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City Guide  - Mexico City  - Key Attractions
Key Attractions

Centro Histórico (Historic Centre)
The focus of the historic centre, the Zócalo, or Plaza de la Constitución, is one of the world's largest plazas and is quite literally the capital's political and religious centre. The area is constantly animated and alive with people - with official ceremonies and celebrations, demonstrations and marches, impromptu performances and artisans plying their wares. The ceremonial raising and lowering of the huge flag at the square's centre takes place at 0600 and 1800.

On the north side of the Zócalo is the Catedral Metropolitana (Metropolitan Cathedral). Built in 1573, consecrated in 1667, and completed in 1813 in a Baroque style known as churrigueresque, it is the largest and oldest cathedral in Latin America. The cathedral has suffered from subsidence over many years and restoration work under way to build new foundations detracts from its grandeur somewhat. There are no opening hours or admission fees but visitors are asked to be respectful during religious services.

Next to the cathedral are the ruins of the Templo Mayor (Main Temple), the principal teocalli of Aztec Tenochtitlán, which was demolished by the Spaniards in the 1520s and rediscovered in 1978 while telephone cables were being laid in the area. First constructed in 1375, the Aztecs then built a new temple every 52 years - seven have been identified layered one on top of another. The site's museum displays various artefacts found in the main pyramid of Tenochtitlán.

The whole eastern side of the Zócalo is taken up by the Palacio Nacional (Presidential Palace), which houses the Federal Treasury, the National Archives and, until recently, the offices of the President of Mexico. Inside are colourful murals by Diego Rivera - his México a Través de los Siglos (Mexico Through the Centuries), in the main stairwell leading to the first floor, depicts every major event and personality of Mexican history, from Cortés' conquest of the Aztecs to the Mexican Revolution.

A few blocks west of Zócalo, the Museo Nacional de Arte (National Art Museum), built at the turn of the twentieth century in the style of an Italian Renaissance palace, houses an exhaustive collection of Mexican art from every school and style.

Templo Mayor
Plaza de la Constitución
Tel: (5) 542 0606.
Transport: Metro Zócalo.
Opening hours: Tues-Sun 1000-1800.
Admission: M$20 (free on Sun).

Palacio Nacional
Plaza de la Constitución
Transport: Metro Zócalo.
Opening hours: Mon-Sat 1000-1800.
Admission: Free; identification required for entry.

Museo Nacional de Arte
Calle Tacuba 8
Tel: (5) 512 3224.
Transport: Metro Bellas Artes.
Opening hours Tues-Sun 1000-1700.
Admission: M$20 (free on Sun).

Alameda Central
Originally the site of an Aztec marketplace, and later a place of execution during the Spanish Inquisition, the Alameda Central is Mexico City's largest central park. A welcome green respite where office workers stroll past the many food stalls and hawkers ply their wares, the place throngs with activity on Sunday and there are often open-air concerts. For an artistic impression of the park, the nearby Museo Mural Diego Rivera displays the artist's Sueño de una Tarde Dominical en la Alameda' (Dream of a Sunday Afternoon in Alameda Park), a huge mural painted in 1947. It depicts the many characters from history that Rivera imagined to have walked in the Alameda.

The Palacio de Bellas Artes (Palace of Fine Arts) a sumptuous, white-marble concert hall at the eastern end of the Alameda also houses a museum and theatre in its Art Deco interior. Intended to mark the 1910 centennial celebration of Mexican Independence, work began in 1904 under the Italian architect Adamo Boari, who also designed the nearby Correo Mayor (main post office) but was finally completed in 1934 following a number of set-backs, including the Mexican Revolution. The museum on the second and third floors displays old and contemporary paintings, sculptures and handicrafts. Powerful works by the great Mexican muralists Diego Rivera, Clemente Orozco, David Alfaro Siqueiros and Rufino Tamayo are on display on the third floor. Operas and orchestral concerts are frequently performed in the theatre, which has a glass curtain designed by Tiffany. Opposite the Palacio is the Torre Latinoamericana (Latin American Tower), a landmark skyscraper built in the 1950s. Its 43rd-floor viewing platform is 2422m (7950ft) above sea level and affords spectacular panoramic views over the city on clear days.

Museo Mural Diego Rivera
Plaza Solidaridad, corner of Balderas and Colón
Tel: (5) 510 2329.
Transport: Metro Hidalgo.
Opening hours: Tues-Sun 1000-1800.
Admission: M$20 (free for students and on Sun).

Palacio de Bellas Artes
Avenida Juárez, corner of Eje Central Lázaro Cárdenas
Tel: (5) 512 2593 or 521 9251.
Transport: Metro Bellas Artes.
Opening hours: Tues-Sun 1000-1800 (museum).
Admission: US$2.50 (free on Sun).

