Arenales Avenue

It starts at its intersection with Republic of Chile Avenue and continues to the south, until it reaches Javier Prado Avenue, joining the districts of Lima (where its first twelve blocks serve as the western limit of its southernmost neighbourhood), Lince and San Isidro.

The 23-storey building's progress was halted in June 1990, and it was only acquired by the healthcare company in 2010 with the intent of transforming it into a medical centre.

[2] Work on the building was meant to continue to coincide with the Bicentennial of the Independence of Peru,[3] which did not happen either.

[4] Its popularity stems from the fact that, since the 1990s, it's the focal point of followers of the city's otaku subculture.

It was blessed by Juan Luis Cipriani Thorne, then Archbishop of Lima, in 2013.