Abstract

The Saavedra Park, built in 1937, is a component of the networks created by the state oil company Y.P.F., which discovered oil in 1907 in Argentine Patagonia, and that endured until its privatization in the nineteen nineties. During this last process, their assets were transferred to the Municipality of Comodoro Rivadavia, who handed it over as a commodate to a trade union in 2005, motivating legal actions, although dismissed, that prompted its declaration as cultural heritage of the city in 2008. The article analyzes the Park in its double nature as: reference of social identities historically constructed under the umbrella of Y.P.F. and as landscape heritage.

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