Torre Latinoamericana
Eje Central Lázaro Cárdenas, corner of Avenida Madero
Tel: (5) 510 4284.
Transport: Metro San Juan Letrán or Bellas Artes.
Opening hours: Daily 0900-2300.
Admission: M$35.

Paseo de la Reforma
The Paseo de la Reforma, Mexico City's main boulevard, runs from the Alameda to the Chapultepec Park (see below) and is lined with shops, offices, hotels, restaurants and some modern skyscrapers. It is a prestigious address and home to many multinationals, financial institutions and embassies. Based on the Champs Elysées, this thoroughfare was built to provide a direct path for the Emperor Maximilian between the historic centre and his palace in Chapultepec Park and is lined with monuments, fountains and statues of Mexican heroes.

In particular, El Monumento de la Independencia (Monument to Independence), or Angelito as it is affectionately known, is a gilded statue of a winged Victory set atop a 46m-high (150ft) column in a glorieta (traffic circle) and the location for demonstrations and sporting and national celebrations. In 1956, the statue toppled to the ground in an earthquake, but was completely restored, much to the relief of the Mexican people. Displayed inside the monument is the skull of Hidalgo, the executed leader of a group of rebels who rose against the Spanish in October 1810, which can be seen daily 0900-1700 at no charge.

Lying to the south of the Paseo and bounded by Reforma, Sevilla, Avenida Chapultepec and Avenida Insurgentes Sur, is the Zona Rosa (Pink Zone), a shopping and entertainment district with many stores, restaurants and nightclubs.

Transport: Metro Insurgentes or peseros marked 'Metro Chapultepec', 'Reforma' or 'Auditorio'.

Bosque de Chapultepec (Chapultepec Park)
The Bosque de Chapultepec, Mexico City's largest park, is a huge wooded area covering four sq kilometres (1.5 sq miles) and containing lakes, the presidential residences, several of the city's finest museums, an amusement park and a zoo. Legend has it the wood served as a refuge for Toltec and Aztec kings during times of trouble. The park attracts thousands of visitors especially on Sundays when families come to relax and picnic. The park is divided into three sections, with the attractions listed below lying in the primera seccion (first section), on Paseo de la Reforma. The segunda sección (second section) is occupied by La Feria (Amusement Park), and the tercera sección (third section) by Atlantis, a marine park with dolphin and seal shows and an aquarium - both are on Avenida Constituyentes.

The Castillo de Chapultepec (Chapultepec Castle), situated on the Chapultepec Hill (the name means 'Hill of Grasshoppers' in the Aztec language Nahuatl), was built in 1785 for the Spanish viceroys and used as a residence for Mexico's presidents until 1940. It now houses the Museo Nacional de Historia (National History Museum), filled with hundreds of paintings, murals, ceramics, furniture and carriages depicting the history of Mexico from the Aztecs to the present day. The rooms once used by Emperor Maximilian and Empress Carlotta have been preserved and fine views over the Valley of Mexico can be had from the castle's balconies. A road-train climbs the hill from inside the entrance to the park (M$20).

The Museo de Arte Moderno (Museum of Modern Art) has permanent exhibitions of Mexican contemporary art - by Rivera, Siqueiros, O'Gorman, Rufino Tamayo, Frida Kahlo and Dr Atl, to name but a few - and also hosts temporary exhibits of international artists. There is sculpture garden in the grounds of the museum. Parque Zoológico de Chapultepec (Chapultepec Zoological Park) has a collection of animals from around the world and was the birthplace of the first panda born in captivity. The Museo Rufino Tamayo contains permanent exhibits of work by contemporary Mexican and international painters, donated by Tamayo and his wife, as well as a fine collection of paintings by the artist himself.

Chapultepec Park
Tel: (5) 515 2697.
Transport: Metro Chapultepec for first section; Metro Constituyentes for second and third sections.
Opening hours: Daily 0500-1700.
Admission: Free.

La Feria
Tel: (5) 230 2121.
Opening hours: Tues-Fri 1100-1900, Sat and Sun 1000-2100.
Admission: M$140 for an all-ride pass.

Atlantis
Tel: (5) 273 2176 or 271 8618.
Opening hours: Tues-Sun 1000-1800.
Admission: M$25.

Museo Nacional de Historia
Tel: (5) 286 0700
Opening times: Tues-Sun 0900-1700.
Admission: M$40.

Museo de Arte Moderno
Tel: (5) 211 8331 or 8045.
Opening hours: Tues-Sun 1000-1800.
Admission: M$20 (free for students and on Sun).

Parque Zoológico de Chapultepec
Tel: (5) 553 6229 or 6263.
Opening hours: Tues-Sun 1000-1630.
Admission: Free.

