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Alameda Central

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 México

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.....

Ballet Folklórico de México

The Ballet Folklorico de Mexico is a celebrated dance company that presents the traditional dances, music and costumes of Mexico's many regions in a polished theatrical spectacle, performing most famously on the stage of the magnificent Palacio de Bellas Artes in the centre of Mexico City. Founded in 1952 by the dancer and choreographer Amalia Hernandez, the company drew on extensive research into the folk traditions of the country to create a repertoire that transforms regional dances into a v.....

Estadio GNP Seguros

One of the largest concert venues in Latin America, Estadio GNP Seguros is a vast open-air stadium in eastern Mexico City, set within the Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez motor-racing circuit. Originally created in 1993 as a temporary concert ground and later permanently built and named Foro Sol, the venue was extensively renovated and renamed in 2024, reopening as a thoroughly modernised home for the biggest international tours. With a capacity of around sixty-five thousand for concerts, the stadi.....

Juncal Tablao Flamenco

In the fashionable Roma district of Mexico City, Juncal Tablao Flamenco keeps alive the art of Spanish flamenco, presenting live performances of song, guitar and dance in the intimate setting of a traditional tablao paired with Spanish and Mediterranean cuisine. The tablao, a small venue where flamenco is performed close to the audience, is the natural home of the art form, and Juncal recreates that atmosphere far from its Andalusian origins, billing itself as one of the leading flamenco venues .....

Mercado Medellín

In the Roma Sur district of Mexico City, the Mercado Medellin is a traditional covered market that has earned a particular reputation for its cosmopolitan range of goods, drawing shoppers from across the city in search of products that are hard to find elsewhere. Like the many neighbourhood markets that anchor daily life in the capital, it offers the usual abundance of fresh fruit and vegetables, meat, fish, flowers, spices and prepared food, but it is best known for its international character,.....

Mexican Folklore Ballet

Performances of Mexican folkloric dance, presented for visitors to the capital, offer a vivid and colourful introduction to the regional traditions of the country through staged spectacles of music, dance and costume. The most renowned of these is the Ballet Folklorico de Mexico, the company founded in 1952 by the dancer and choreographer Amalia Hernandez, which has come to be regarded as the foremost folk-dance ensemble in the nation and performs regularly at the magnificent Palacio de Bellas A.....

Museum of Tequila and Mezcal

Standing on the famous Plaza Garibaldi in the centre of Mexico City, the Museum of Tequila and Mezcal, known by its Spanish initials MUTEM, is devoted to the two agave spirits that are among the most emblematic products of Mexico, and to the mariachi music with which the square has long been associated. The museum opened in December 2010 as the centrepiece of a wider project to renovate and revitalise the historic Plaza Garibaldi, traditionally the gathering place of mariachi musicians who wait.....

Palacio de Bellas Artes

The grandest cultural building in Mexico, the Palacio de Bellas Artes, or Palace of Fine Arts, rises in gleaming white marble at the edge of the Alameda Central in the historic heart of Mexico City, its great tiled dome a landmark of the capital. The palace had a long and troubled birth: commissioned during the rule of Porfirio Diaz in the early years of the twentieth century and designed by the Italian architect Adamo Boari in an opulent Art Nouveau style, its construction was interrupted by th.....

Palacio Postal

Often described as one of the most beautiful post offices in the world, the Palacio Postal, or Postal Palace, in the historic centre of Mexico City is a richly ornamented building that still functions as a working post office more than a century after it opened. Completed in 1907 during the rule of Porfirio Diaz, an era marked by ambitious public buildings in European styles, the palace was designed by the same Italian architect, Adamo Boari, who would later begin the neighbouring Palace of Fine.....