City of the Resurgent Falls
- Feb 26
- 2 min read
This project dives into the potential super-eco-friendly futures of 10,000 towns and cities around the world. This week, it’s all about envisioning what lies ahead for the Paraguayan city of Salta del Guairá.
The Guairá Falls of the Paraná River in Paraguay were once a continental wonder of South America. Their seven columns discharged the highest volume of water of any falls in the world. Their cacophonous roar could be heard twenty miles away. For many years, Guairá Falls were a tourist attraction—a special favorite among the people of the continent — for their power, glory, and the bellowing mists sent into the pristine landscape.

That was until 1982, when the military government blew away the rocks over which the water fell to create a reservoir for the newly constructed Itaipú Dam. So this is what the seven columns of waterfalls looked like after this project was completed.

The local indigenes, the Guarani, and the Paraguayan mestizos as well, prayed and mourned as their sacred falls died. Salto del Guaira, the city, still exists in Paraguay despite the demise of its namesake watery landmark and despite the loss of the one million tourists who passed through it each year before the dam was built.
In the future, both the town and the falls have reemerged in splendiferous style. Perhaps the Paraguayan military bombs the Itaipú Dam by mistake, or perhaps a series of natural disasters strike it and make it tumble — a great earthquake, for instance, plus a series of storms and floods. Or maybe the dam just crumbles from old age or neglect. For whatever reason, someday in the late twenty-first century the Guairá Falls are reborn in a glorious cascade.

By that time, the Guarani have gained control of their land and the Paraguayans have mustered democratic resistance to their army’s constant interference in government. Together, the Paraguayan people and the native Guarani set about rehabilitating the falls with a scenic city -- and a regenerating mosaic of riverine woodlands.
Then -- once more -- millions of South American tourists are very happy to come and see their amazing continental falls.

Now, wherever in the subtropical world you might be, if you are contemplating about beginning your own little urban or rural eco-renaissance, feel free to buy just one gorgeous potted tropical plant in order to get started -- from our kind and Green associates at "The Garden Shed






















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