Native Trails MyTrails 2025 94 Ciudad de México 43 Papalote Museo del Niño 44 Museo Casa Luis Barragán 45 Museo Casa de León Trotsky 46 Museo Frida Kahlo - Casa Azul 47 Coyoacán 48 Museo Casa Estudio Diego Rivera 49 Museo Arte de Carrillo Gil 50 Museo de El Carmen 51 Suburb San Ángel 52 Bazar del Sábado 53 University City and Olympic Stadium 54 Museo Anahuacalli 55 Estadio Azteca 56 Archaeological zone Cuicuilco 57 Floating gardens of Xochimilco 58 Chinampas of Xochimilco R Restaurants 1 Taquería El Califa de León 2 Restaurant Limosneros 3 Restaurant Café de Tacuba 4 Restaurant Villa Maria 5 Restaurant La Casa de las Sirenas 6 Restaurant Sanborns - Casa de los Azulejos 7 Restaurant Hacienda de los Morales 8 Restaurant Balcón del Zócalo 9 Restaurant El Cardenal 10 Restaurant Salón Corona 11 Restaurant Pujol 12 Restaurant Anatol 13 Restaurant Azulísimo 14 Restaurant Puerto Madero 15 Restaurant Quintonil 16 Restaurant Carmela y Sal 17 Restaurant Los Canarios 18 Handshake Speakeasy Cocktailbar 19 Restaurant Rosetta 20 Restaurant Huset - Cosina de Campo 21 Restaurant Filigrana 22 Restaurant El Tizoncito Tamaulipas 23 Restaurant San Angel Inn 24 Restaurant La Buena Fe 25 Restaurant Los Danzantes 1 Visit of the basilicas of Guadalupe Duration: 01:30 h · Level: Easy The two basilicas dedicated to the Virgin of Guadalupe are located directly next to each other. During a short walk you can visit the churches and the gardens behind it. A special highlight is the legendary cloak of the Virgin in the new, modern basilica. 2 Visit of the Plaza de las Tres Culturas Duration: 01:00 h · Level: Easy You explore the “Plaza de las Tres Culturas.” Once the trade center of the Tlatelolco civilization, this square today unites architectural elements from Aztec, Spanish, and modern Mexican times. In 1521, the last Aztec ruler, Cuauhtémoc, was killed by Spanish conquerors and the Aztec pyramids were partially destroyed. In 1536, Franciscan monks fixed the place and used the stones of the former temple complex to erect the church and school “Colegio de Santa Cruz de Tlatelolco.” Next to the visible foundations of the pyramids, which are today crossed by visitor paths, archaeologists in 1963 unearthed the remains of a skull rack with almost 170 human skulls. Immediately before the opening of the Olympic games of 1968, the Square of the Three Cultures was the scene of student unrest and its bloody suppression; the events were later converted into a moving poem by Octavio Paz. The modern Torre de Tlatelolco marks the southern limit of the Plaza. 3 Tour of the Museo Soumaya Duration: 02:30 h · Level: Easy The Museo Soumaya, which has been located in a new, sculpturally appealing building since 2011, is home to an important collection of works by predominantly European, painters such as Cézanne, Renoir, Miró, Dalí, Degas, and many others. The museum came about as a result of a private initiative by the Mexican telecommunication magnate Carlos Slim, who named the museum after his late wife. His appreciation for Auguste Rodin’s sculptures means that Mexico City now has the biggest collection of his work outside of France.
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