sitting directly opposite the Ibirapuera Auditorium is another futuristic Niemeyer building that perfectly complements its more recently constructed twin. Completed in 1951, and built to commemorate São Paulo’s 400th anniversary, the Pavilhão Lucas Nogueira Garcez is more popularly known by locals as Oca (Indian for “house”). While this exhibition space is said to resemble a traditional Native American dwelling, there is more than a touch of the extraterrestrial to its flattened dome shape and large circular windows.

Oca, photo by Daniel Allen

Fans of Niemeyer’s work should also be sure to take in the Edifício Copan, a 140m-high, 38-story residential building completed in 1966 in Sao Paulo's República neighbourhood. Home to 5,000 people and more than 70 shops, this serpentine, monolithic structure is one of the largest buildings in Brazil, and has the largest floor area – 116,152sqm – of any residential building in the world. It is so big it even has its own post code.

Close to the Edifício Copan, in the Pompeia neighbourhood, is another of São Paulo’s architectural institutions – the SESC Pompéia. This former steel drum factory was converted into a complex for community activities and events between 1977 and 1986, following a blueprint by Brazil’s most celebrated female architect, Lina Bo Bardi.

SESC Pompéia, photo by Daniel Allen


“The overarching theme behind the SESC Pompéia development was about creating spaces for the people of São Paulo,” Souza said. “It really changed the way the people of the city viewed old industrial buildings and disused industrial sites, many more of which have subsequently been developed.”
During its conversion, SESC Pompéia’s old brick sheds were transformed into exhibition spaces, a library, an excellent cafeteria and a series of workshop spaces – the latter are filled daily with pensioners and youngsters learning skills such as carpentry and photography. The wooden boardwalks and alleyways between buildings are packed with mothers and children, locals and tourists.



SESC Pompéia, photo by Daniel Allen

Bo Bardi also designed two new concrete buildings that are connected to the renovated factory by a succession of linear footbridges and illuminated by distinctive, irregularly shaped windows with red grills. These buildings contain sports facilities like football fields, a swimming pool and a solarium.

SESC Pompéia, visitors surrounding art work, photo by Daniel Allen 

Bo Bardi was also responsible for another of São Paulo’s landmark buildings – the city’s iconic Museu de Arte de São Paulo, completed in 1968 in the city's Bela Vista neighbourhood. This suspended box, constructed in concrete and glass, sits on two u-shaped red columns and stores collections ranging from the gothic to the abstract. The place is still hugely popular with the city’s residents and regularly features concerts in the space underneath the structure.

Perhaps the Hotel Unique itself best embodies the brave world of São Paulo architecture. Shaped like a giant slice of watermelon, with a porthole-studded copper façade, this extravagant, post-modern landmark in the heart of the city’s upscale Jardins neighbourhood was also designed by Ruy. Looking forward, it is architects such as he, inspired by the likes of Niemeyer and Bo Bardi, who will further shape this great Brazilian city.

Unique hotel, photo by Daniel Allen


Eliana Souza - SPin Brazil Tours

The uncomparable Pelé and the world of football

Talking about Brazil and do not mention football it is like talking about the Vatican and do not mention the Pope. Football is not an ordinary issue here. It can start as a light chat on the last goals of the domestic championships and finish in a heated discussion among several interlocutors because football is more than a passion. It is considered a theme that can really interfere in your personal life, change your mood and in some cases unbalance your mind.

Despite the latest news about the 2014 FIFA World Cup, the performance of the Argentinian player Messi, the success of the German Bayern Munchen team or the adaptation of the Brazilian star Neymar to the European football style,  the one who is the absolute king on this regard is Pelé.

Whatever are the estimates or the accomplishments, Pelé is still the most remembered star when it comes to football worldwide. He was elected the athlete of the twentieth century by French press in 1961 however since he has started his career has been collecting the glories for his victories. Few Brazilians are recognized globally as the face of Brazil and promoted the country so strongly in a time when just traditional press, radio and TV were the available media. His extraordinary sporting journey and a well-succeeded career as a businessman transformed him in an icon in the whole planet.



