Mexico City
Tags: Carlos Slim, Mexico City
Mexico City is the second megacity of our planet, after Tokyo. 25 millions people from Area metropolitana call Mexico City home. To make a comparation: all the scandinavian coutries put together reach not 25 millions people!
Mexico City is huge and is expanding daily and florishes. It is the country’s most important economic and financial hub, easy to imagine. It is also a megacity of contrasts:
-it is an expansive city, but you can also live on budget here;
-between all the megacities of our world,it is maybe the worst located megacity of our planet( a valley surrounded by mountains at 2300 m, which makes ventilation impossible)
-it is generally a safe place, but you should avoid Tepito, where drugs addicted and drug smuggler deal all day long. Especially if you don’t speak spanish, you can count with hard times
There are a lot of legends about Mexico City, which is also known as the City of Palaces and the City of Hope, and many of these legends go deep in the history of Tenotchitlan, the aztec capital conquered by spaniards. Today on the place of Tenochitlan you can find the Zocalo(or La Playa de la Constitucion), which is one of the world’s biggest squares.
Which such a rich historical past and aztec remainings all over the city, it is obviously that Mexico City is a culture city. I liked very much that the aztec remainings are very well conservated and perfectly integrated in the modern Mexico City, the world’s fastest growing metropolis.

Mexico City hosted the Olympic Games in 1968 and World Football Championships in 1970 and 1998, as football is here very popular. Maybe you can still remember, the biggest stadium(also one of the world’s biggest) is Azteca !
I also loved very much in Mexico City a restaurant with spanish and mexican kitchen : La hacienda de los Morales. I enjoyed the mild weather, never too hot, never too cold. I liked the policeman from District Santa Fe which speak english. They are more efficient than NYPD and earn one third as the american do; consequently they are open to small pribes. I was glad to discover that “chille rellenos” is a tasty vegetarian dish, which can be found practically in every restaurant.
I did not like the air, which is not very clean, but is strong, due to altitude. When I arrived in Mexico City I suffered on the what is called “the mexican syndrom” : breath difficulties, which last only a few minutes! And I hated in Mexico City the neglected downtown, the heart of the city. This old center has aproximately 9 sqkm, and has ruined for a few decades. Nowadays it is involved in a sort of Renaissance, due to public and private initiatives, mainly from Carlos Slim. You must have heard of him, it is one of the world’s richest men, and spent the childhood here, in the old centre. Now he tries to revigorate all the area.
Mexico City is an oval city which I loved! But is 60×40 km, impossible to meet all at once. I will come back for sure.
You will like:
- The most important things to know about El Zocalo in Mexico City
- Top 5 destinations in May
- Sao Paulo
- Tourist attractions in Mexico
- Living in a megacity
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May 8th, 2008 at 6:08 am
[...] Mexico CityMexico City is the second megacity of our planet, after Tokyo. 25 millions people from Area metropolitana call Mexico City home. To make a comparation: all the scandinavian coutries put together reach not 25 millions people! … [...]
May 17th, 2008 at 12:07 pm
[...] of all, travelling for the first time at Mexico City, probably by air to he Benito Juarez airport, you can see shortly from the plane the mexican flag. [...]
May 18th, 2008 at 3:31 pm
[...] a few weeks I visited Mexico City and collected a lot of stuff which you can find in my [...]
June 23rd, 2008 at 8:17 pm
[...] you think to megacities as New York, Tokyo, Mexico City you are wrong! These megacities became environmental friendly and aware, it is not so bad living [...]
June 24th, 2008 at 4:56 pm
[...] -the symbol is a square: Red Square in Moscow, El Zocalo in Mexico City. [...]
October 16th, 2008 at 8:31 pm
[...] Mexico City is the capital, and stands beneath two impressive snow capped volcanoes, Popocatépetl and Ixtaccíhuatl. The city is well above sea level, 2240m to be precise, and is full of beautiful rambling buildings that are a patchwork of all the colonial influences over the cities vibrant history. Although Mexico City is vast and hectic it does have a very spacious and open feel, with many quiet back streets and green parks where you can stop for a minute and take a breather. For visitors there is the Cathedral Metropolitana, which is an attractive mix of a number of different styles including Gothic, Baroque and Neo-Classical, with its famously ornate gilded interior chapel and altar. Nearby to the cathedral is the excavated site of one of the great Aztec temples, which can be viewed from various raised walkways. Adjoining this is a museum, which has more information on the temple and displays some of the wonderful artefacts that were excavated from the site. There is also a beautiful concert hall and arts centre in the city, the Palacio de Bellas Artes, which is carved from white Carrara marble and has housed many classic performances for renowned artists over the years such as Maria Callas, Plácido Domingo, Pavarotti, and Dame Kiri Te Kanawa. [...]