America

ARGENTINA

High altitude is the quiet engine of Argentina’s wine identity: vineyards often sit above 1,000 metres, where cool nights and strong diurnal shifts refine structure. Alluvial fans and stony soils at the Andes’ foothills meet snowmelt irrigation, increasingly managed through canals and drip systems to keep dryness in balance with terroir expression. Indicación Geográfica names—Mendoza, Luján de Cuyo, Valle de Uco—now lean into parcel mapping, elevation bands and precise picking. The result is a modern, internationally legible style built on tension, clarity and age‑worthy architecture rather than sheer weight.

ARGENTINA

High altitude is the quiet engine of Argentina’s wine identity: vineyards often sit above 1,000 metres, where cool nights and strong diurnal shifts refine structure. Alluvial fans and stony soils at the Andes’ foothills meet snowmelt irrigation, increasingly managed through canals and drip systems to keep dryness in balance with terroir expression. Indicación Geográfica names—Mendoza, Luján de Cuyo, Valle de Uco—now lean into parcel mapping, elevation bands and precise picking. The result is a modern, internationally legible style built on tension, clarity and age‑worthy architecture rather than sheer weight.