
The Alameda Central is the oldest public park in the Americas, a leafy rectangle of trees, fountains and pathways in the heart of Mexico City, laid out in the late sixteenth century on land that had once been an Aztec marketplace and, more grimly, a site of executions during the Inquisition. Its name comes from the alamos, or poplars, originally planted there, and over the centuries it has been a fashionable promenade for the city's residents, redesigned and embellished in various styles, partic.....

Arena Mexico in Mexico City is the most famous venue for lucha libre, the colourful and theatrical style of professional wrestling that is one of the country's best-loved popular spectacles, and it is often called the Cathedral of Lucha Libre. Opened in 1956 and seating around sixteen thousand spectators, the arena is the home of the long-established Consejo Mundial de Lucha Libre, the world's oldest wrestling promotion, and it hosts regular bouts several times a week that draw a passionate and.....
Aztlan Parque Urbano is an amusement park in the great Chapultepec park of Mexico City, opened in 2022 on the site of the former Feria de Chapultepec, a long-running fairground that had closed after a fatal accident on one of its rides. Conceived as a modern, family-oriented urban park, Aztlan was developed as part of a wider renewal of the Chapultepec area and blends amusement rides with green space, cultural references and dining, taking its name and theme from Aztlan, the legendary ancestral .....

Occupying a large open green within the Bosque de Chapultepec in Mexico City, Campo Marte is a sprawling open-air ground that has long doubled as one of the capital's notable settings for large concerts and festivals. Originally laid out in the 1930s as a military parade and equestrian field beside Paseo de la Reforma, the expansive site sits in the prestigious Polanco district and offers the kind of wide, flexible space that big outdoor events demand. As a concert venue, the ground is a fully .....
Built between 1940 and 1942 as the first house the architect Luis Barragan designed for himself, Casa Ortega in the Tacubaya district of Mexico City is regarded by many as one of his best-kept secrets, a place where his mature style first took shape. Barragan, who would go on to win the Pritzker Prize and become the most influential Mexican architect of the twentieth century, lived here until 1947 before selling it to the silversmith Alfredo Ortega and building the adjoining Casa Barragan, now a.....
Crowning a hill in the great Chapultepec park of Mexico City, Chapultepec Castle is the only true castle in North America to have housed reigning sovereigns, and its commanding position has made it a witness to much of the nation's history. Construction began in 1785 on the orders of the Spanish viceroy, on a hill the ancient Aztecs had held sacred, and over the following century the building served in turn as a military academy, an imperial residence and a presidential home. During the Mexican.....
For more than eighty years the official residence of the presidents of Mexico, the compound known as Los Pinos was opened to the public as a cultural centre in December 2018, when a newly elected president declined to live there and handed the grounds over to the people as a gesture against the trappings of power. Set within the great Chapultepec park in Mexico City, the complex takes its name, meaning the pines, from a country estate that once stood on the site, and over the decades successive .....
An architectural landmark in the south of Mexico City, El Cantoral, formally the Roberto Cantoral Cultural Center, is a striking modern concert hall in the Xoco neighbourhood. Designed by the acclaimed architect Gerardo Broissin and inaugurated in 2012 as a posthumous tribute to the celebrated Mexican singer-songwriter Roberto Cantoral, the building has won international architectural awards for its bold, sculptural form, which appears to float amid its surroundings. The main hall is renowned f.....

A boutique live-entertainment space in the south of Mexico City, Foro Red Access is an intimate venue built around the idea of pairing music and performance with food and drink in a close, club-like setting. Located in the Coyoacan area, the room is designed for small, curated audiences, offering a more personal alternative to the city's larger concert halls and a setting in which every seat feels close to the stage. The venue is compact, accommodating only a few hundred guests, often arranged .....

Opened to the public in September 2025, the Museo Casa Kahlo, long known as the Casa Roja or red house, offers a quieter and more intimate counterpart to the famous Casa Azul a few steps away in the Coyoacan district of Mexico City. The house, a colonial building distinguished by its deep crimson walls, was bought in the 1930s by the photographer Guillermo Kahlo and his wife Matilde Calderon, the parents of the artist Frida Kahlo, and for much of the twentieth century it was the home of Frida's .....