By Freda Moon – THE NEW YORK TIMES
Panama City, the perpetually flowering capital of Panama — the small tropical country that bridges North and South America — has been fought over since its founding. The city and commercial hub, famous for the engineering marvel that is its canal, is among the unsung cosmopolitan capitals of the Americas. Flashy highrises and an eclectic culinary landscape — which includes neighborhood canteens, dim sum palaces, French bistros and kosher supermarkets — reflect the city’s international character. Panama City is also where you can feel history under your feet. The Museo Canal, celebrating its 25th anniversary, has a new permanent exhibition on the country’s route to sovereignty, including the United States’s handover of the Panama Canal in 1999, that provides visitors with much-needed context for this place that manages to be very much itself, while also a bit of everywhere else.
With its opening, the Sofitel Legend Casco Viejo, Panama hotel has made available to its guests and visitors an art collection that adds up to a thousand works, most of them created by Panamanian artists. ...
Sofitel recently opened the doors to its newest historical luxury hotel, the Sofitel Legend Casco Viejo in Panama City, smack dab in the capital’s old city and a short distance from the Panama Canal. ...
This chicly historic French-inspired cultural gem in Panama City’s old quarter has all the modern fixings, from the waterfront infinity pool and immersive spa program, to spacious personal terraces overlooking the...