San Juan
About San Juan
San Juan is the capital and most crowded district in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. It is the 46th-biggest city under the ward of the United States. San Juan was established by Spanish homesteaders in 1521, who called it Ciudad de Puerto Rico. Puerto Rico's capital is the second most seasoned European-built up capital city in the Americas, after Santo Domingo, in the Dominican Republic. A few verifiable structures are situated in San Juan; among the most outstanding are the city's previous protective fortresses, Fort San Felipe del Morro and Fort San Cristobal, and La Fortaleza, the most seasoned official house in nonstop use in the Americas.
The architecture of San Juan is exceptionally assorted, because of its size and all the social impacts got amid its reality. The most established piece of the city, known as Old San Juan, for the most part includes the impact of Spanish engineering. This piece of the city is involved by a system of "setted" streets typically encompassed by old, two-storied houses based on stone work. Some pilgrim structures have been reestablished and serve either as government workplaces or museums.