Puerto Plata

San Felipe fortress in Puerto Plata, Dom.Rep.

Puerto Plata, city and port, northern Dominican Republic. It lies at the foot of Isabel de Torres Peak, along the Atlantic Ocean. Puerto Plata was founded in 1503 by Christopher Columbus. Serving the fertile Cibao Valley, the port handles the produce of one of the country’s leading coffee-growing regions. The agricultural hinterland is also a major tobacco-producing area, and bananas, sugarcane, and dairy products are economically significant as well. Puerto Plata’s port handles principally tobacco, coffee, cacao, rice, sugarcane, bananas, and lumber. Fishing is important to the city, as are processing and manufacturing plants; chocolate, matches, dairy products, foodstuffs, and liquor number among the leading products. Tourism is prominent, and many resort complexes line the city’s beaches, most of them at Dorada Beach. Puerto Plata houses an amber museum featuring collections of fossilized amber dating back thousands of years. A cable car ascends Isabel de Torres Peak for a panoramic view of the city and port. Puerto Plata is accessible by secondary highways from coastal and inland urban centres. It has an international airport. The ruins of La Isabela—one of the first European towns in the New World, founded by Columbus in 1493—are located 30 miles (50 km) west of the city. Pop. (2002) urban area, 112,036; (2010) urban area, 118,282.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Maren Goldberg.