The third port of call on our July 2012 cruise was Willemstad, Curaçao. Long before we docked at the Mega Pier in the Otrobanda section of the city, the Queen Juliana Bridge dominated the skyline. The bridge was opened on April 30, 1974 and stands 185 feet above St. Anna Bay.
Queen Juliana Bridge |
Mega Pier |
Club House Hoogstraat 18-22 |
Another renovated office on Hoogstraat |
San Mateo Parish |
Curaçao Museum |
Cannons protect the side entrance |
Stained glass map of the Caribbean |
Stair case and breezeway walls lined with artwork |
Replica slave shelter |
Replica slave hut |
Cockpit of the first KLM plane to cross the Atlantic |
Carnival Freedom docked at the Mega Pie |
Punda in the distance with Otrobanda in the foreground |
Punda from Queen Juliana Bridge |
Queen Wilhelmina Bridge built in 1928 |
Skuchami Breedstraat O 178-180 |
Skalo Office Center Scharlooweg 74-76 |
Shopping center |
Another house remade into offices |
Traveling further east, we drove through a more suburban section of town. After driving up and down a series of residential streets, we stopped at a hilltop souvenir shop with a breathtaking view of Spanish Water and Table Mountain. At one time, the mountain was a phosphate mine.
Spanish Water Bay |
Livingstone Resort |
Iguana lookout |
Rush hour on Queen Juliana Bridge |
Isla oil refinery on Schottegat Bay |
Looking across St Anna Bay to Punda |
Pedestrian traffic on Queen Emma Bridge |
Queen Juliana Bridge from Queen Emma Bridge |
Shopper's heaven |
Bell Clock building |
Governor's Palace |
Pastel Punda buildings on St Anna Bay |
Rif Fort, 1828 |
Fort entrance leads to more shops |
Punda after dark |
The queue for boarding our ship |
The official tourist website for Curaçao is at http://www.curacao.com/en.
The UNESCO World Heritage information may be found at http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/819.
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