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Catedral Metropolitana
Completed in 1999, the cathedral stands on the site of an earlier version that burnt down in 1956. The beige stucco building has two bell towers rising above a blue-and-yellow checkered dome and its facade is decorated with colorful campesino (rural) motifs of La Palma painter Fernando Llort. Underneath the cavernous nave is Archbishop Oscar A Romero's tomb.
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Iglesia El Calvario
West down Calle Gerardo Barrios, at 3a Av Sur, you'll see the Gothic towers of the decaying Iglesia El Calvario .
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Iglesia El Rosario
What appears from the outside like a dilapidated airport hangar is, in fact, one of the most intriguing churches in the country. After entering through an easy-to-miss corridor, you'll see that Iglesia El Rosario opens into a shallow nave backed by a high brick wall and soaring arched roof above. The roof isn't a true arch, though, but a series of overhanging steps inset with a rainbow of stained-glass panels.
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Metropolitan Cathedral
San Salvador's Metropolitan Cathedral faces Plaza Barrios and marks the center of the city's street grid. Completed in 1999, after years of renovation, the cathedral stands on the site of an earlier version that burned in 1956. The beige stucco building has two bell towers rising above a blue and yellow checker-patterned dome. The facade is painted with the colorful campesino motifs of La Palma painter Fernando Llort; you can see Llort's schematic paintings at his gallery, El Arbol de Dios.
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