Avenida Tacna
Tacna Avenue, formerly Jirón Tacna, is one of the main avenues that surround the Damero de Pizarro in the historic centre of Lima, Peru. It starts at the Puente Santa Rosa, and continues until it reaches Wilson and La Colmena avenues. It is prolonged to the south for two blocks and to the north until it reaches Rímac Avenue in San Juan de Lurigancho.
History
The road that today constitutes the street was laid by Francisco Pizarro when he founded the city of Lima on January 18, 1535. In 1862, when a new urban nomenclature was adopted, the road was named jirón Tacna, after the city of the same name. Prior to this renaming, each block had a unique name:- Block 1: Manita, for reasons not known. According to Ricardo Palma, a waving hand, in reality an optical illusion, guided people there.
- Block 2: Mantequería/Borriqueras, after the lard-selling stores and the donkey stables there, respectively.
- Block 3: Comesebo, for reasons not known.
- Block 4: Pileta de las Nazarenas, after the fountain formerly located there that belonged to the Sanctuary and Monastery of Las Nazarenas.
- Block 5: Huevo, for reasons not known.
The intersection with Emancipación Avenue is the location of the Edificio Oropeza, an incomplete building that has been abandoned for over three decades, as well as that of a station of the same name of the Metropolitano bus system.