Get Up & Go contributor David Ellis continues his search for the weird and whacky and says that after laying abandoned
for years because people believed it was haunted, a picturesque old hotel in
the mountains 30km south-west of Bogota in Colombia has taken on a new lease of
life as a museum.
The once-luxury Hotel del Salto was originally built as a
private mansion and converted to a hotel in 1928; it was an immediate hit with
honeymooners and others visiting the spectacular nearby Tequendama Falls, but
with increasing contamination of the Bogota River interest in the 160m high
Falls waned and the hotel closed in the early 1990s.
Despite several proposals for its re-opening the hotel’s
doors remained locked – many locals believing it to be haunted by the ghosts of
revellers who fell off balconies into the river below, and others saying of
ghosts of indigenous locals who jumped off the Tequendama Falls to escape
incarceration as slaves.
The hotel was recently re-opened as the Museum of Biodiversity
and Culture to highlight the work being put into the rejuvenation of the Bogota
River, alongside the history of the local people.

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