Fans of extreme tourism has a new attraction now after a inauguration of the site at the foot of San Cristobal Volcano, Nicaragua’s tallest, in the northwestern region of the Central American country.
The site was constructed with a budget of 250,000 euros (US$276,125), funded 80 percent by the European Union and 20 percent by the Chichigalpa city government.
Its construction is aimed at promoting the comprehensive development of the tourism value chain based on the Route of the Colonial Cities and the Volcanoes, the EU said.
The site has an inn, dining hall, visitors center, tourist service facility and trails for climbing the 1,745-meter (5,721-foot) high volcano.
Chichigalpa Mayor Victor Manuel Sevilla told EFE, “We used to think that all this volcano could do was erupt, but now it’s on the national route of tourist attractions,”
As part of the project, 43 members from eight communities near the San Cristobal Volcano Ecological Park formed a tourism cooperative, another 234 trained in the subjects of tourism, the environment and climate change, while 92 specialized in the Chonco-San Cristobal-Casitas Reserve Management Plan.
The Route of the Colonial Cities and the Volcanoes includes six provinces on Nicaragua’s Pacific Coast, where a single seismic complex has more than 10 volcanic structures, and where some of the oldest cities in Central America are preserved.