Reinventing Rio
The dazzling but tarnished Brazilian city gets a makeover as it prepares for the 2014 World Cup and 2016 Olympic Games
- By Alan Riding
- Photographs by Eduardo Rubiano Moncada
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2010, Subscribe
When it comes to Rio de Janeiro there is no avoiding the obvious. The city may be as famous for its Carnaval, soccer, flesh and fun as it is infamous for its hillside slums and organized crime. Yet its defining feature remains its breathtaking setting. No visitor can ever forget viewing the city from on high for the first time. Even natives—the Cariocas—stand in awe of its grandeur. How could I feel different? I, too, was born there. As a writer friend, Eric Nepomuceno, put it, “only Paris comes close to matching Rio in self-love.”
Mountains rise to the east and west and protrude like giant knuckles from inside the city itself. Stretching to the north is a vast bay, which Portuguese navigators evidently thought was a river when they first sighted it in January 1502. Hence the name Rio de Janeiro (River of January). For centuries, ferries carried people and cargo to and from the city of Niterói on the bay’s eastern shore; today a seven-mile-long bridge crosses the bay. And standing guard at its entrance is the 1,300-foot-high granite mound known as the Pão de Açúcar—the Sugar Loaf.
To the west, two long curving beaches—Copacabana and Ipanema-Leblon—run along the city’s Atlantic shoreline, only to be interrupted by twin mountains, the Dois Irmãos, or the Two Brothers. Behind the beaches lies a glistening lagoon, Lagoa Rodrigo de Freitas, and the Botanical Gardens. From there, thick tropical forest reaches up into the Tijuca National Park, “every square inch filling in with foliage,” as the American poet Elizabeth Bishop put it a half-century ago. And rising 2,300 feet out of this vegetation is still another peak, the Corcovado, or the Hunchback, crowned by the 125-foot-tall—including the pedestal—statue of Christ the Redeemer.
Then there are the less sublime areas. Rio’s North Zone, which begins at the city center and sprawls for miles inland, resembles many cities in developing countries, with crowded highways, run-down factories, crumbling housing projects and many of Rio’s more than 1,000 shantytowns, or favelas, as they’re known. Anyone landing at Antônio Carlos Jobim International Airport (named after the late bossa nova composer) is confronted with this unexpected, dismaying sight as they go to their likely destinations in the South Zone of the city.
Then suddenly another Rio comes into view. The bayside highway curves around the city center before dipping into the majestic Aterro do Flamengo park and sweeping past the Sugar Loaf. It then enters the tunnel leading to Copacabana and the broad Avenida Atlántica, which stretches nearly three miles along the beach. A different route south passes under the Corcovado and reappears beside the Lagoa Rodrigo de Freitas, following its shores to Ipanema-Leblon. (That was my way home when I lived in Rio in the 1980s.)
The Atlantic beaches are the city’s playgrounds, with sunbathers crowding near the waves and soccer and volleyball occupying much of the rest. The beaches are also strikingly heterogeneous: people of all income levels and colors mix comfortably, while women and men of every shape feel free to wear the skimpiest of swimsuits. Actors, journalists, lawyers and the like have their favorite meeting places at beachside cafés selling beer, sodas, coconut milk and snacks. There is even a corridor for cyclists and joggers.
Away from the sea, though, the Copacabana neighborhood looks run-down and its streets are often clogged with traffic. Even the more elegant Ipanema and Leblon, one beach but two neighborhoods, coexist with those hillside favelas, highlighting the gulf between Rio’s rich and poor. During violent storms in April this year it was mainly residents of the favelas who died—251 in greater Rio—as a result of landslides. Favelas are also routinely blamed for drug-related violence and all-too-frequent muggings. With the pleasures of living in the beauteous South Zone, then, comes the need for security.
Farther west, beyond Leblon and a smaller beach called São Conrado, is a third Rio, Barra da Tijuca, with 11 miles of sand and no encroaching mountains. Forty years ago, it seemed an obvious place to accommodate Rio’s growing middle class. But what was intended as a model urban development has become a soulless expanse of apartment blocks, highways, supermarkets and, yes, more favelas, including the one, Cidade de Deus, that gave its name to Fernando Meirelles’ award-winning 2002 movie, City of God.
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Related topics: Crime Poverty Renovation and Restoration Brazil
Additional Sources
“Gangland; Who Controls the Streets of Rio de Janeiro?” John Lee Anderson, The New Yorker, Oct. 5, 2009









Comments (7)
"The beaches are also strikingly heterogeneous: people of all income levels and colors mix comfortably"
It is good that there are no armed clashes between races over beach blanket space, but it would be extremely unusual to have a major public beach with zero crime and for that crime to have no demographic characteristics. As for as the teeming shantytowns, the best measure of progress would be a decline in their populations, as well as in Rio generally.
Posted by Thomas Michael Andres on January 9,2012 | 11:49 PM
My 23 year old daughter has lived in Copacabana since July of this year. Initially apprehensive, she has adapted to her surroundings and remains aware of what occurs around her. I read this article with great interest, and have found that much of what has been written here supports her tales of 'life in Rio'...not exactly what she expected, but interesting and lively all the same.
Posted by Cindy on October 20,2010 | 11:17 PM
Never having been to Rio, I found this article fascinating. To see an entire city, for the most part, see the good in their environment and want to, as a group, improve upon what has already been done is so positive. I wish my city would be able to unite with that type of vision in mind.
Posted by Barbara Mongan on October 4,2010 | 09:38 PM
Current event
Posted by Mrs. Pullen on October 1,2010 | 04:10 PM
It's interesting that Río has the opportunity to be shown as a modern and pacific city; However, until I read this article, I had no idea Rio was seen as an abandoned and dangerous city. As an average person, I have (had) the idea that Río is a fun place to live in, great known for it's beaches and festivals.
Posted by Luis on September 15,2010 | 09:27 PM
I live in Rio, and I have lived in many other places in the world, including Metropolitan Detroit, Michigan.
From my perspective, generally speaking, I don't see a whole lot of differences between Rio's problems and those of the City of Detroit (and other cities in the world), the only exceptions being that Rio is full of life and beauty and many friendly people and Detroit is not.
Posted by Susan on August 28,2010 | 06:20 AM
Terrible!
Posted by Alex on August 23,2010 | 03:23 PM