At 5 pm, kiosks from Leme to Prainha raise their cups in “The City’s Biggest Toast” for Rio’s 461st anniversary, with events along the shore
Rio de Janeiro turns 461 this Sunday, March 1, and the celebration has a citywide moment on the calendar. At 5 pm, beach kiosks along the waterfront will lift their cups simultaneously in The City’s Biggest Toast, an initiative led by Orla Rio.
The idea is simple and striking: turn the late afternoon into a shared gesture by the sea. The same scene unfolds across different beaches at the exact same time, linking the shoreline as one continuous public space.
What’s happening along the shore
Throughout the day, different stretches of the waterfront host a special lineup mixing culture, sports, and live music. The schedule ranges from capoeira and a mass to exhibitions, workouts, talks, and sunset shows.
At Quiosque La Carioca (Posto 11, Leblon), a capoeira circle starts at 4 pm. At 6 pm, Moyses Marques performs Brazilian popular music with Dois Irmãos, with Vidigal as the backdrop.
At Praia do Pontal in Recreio, Quiosque do Guido holds a Holy Mass at 9 am. The service may be canceled in case of rain or strong winds.
In São Conrado, Quiosque Barthô hosts an exhibition by Barthô Praia Clothing during the day, weather permitting. In front of Quiosque QuiQui, Arena Sanca – Rio Cultura & Saúde keeps Sunday moving with a functional training class, a sustainability talk, sports activities, and late-afternoon concerts.
At Arena Sanca, Gabi Melim takes the stage at 5 pm, followed by DJ JP. At 6:30 pm, the band Lagum closes the music program.
In Ipanema (Posto 10), Sel d’Ipanema hosts DJ Alberto Dias with Edu Mega on percussion from 4 pm to 7 pm. In Recreio, between Postos 9 and 10, Quiosque Bells brings live rock starting at 1 pm.
A synchronized birthday toast
At 5 pm, the toast runs from one end of the city’s beaches to the other. In different places, at the same time, cups rise toward the ocean—one shared instant to mark Rio’s anniversary.
“More than a celebration, the toast is an invitation for people to use the shoreline in an integrated way. When we synchronize this gesture across different beaches, we show the strength of this public space as the city’s meeting point. At 461 years old, Rio celebrates facing the sea, but above all by valuing coexistence, culture, and the energy that make the shoreline one of its main assets,” says João Marcello Barreto, President of Orla Rio.
Photo: Tomas Rangel

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