Most of the buildings and roads in the town are elevated on poles because of the wet soil and frequent flooding. The town is connected only by river to neighbouring towns, and to Quibdó, the capital of the Chocó Department. The town is served by the Vigía del Fuerte Airstrip, receiving a more or less daily charter flight in the form of a small propeller plane, connecting it to Medellin. The town hosts two colleges. One generic college serving the town and nearby villages and communities. And the Institución Educativa Embera Atrato Medio, a semi-residential college aimed exclusively at the Embera people living in the region. The latter is ran primarily by the Misioneras de la Madre Laura, residing in the town.
Armed conflict
On the 25th of March 2000, around 300 members of the 57th and 34th fronts of the Northwestern Bloc of the FARC-EP took over the town from AUC control. During the surprise attack they simultaneously attacked the house that the AUC was using as a base and the police station in the centre of the town. The guerilleros ended up launching a cilindro bomba, a makeshift, heavy explosive, into the police station. The resulting explosion took out the concrete police station and damaged the neighbouring church beyond repair. Afterwards, they went into the police station with drawn machetes, none of the 22 policemen survived. Besides the policemen around 9 civilians were killed, bystanders or expected collaborators of the AUC. Among the dead was the major of the town, whose body they burned. Two men were killed on the 1st of May 2002 the day preceding the Bojayá Massacre. Three men were confirmed to have been killed on the 4th of May by members of the FARC upon the accusation of having stolen gasoline for the paramilitaries. All of the 5 aforementioned men are buried in the mausoleum with the victims of the 2nd of May massacre in Bojayá. On October 11th 2013, presumed FARC rebels attacked the municipality's airport, destroying an aircraft in the process. The fighting and consequent displacement has not seized, not after the 2002 Bojayá massacre, nor after the 2016 peace deal with the FARC. Displacement force inhabitants of the region to flee, many whom settle in Vigía and the neighbouring Bellavista, Quibdó or leave the Chocó region altogether.