Because of the doubts generated by the achievements during his sporting career and the inevitable comparison with the Argentinian player Messi last year, he ordered by himself a detailed survey to get the accurate data. 

Some of the official marks can be researched in different magazines, books and specialized sites. However it is never too much to point them out:

Playing for Brazil National Team:
1957, 1962, 1970 – World Cups:  tri-world champion
1957, 1963 – Rocca Cup:  bi-champion
1958, 1962, 1968 – Osvaldo Cruz Cup : tri-champion

Playing for other teams:
1955 – Bauru Radium club – indoor football – champion
1959 – South American Army championship – champion
1959 – State of São Paulo local championship – champion

Playing for New York Cosmos:
1977 – NASL – North American Soccer League - champion

Playing for Santos Football Club, the team he has contracted for more than 18 years:
1962 – 1963 -  Liberators of America – bi-champion
1962 – 1963 – World Inter-clubs – bi-champion
1968 – Silver Cup – champion
1961, 1962, 1963, 1964 & 1965 – Brazil Cup - penta-champion
1958, 1960, 1961, 1962, 1964, 1965, 1967, 1968, 1969 & 1973 –
State of São Paulo Cup - Ten times champion

Pelé has won 61 titles, being 25 when playing for tournaments abroad.

Pelé celebrating a goal, photo by Domicio Pinheiro in 1969 


With 1283 goals during 1.366 official matches, his average reaches 0,93 goal per game.

According to Juca Kfhouri, aclaimed Brazilian journalist, specialist in football, “Pelé is incomparable. Although Messi will certainly overcome him, Pelé has a significant number of spectacular scores that keeps him in the throne yet”.

One of the best definitions about him was given by the Brazilian poet Carlos Drummond de Andrade, who said: "The difficult, the extraordinary, it is not score a thousand goals as Pelé, but score one goal like he does".

The mark of 1283 goals is the title of a luxurious book launched in honor to the player in São Paulo last October . The weight of 15 kilos and 500 pages are compatible to the importance of Pelé in the football history. Printed in Italy, the “collectors book” was handmade produced and just 1283 editions will be commercialized – all of them autographed by him. They will be sold in New York, London and Dubai as well.

An exclusive edition of 200 books will bring hundreds of historical photos, including the one that shows the athlete wearing the World Cup jersey with a heart of sweat stamped in the middle of his chest. No wonder that the photo is titled "the heart of the king". That version will cost about US$ 2,300.00 and will bring the special shot printed in cotton with the signature of both, the idol and the Brazilian photographer Luiz Paulo Machado, who took the picture in 1971.  


The luxurious edition of  Pelé book, photo by Editora Toriba

In 2014 Pelé will be honored again with the inauguration of the Museum Pelé, established in the coastal city of Santos, where his star has shinned for about eighteen years. At that time his restrictive agreements forbidden him to leave Santos FC team and try an international career which is usual among the athletes nowadays.  Several matches took place at Urbano Caldeira stadium, at Vila Belmiro, where the club established its headquarters.


Vila Belmiro Stadium, aerial view, photo by Tadeu nascimento

The museum is part of a daring renovation project of a historical sector in downtown Santos, where two important buildings of the XIX century were located.  Known as the Valongo mansions, the buildings will be reconstructed respecting its cultural architectural heritage.

Pelé Museum project at Valongo neighborhood,  file of Ney Caldatto

Designed in a contemporary style by the Brazilian architect Ney Caldatto, the interior of the museum will be comprised by two blocks. The first one will include a gigantic twelve-meter sphere which will house an auditorium for projecting documentaries and movies as well as a venue for events. In the other block the visitors could stroll through three interconnected floors that will host the collection of personal objects, shots, awards, trophies, etc. A deep research has been made by the organizers and curators to surprise the tourists. 

Pelé Museum project, interior with the sphere, file of Ney Caldatto

Sponsored by important Brazilian and international national companies like Caio, Carbocloro, Libras Terminais and Sherwin-Williams, the museum has also received investments from other renowned ones like Gerdau, Mitsubishi, Ambev, Santander bank, Votorantim and Odebrecht, among others.

