For decades, Rio de Janeiro has evoked a distant fantasyland of skimpy bathing suits and Carnival spectacle wedged between the sea and a riotous upheaval of tropical mountains. All this, under the outstretched arms of Christ the Redeemer, the sculpture with the most jaw-dropping view on Earth&mdashif only soapstone jaws could drop. But the 2010s have given Rio a chance to add a cosmopolitan edge as host of the 2014 World Cup and this year&rsquos Summer Olympics, twice making it the centre of the world. The new Rio is taking shape in fits and starts The downtown port area is in the midst of an impressive overhaul of public works, exhumed historic sites and new museums. And with it, energy has been flowing toward more central, bustling neighbourhoods, away from the traditional South Zone destinations of Copacabana and Ipanema&mdashthough their beaches still give a party on the sand like no other. And with the dollar at its strongest in over a decade against the troubled Brazilian real, traditionally pricey Rio is still exuberant, but no longer exorbitant.









