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Mexico City's principal sights fall into three areas. Allow a full day to cover each thoroughly, although you could race through them in four or five hours apiece. You can generally cover the first area—the Zócalo and Alameda Central—on foot. Getting around Zona Rosa, Bosque de Chapultepec, and Colonia Condesa may require a taxi
Mexico City's principal sights fall into three areas. Allow a full day to cover each thoroughly, although you could race through them in four or five hours apiece. You can generally cover the first area—the Zócalo and Alameda Central—on foot. Getting around Zona Rosa, B
Mexico City's principal sights fall into three areas. Allow a full day to cover each thoroughly, although you could race
Mexico City's principal sights fall into three areas. Allow a full day to cover each thoroughly, although you could race through them in four or five hours apiece. You can generally cover the first area—the Zócalo and Alameda Central—on foot. Getting around Zona Rosa, Bosque de Chapultepec, and Colonia Condesa may require a taxi ride or two (though the Chapultepec metro stop is conveniently close to the park and museums), as will Coyoacán and San Angel in southern Mexico City.
This new Mexico City attraction has been a hit since it opened in June 2014, attracting long lines of people hungry to see the largest aquarium...Read More
Five themed sections compose this excellent interactive children's discovery museum: I Communicate, I Am, I Belong, I Express, and I Understand...Read More
This children's amusement park has various games and more than 50 rides, including go-karts, a Eurobungy, spinning teacups, and a montaña rusa...Read More
A huge arbol de la vida (tree of life) sculpture stands in the courtyard of this museum devoted to popular culture and regional arts and crafts...Read More
The San Carlos collection, housed in a handsome, 18th-century, neoclassical stone building with a stunning open-air oval courtyard, is an important...Read More
This is Mexico City's version of the Empire State Building. It took eight years to complete; construction began in 1948 and ended in 1956. It...Read More
In the early 16th century Mexico City's zoo, in Chapultepec, housed a small private collection of animals belonging to Moctezuma II; it became...Read More
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