The City Hall of Santos intends to inaugurate it before the World Cup to promote the name of Santos by inserting it definitely in the route of international tourism in the future. The city already receives thousands of tourists who arrive in cruises that stop in its maritime terminal for passengers every year.

Curiosities about the king:
-     The third person singular is generally used by Edson Arantes do Nascimento (his real name) to refer to Pelé, as if he is another person.

-     The nickname Pelé was given by his fellow players when Edson played football in the streets of Bauru with other poor kids. To celebrate the goals he defended as a goalkeeper he often has shouted “Bilé”, the name of a player from a Brazilian team where his father played for. Based on what they listened, his friends that did not understand neither the context nor the expression started to call him “Pelé”, a nickname that he rejected at the beginning.

-        1.73 m tall, the Brazilian forward was an excellent dribbler who kicked with both legs.

-     Pelé ended his career in 1974 however in 1975 he joined New York Cosmos to promote   football practice in USA. In August 2010 he was named the Honorary President of the club.

-    In 1979 he scored his thousandth goal at Maracanã stadium in Rio de Janeiro during an emotional celebration when he kissed right on the ball.

-        In the 80´s Pelé had an affair with Xuxa Meneghel, a Brazilian model in the beginning of career. Later she has introduced a new formula of entertainment show for children in Brazil and got famous as a TV host, film actress, well-succeeded singer and businesswoman.

-    From 1995 to 1998 he has managed the Extraordinary Ministry for Sports during the government of President Fernando Henrique Cardoso.

-       Occasionally the rivalry with Diego Maradona comes to the air. The controversy has been tougher when both competed for FIFA player of the century in 2010. Maradona won as the most voted by internet although Pele was elected by FIFA officials, journalists and coaches.

-       In 2011 Pelé was nominated Honorary Ambassador of Brazil for the 2014 World Cup by President     Dilma Roussef.


Pelé and President of Brazil, Dilma Roussef
photo by Roberto Stuckert - PR


Eliana Souza - SPin Brazil Tours

All Souls' day in São Paulo

Today, November 2nd, is celebrated the All Souls' day in Brazil like in other countries in the world. 

Several cemeteries in São Paulo city receive families and people in general that visit the tumbs of their beloved relatives or friends to pray for them.

The cemetery of Consolation (Consolação) was the first cemetery built in the city in the middle of the XIXth century.  Before that date the important dead people were buried inside churches which have caused a lot of sanitary problems. 

Located close to the historical center at Consolação Ave., int he heart of the city, surrounded by modern buildings nowadays, the cemetery gives the opportunity to understand better the history of the development of the city in the twentieth century and the transformation of its cultural, educational and social life through the expansion of coffee production and the arrival of diverse immigrational groups. 

                                                                    Consolation cemetery - photo by wikipedia

Brazilian writer Monteiro Lobato, the modernist artist Tarsila do Amaral,  the poet and writer Mario de Andrade, the journalist Libero Badaro, the medical sanitary officer Cesário Motta Júnior, the influent Marchioness of Santos and the architect Ramos de Azevedo - responsible for the construction of the imponent entrance gate of the building and its chapel, are just some of the personalities that share their tumbs in the artistic rows of the cemetery. Many of the art work was created and designed by renowned Italian sculptors like the modernist Victor Brecheret and Amadeo Zani. 

                          Tumb of Brazilian socialite Olivia Penteado, created by Victor Brecheret, photo by wikipedia

The tomb art tour coordenated by the administration of the cemetery points out several different aspects of the area by showing the tumbs and exploring a lot of stories that involve the visitors and the tourists. 

                         
                                                 Consolation cemetery - aerial view - photo by Alexandre Ravagnani


One of the highlights is the mausoleum of a prestigious family named  Matarazzo, an Italian imigrant that arrived in Sao Paulo in 1881 and made fortune by building an empire of businesses that  included  food and textile industries. Its mausoleum, designed by the Italian sculptor Luigi Brizzolara, is considered the largest in South America with a height equivalent to a three-story building.


