Santiago of Chile›San Pedro de Atacama›Ojo de Perdiz›Uyuni
Chile and Bolivia: the Andean deserts — NAAR
Itinerary
Day 1 — Santiago of Chile
as it entered the twentieth century Santiago began to expand eastwards into the new barrio alto and north into Bellavista; in no time the city started gobbling up outlying towns and villages at great speed and Gran Santiago today stretches 40 km by 40 km. The rapid economic growth of the last decade has seen high-rise buildings sprouting up in the central area, particularly in Providencia and Las Condes, but the city’s core still sticks to the same street pattern marked out by Pedro de Valdivia in 1541, and its first public space, the Plaza de Armas, is still at the heart of its street life.
Car
Day 3 — Santiago of Chile → San Pedro de Atacama
Located at the northernmost tip of Chile, at an altitude of 2430 meters, San Pedro de Atacama is the gateway to the Atacama Desert. San Pedro de Atacama is surrounded by majestic sites with unique landscapes in the world: the Moon and Death Valleys, geysers, salt flats, turquoise-colored lagoons, and some of the highest volcanoes on the continent.
Car
Day 7 — Ojo de Perdiz → Uyuni
on the bleak southern Altiplano 212 km southwest of PotosÃ, the town of Uyuni, 3.668 m asl, is the convenient (and nothing else) jumping-off point for touring the remote and beautiful scenery of the surrounding region.