News

A Christmas tree in December turns into an eyesore in February

Posted: Friday, February 24, 2012 - By Matt Levin
Nobody at the San José Municipality could figure out when a massive metal Christmas tree in the center of San José would be taken down.
Claro Christmas Tree 1
Alberto Font

Souvenir vendor Francisco Salas called the creation a “complete mess.”

Ice cream seller Pedro Reyes saw it as a “nuisance.”

A security guard at the National Museum said he thought the tree looked pretty and festive when the metal behemoth first appeared. Now it looked dead.

In December, the National Power and Light Company (CNFL) received permission from the San José Municipality to construct an enormous metallic Christmas tree in the center of Plaza de la Democracia, in the capital’s center. Telecom enterprise Claro sponsored the glowing 10-meter tree. The holiday season came and went, and the Claro Christmas tree stayed. 

Raquel Caravaca, the municipality’s comptroller of services, said that last year the CNFL reached an agreement with the city to take charge of the lighting project. Construction company CAVICA was contracted to build the tree. 

On Wednesday, after being contacted by The Tico Times, Caravaca said the municipality Public Works Department sent a written order to CAVICA demanding the organization remove the structure. 

Caravaca added in an email that she has tried to reach a representative from CAVICA, but nobody has answered her. The Tico Times also placed multiple calls to the construction company to no avail.  

Meanwhile, the befuddling eyesore rests mightily and uselessly in a plaza space. The once-popular spot for outdoor concerts and other activities now serves as an odd relic to Costa Ricans and tourists alike.

The tree showed brightly through Christmas. Then, the new year arrived. The lights switched off, and it seemed Santa had deposited an immense metal carcass in the middle of San José. 

Salomón Rivera resides inside that hollow space on most days. He said he was hired by CAVICA as the tree’s cuidador, or caretaker. Rivera organizes stray pieces of metal in the construction, and presumably keeps out vagrants and vermin. From time to time, he also explains to police officers why he’s spending his afternoons dwelling inside a fake Christmas tree in February. 

On Tuesday, Rivera said that CAVICA told him workers would arrive to begin taking apart the Christmas tree. Nobody showed up. 

“Christmas is over,” Rivera said. “But this tree could stay here for the next one.”

Laianer Arias contributed to this story.

  • Currently 0 out of 5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Rating: 0/5 (0 votes cast)

Thank you for rating!

You have already rated this page, you can only rate it once!

Your rating has been changed, thanks for rating!

Log in or create a user account to rate this page.

| Share

To comment, write a letter to the editor to letters@ticotimes.net. Please make sure to include your full name and location. Letters must be 500 words or fewer. Submissions should be original.

Write the first comment

Log in or create a user account to comment.

Comments

Weekend

Restaurants

tamales top

Tico Times reporters attempt to make tamales with the pros

Arts & Leisure

filippo

Costa Rican artists explore the juxtaposition of democracy, geography and dreams at this year’s c...

Travel

alturas view

Villas Alturas is the best green-season luxury deal on the Pacific coast