                                                         Mausoleum of the Matarazzo family, photo by wikipedia

It is not rare to find students from public and private schools of the city visiting the graveyard. To get in touch with the burier Evaldo da Costa, who has been working in the cemetery for more than 20 years, can be a remarkable experience for them. Edvaldo likes to play with the kids and explore the idea of death and the mythical references we have about it. Stories of ghosts and fear are part of his presentation to the groups. Some of them respect some superticious instructions when they are leaving the site. They walk into reverse and make the sign of cross three times. There are people that believe it is a kind of guarantee that no spirit will follow you. 


Consolation Cemetery
Address: Rua da Consolação, 1.660
Telephone: (11) 3256-5919, 
Time: from Monday to Friday, from 07:00a.m. to 06:00p.m. (guided tours from 09:00a.m. to 02:00p.m.)
Free Entrance



Eliana Souza - SPin Brazil Tours
The interesting approach from Brazilian Gabriela Kruschewsky about what she misses - published at BussFeed

33 Things That Will Make You Homesick For Brazil
Que saudade!!! posted on



1. Sunrises and beautiful weather, like, every day!


Sunrises and beautiful weather, like, every day!

View this image › 
Flickr: aaepstein


2. Beaches swarming with tons of beautiful people. 

Beaches swarming with tons of beautiful people.

3. Lime, sugar, and cachaca as your go-to cocktail, aka caipirinhas.

Lime, sugar, and cachaca as your go-to cocktail, aka caipirinhas.


4. Guaraná as a soda, and not as the extract in 5-Hour Energy™.

Guaraná as a soda, and not as the extract in 5-Hour Energy™.

Sylvie Cho

5. Getting fresh coconut water on the spot.







6. Being allowed to drink a nice cold beer…at the beach.

Being allowed to drink a nice cold beer...at the beach.

Really anywhere, actually (except while driving, DUH).


7. Pão de Queijo, or what others may know as “cheese bread.”



8. Birthday parties with endless plates of salgadinhos and brigadeiros!



                                                                      kitanda.com
                                                                 streetsmartbrazil.com
Fried goodness and chocolate truffles.

9. Skewers upon skewers of juicy meat.


10. Straw potatoes and corn on top of your hot dog.

11. Bomboms = best chocolate ever!

12. The second part of the song that comes after “Happy Birthday!”

13. Live music everywhere you go.Live music everywhere you go.

View this image ›


14. Also, the beach.


Salvador, Bahia


15. Being around people who can samba.




Like this lady!





16. Dressing up in all white and jumping into the 

ocean on New Year’s.

Natalia Zecchini

17. Getting your costume ready for CARNAVAL!!!

Getty Images


18. Releasing your inner country every June for Festa Junina.


19. Volleyball…at the beach.


20. Chanting your soccer team’s battle cry at a home game.




Mengão do meu coracao!!!








21. Bumping into a capoeira presentation on the street.


22. Kids running around and playing soccer in packs 

with their smiling faces.

Getty Images

23. Getting your soap-opera fix every night on Globo.

Drama, drama, drama.


24. Normally priced Havaianas that are not considered to be couture flip-flops.

The classics, before U.S. department stores got their hands on them.


25. Some of the most beautiful architecture in the world.

Oscar Niemeyer everywhere you look!


26. Waterfalls, on waterfalls, on waterfalls.

Iguazú Falls


27. Saying “what up” to J.C. every now and again.

Cristo Redentor, Christ, the Redeemer


28. Did I mention the beach?

Porto de Galinhas, Pernambuco


29. Putting your Nascar skills to use while driving a stick shift.

30. This song that you still can’t get out of your head.






Yes, even after two years.




31. These CDs that remind you of your childhood:


32. IVETE!!!

Getty Images -The Brazilian Diva.


33. And of course, watching this little breakdown of 

Pharrell and Snoop getting their samba on!



Eliana Souza - SPin Brazil Tours