Museo Rufino Tamayo
Tel: (5) 286 6519.
Opening hours: Tues-Sun 1000-1730.
Admission: M$20 (free for students and on Sun).

Museo Nacional de Antropología (National Anthropology Museum)
Perhaps Mexico's City's finest museum, the Museo Nacional de Antropología (National Anthropology Museum) is also one of the best of its kind in the world. Situated in an extension of Chapultepec Park, this huge museum houses a vast and spectacular collection centred on a huge rectangular patio and can take days to explore. Its well organised collection is dedicated to each major culture that contributed to the evolution of a Mesoamerican civilisation: Pre-Classic, Toltec, Teotihuacán, Aztec, Oaxaca, Gulf Coast, Maya, Northwestern and Western Mexico. Some of the most fascinating exhibits are the famous Aztec 'sun' (or 'calendar') stone, giant stone Olmec heads from Tabasco and a replica of a Mayan tomb from Palenque. On the upper level, the rooms are dedicated to how modern Mexico's indigenous people live.

Several times a day, voladores (fliers) give a daring and spectacular performance in front of the museum's entrance, re-enacting an ancient ceremony. Men dressed in colourful, traditional costume attach ropes to themselves and scale a tall pole, from where they launch themselves and 'fly' in circles as they unwind until they reach the ground.

Paseo de la Reforma (north of Chapultepec Park)
Tel: (5) 553 6381.
Transport: Metro Auditorio.
Opening hours: Tues-Sun 0900-1900.
Admission: M$30 (free on Sun).

Coyoacán
Once a city in its own right, the suburb of Coyoacán is the oldest part of Mexico City and was the place from which Cortés launched his attack on Tenochtitlán. Along the peaceful tree-lined avenues are beautiful buildings from the sixteenth to nineteenth centuries. Especially at weekends, the craft stalls, musicians and mime artists around the central squares of Plaza Hidalgo and Jardín del Centenario create a bohemian atmosphere.

The Museo Casa de Frida Kahlo occupies the family home of the artist Frida Kahlo. She was born here in 1907 and then lived here with her husband, the revolutionary muralist Diego Rivera, from 1929 until her death in 1954. The couple was part of a glamorous, leftist, intellectual set during the 1930s and the house is full of mementoes of this period. Two rooms are preserved as lived in; the rest display paintings by both artists. The Kahlo work on display is not her best known, but expresses something of the pain and torment in her life. The small collection of folk art - a passion of Kahlo's -includes a number of regional costumes worn by the artist.

The Museo Casa de León Trotsky (Leon Trotsky Museum) is the house where the Russian revolutionary spent the last four years of his life. Very little has changed in the house since Trotsky was assassinated in the study in 1940 and it is a very dark and sombre place. There is a tomb in the garden where his ashes were interred.

Museo Casa de Frida Kahlo
Londres 247 (corner of Allende), Coyoacán
Tel: (5) 554 5999.
Transport: Metro Viveros, Coyoacán or General Anaya; pesero marked 'Coyoacán' from Paseo de la Reforma.
Opening hours: Tues-Sun 1000-1800.
Admission: M$20.

Museo Casa de León Trotsky
Río Churubusco 410, between Gómez Farías and Morelos
Transport: Metro Viveros, Coyoacán or General Anaya; pesero marked 'Coyoacán' from Paseo de la Reforma.
Opening hours: Tues-Sun 1000-1700.
Admission: M$20 (half price for students; free on Sun).

San Angel
San Angel is an elegant, colonial neighbourhood about nine kilometres (six miles) south of Paseo de la Reforma. The affluent suburb is best known for its weekly arts and crafts market, the Bazar Sábado (Saturday Bazaar), in Plaza San Jacinto. The Museo Estudio Diego Rivera (Diego Rivera's Studio Museum), where Rivera and his wife Frida Kahlo lived in the 1930s, is an avant-garde building designed for them by Juan O'Gorman. There are only a few of the artists' works on display but plenty of memorabilia. The Museo Carrillo Gil Arte Contemporano (Carillo Gil Contemporary Art Museum) is a fine art museum containing works by Mexican and international artists.

Museo Estudio Diego Rivera
Calle Diego Rivera 2 (corner of Altavista).
Tel: (5) 550 1189.
Transport: Metro MA Quevedo, then minibus to San Angel.
Opening hours: Tues-Sun 1000-1800.
Admission: M$10 (free on Sun).

Carrillo Gil Arte Contemporano
Avenida Revolución 1608
Tel: (5) 550 6289.
Transport: Metro MA Quevedo, then minibus to San Angel.
Opening hours: Tues-Sun 1000-1800.
Admission: M$10 (free on Sun).



Copyright © 2001 Columbus Publishing
    
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