Between Rivers | The “Viewpoint of the River” of Gualeguaychú
It will be the highest tower in the country built in wood
The Mirador del Río is an elevated tower 18 meters high, built entirely of elliotti pine and taeda missionary wood, on a metal structure imported from Italy. It was located on the Paseo Península and will allow visitors to observe the natural beauty of the riverside landscape from the 8 floors. Due to its height and wood, it is the only one and the first in Argentina. It was developed by Eduardo Rubel for the Municipality of Gualeguaychú as a tourist attraction and strategic value of the landscape of the place.
An 8-story tower built in wood
The "Mirador del Río" is an elevated tower 18 meters high, built entirely of wood on a metal structure imported from Italy, which will allow you to observe the natural beauty of the riverside landscape. In total it rises to 22 meters high, by the final roof.
This new Paseo de la Península has a road network that begins at Bulevar De León and Luis N. Palma, with an extension of approximately 3,150 meters.
"The tower is located in the center of the Peninsula, to appreciate the meandering of the river," explained the person in charge of the idea and development of the project, Eduardo Rubel. The idea of the project is based on the strategic value of the place fully populated with vegetation and trees.
The Tower is located in the center equidistant between two channels of the same river, allowing a 360-degree view on each floor that will rise to the seventh with a height of 22 meters, its highest part being 23.50 meters
In Argentina it is necessary to break with paradigms about the use of wood in construction, it is necessary to break with prejudices, it is necessary to show the added value and technological development that the wood industry has achieved. You have to believe in the raw material we have. And what better than doing a work that allows everyone who wants to enjoy this space designed for tourism, well-being, recreation and the enjoyment of nature, that links wood with all its senses”, said Rubel, demonstrating his Passion and enthusiasm for the project, from the beginning of the interview.
"Today, wood is the highly sustainable material and the future of construction, that is indisputable"- Eduardo Rubel.

IT MAY INTEREST YOU
Paraguay | The plantations became instruments of territorial development and the generation of decent employment, INFONA highlights.
Plantings in different phases, control of ants and weeds, pruning and thinning, mechanized harvest, technology applied to the field and complete integration of the production cycle were part of the CREA Forestal proposal in its Technical Update Conference – JAT Forestal 2025. The event took place on Friday, November 14, at Estancia Ñemity, located in San Juan Nepomuceno, Caazapá, where agricultural producers, technicians, contractors, students and companies in the sector met to observe the forestry business of the future in action.
Missions | New illegal felling in the Piñalito Provincial Park in San Pedro reveals the silent expansion of deforestation in protected areas
The advance of deforestation on protected areas was once again evident this week in the Piñalito Sur Provincial Park, in San Pedro, where the Ministry of Ecology and Renewable Natural Resources confirmed a new case of selective illegal logging. The event occurs in a context of growing concern about the fragility of the environmental control system in rural and border areas, where the scarcity of resources, personnel and logistics limits the capacity of surveillance against criminal organizations organized to steal native woods and market them on the black market in connivance with sawmill owners.
The forest of the oldest shadows: the story of the petrified trees
One of the natural treasures of Río Negro turns 23 years old under the protection law that allows its conservation. Where it is and how it was formed. Río Negro celebrates 23 years of conservation in the petrified forest as a Protected Natural Area (ANP). It is a space of 625 hectares that protects an exceptional site of fossil trunks that date back more than 60 million years.





















