Picture this same coast a little over a century ago: there were no pine woods, no chalets, no tree-lined streets, but a desert of shifting dunes that ran with the wind. Until the early 20th century, the whole coastal strip of Canelones —where the Costa de Oro extends today— was a conglomerate of sand flats, dunes, wetlands and marshes considered practically uninhabitable and unproductive. That Cuchilla Alta is today a peaceful resort among pines, on green bluffs facing the Río de la Plata, is the result of a deliberate transformation of the landscape that began with a handful of visionary foresters.
That change started in 1908, when a group of doctors and students —among them Francisco Ghigliani, Alberto Galeano, José María Delgado and Atilio Narancio— founded the Sociedad Anónima Arborícola Uruguaya with the idea of foresting those barren dunes. By planting pines and eucalyptus the shifting sands were fixed and, in a few decades, a cool, shaded setting suited to summering was created. The name 'Costa de Oro' ('Golden Coast') itself was born from the golden gleam of that sand, which led to naming the whole Canelones coast after a precious metal. On that transformed canvas gradually arose, over the course of the 20th century, the succession of resorts that stretches between the Pando and Solís Grande streams.
Cuchilla Alta is part of that process, but with a feature that sets it apart: its somewhat higher geography. These lands of southeastern Canelones present an elevation of the terrain —a 'cuchilla'— with bluffs and dunes that face the coast, and that gave the resort its name and differentiated it from the flatter coastal towns of the area. In Rioplatense Spanish, a 'cuchilla' is a hill or elongated elevation of the terrain, a term very present in Uruguayan place names. The resort was thus born as a summer destination on the bluffs, with its streets laid out among the pine woods and its beaches at the foot of the dunes.
Over the course of the 20th century, Cuchilla Alta consolidated as a small Costa de Oro resort. The closeness to Montevideo —about 70 kilometers— and the progressive improvement of the roads and communications made it easier for vacationers to arrive, finding in this rugged, wooded resort a quiet place for summer rest. Unlike the busier resorts of the area, Cuchilla Alta drew those seeking a more natural and wild profile.
The resort grew with the building of summer chalets among the pine woods and on the bluffs, and the consolidation of a peaceful summer life around the beaches. Its smaller size and particular geography gave it an identity of its own within the Costa de Oro: that of a serene, low-density destination in close contact with nature, with natural lookouts over the Río de la Plata.
The opening and improvement of the Ruta Interbalnearia, which connects Montevideo with the whole coast to the east, was an important factor for the development of Cuchilla Alta and the other Costa de Oro resorts, by facilitating the arrival of vacationers and travel along the Canelones shoreline.
As happened with other Costa de Oro resorts, Cuchilla Alta gradually gained some permanent population. Families who originally summered at the resort, or who sought a quieter life in contact with nature, settled permanently, providing the small center with basic services that run year-round. However, unlike larger, more residential resorts, Cuchilla Alta kept a low-density profile and a notably serene atmosphere.
This process is part of the general trend of the whole Costa de Oro: the growing residentialization of former summer resorts, driven by the improvement of communications and the search for a quieter life a short distance from the capital. In the case of Cuchilla Alta, its geography of bluffs and dunes and its smaller size helped keep its rugged, peaceful character.
Today, Cuchilla Alta combines the condition of a small tourist resort in summer with that of a very quiet town the rest of the year, sustained by a modest permanent population. Its identity remains marked by nature: the bluffs, the dunes, the pine woods and the beach that have defined it since its origin.
Today, Cuchilla Alta keeps its identity as a small rugged, natural and deeply quiet resort, faithful to the geography of bluffs and dunes that sets it apart. It remains one of the most serene corners of the Costa de Oro, chosen by those seeking rest, coastal nature and a slow pace of life, far from the bustle of the great tourist centers.
Its main attractions —the beaches at the foot of the bluffs, the natural lookouts over the Río de la Plata, the dunes and the pine woods— make Cuchilla Alta a destination that favors contact with nature over services and nightlife. The sunsets from the top of the bluffs are among the loveliest on the Canelones coast, and the silence and fresh air are an essential part of its charm.
There is an underlying tension that runs through the whole Costa de Oro and that also touches Cuchilla Alta: the resorts that were born for summering gradually filled with permanent residents, and several of those closest to Montevideo —to the west, in present-day Ciudad de la Costa— became almost bedroom neighborhoods of the capital. Cuchilla Alta, further away and smaller, remained relatively on the margins of that urbanizing pressure and therefore kept its original appearance as a coastal town among pine woods better than others. That relative 'distance' —barely 70 kilometers from Montevideo, but outside the densest corridor— is, paradoxically, what keeps it quiet.
The identity of Cuchilla Alta rests on that combination of bluffs, dunes, pine woods and beach that defined it from its origin and that still marks its rugged, peaceful character. A destination that invites you to slow down and enjoy the most natural and serene seaside Uruguay, a few kilometers from Montevideo and in the very heart of the Costa de Oro.