The former Gran Hotel Viena, Miramar, Córdoba Province, Argentina. The hotel was inaugurated in 1945, and closed in 1980 following a record flood three years earlier. This message reminds us that the great floods from 1870 to 1920, were absolutely septate, ignored. And, through the very dry 1920-1970 period: it was built and planned as if it were a silly climatic history; ... And the same wise and Florentino Ameghino climatologist only one locality, an avenue, a street ...
This image, which was originally posted to Flickr, was uploaded to Commons using Flickr upload bot on 26 May 2010, 02:40 by Sherlock4000. On that date, it was confirmed to be licensed under the terms of the license indicated.
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https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0CC BY 2.0 Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 truetrue
Argentina has no "freedom of panorama" provision in its copyright law. At least some think there is de facto freedom of panorama in Argentina regarding buildings:
It is uncontroversially accepted that buildings can be reproduced by paintings or photographs, without this reproduction infringing copyright.
Se ha admitido pacificamente que los edificios puedan ser reproducidos mediante pinturas o fotografías, sin estimarse que esta reproducción lesione los derechos de autor.
— Dr. Emery, Miguel Angel (professor of intellectual property law in Argentina), Propiedad Intelectual, Astrea Editors 4th. edition ISBN9789505085231. p.40 op cit