Patapo District

The district is home to the Cerro Patapo Ruins, a complex city on a mountainside with artifacts and numerous remnants of walls, staircases, and entrances, and was inhabited by the Wari peoples.

[4] Generally, the area is covered with somewhat steep slopes surrounded with flat patches of desert.

[9] The area mainly composes of small concentrations of houses throughout the connecting highway, but there are several locales with enough population to be considered a real town.

Trapiche, road congestion was such an issue that a traffic light was installed, however, it has seen been removed, possibly due to the lack of enforcement.

Around the main park, clusters of inflated bouncy castles and slides and soccer stickman sets.

Promotional murals painted on the exterior of houses and on billboards on top of buildings are common and help support a candidate.

Additionally, a footbridge spans it in between the former two; the bridge is known locally to be unstable, it wobbles frequently and the structure collapsed at one point.

The cemetery for both this town and the former is located here, and mass marches for the recently deceased is a common sight.

Additionally, the sheer size of the tank ensures that the water won't run out before normal service is restored.

Service is decent although unexpected blackouts sometimes occur, although they aren't severe nor frequent as less developed areas.

Due to lack of energy consumption and monetary value, the electrical bills rarely exceed US$2 (~6 PEN.)