
Carlos Gardel House Museum
Museum
Concert hall
Neighborhood
Founded in
Web
History
The house of Jean Jaurès 735 was purchased by Carlos Gardel in 1926 for his mother, Berta Gardés, in the then-bustling neighborhood of Abasto. They lived together there between 1927 and 1933, in a typical "chorizo" house with rooms aligned around a central patio, from where Gardel would leave for his tours and return to daily life in Buenos Aires.
After the singer's death in 1935, the residence underwent various uses and owners — it even functioned as a tango house — although it retained its original structure. In 1997, it was declared a National Historic Site, in recognition of its symbolic value as "the last porteño house of Gardel" and as a witness to the domestic architecture of his time.
In the early 2000s, the city undertook a comprehensive restoration process that recovered the original appearance of the house and adapted its spaces for museum use. In 2003, it opened to the public as the Carlos Gardel House Museum, dedicated to investigating, preserving, and disseminating the life and work of the Zorzal Criollo, as well as the cultural context in which they are inscribed.
The Carlos Gardel House Museum Today
The Carlos Gardel House Museum conducts guided tours, temporary exhibitions, educational activities, music cycles, talks, and special proposals related to tango, which offer a journey through the life and legacy of the singer from the house he inhabited.
Its Heritage Importance
The Carlos Gardel House Museum establishes a direct link between the Abasto neighborhood and the most emblematic figure of tango. The preservation of its domestic architecture, along with objects and historical archives, constitutes a valuable cultural heritage of the city and activates the affective memory surrounding Gardel as a fundamental symbol of porteño identity.




























