Guatemala City is a sprawling behemoth of 4 million, and the heart of Central America's largest economy and population center. Guatemala suffers from a high degree of poverty, the rate of which has not decreased commensurate with improvements in the economy. The city infrastructure reflects these inequalities, with wealthy residents and developers taking advantage of the unique topography to build ridgetop aeries inaccessible by neighboring low-income residents.
It's precisely these ridges which crumble in the country's rainy season, plaguing the city with sinkholes and famously swallowing whole factories. Along many of these ridges, tin shacks extend precariously down near-vertical walls to the river's edge, forming havens of informality that police, city services, and average Guatemaltecos fear to enter. Some even live within the city dump, Central America's largest, itself built at the bottom of a ravine.
Meanwhile the wealthy are building themselves gleaming new communities like Cayalá, a sort of neo-classical haven recently profiled as a "utopian domain created by one of Guatemala’s richest families". I saw many of these communities in the city's hills, and there is great wealth here - the thought that Guatemala is a poor country is at stark odds with the golf resorts, SUVs, and hilltop mansions of places like Las Nubes and San Isidro, in the city's east zones.