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Mexico City’s hottest neighbourhoods to eat, play and stay

While Mexico’s beaches and ruins are a powerful drawcard, there’s a quiet revolution taking place in the capital, with the newly hip neighbourhoods of Roma, La Condesa, Polanco and El Centro flourishing with design hotels and an exciting culinary scene.

Roma

This area has morphed in recent years from a low-rent neighbourhood into one of the city’s coolest colonias, studded with galleries, indie design stores, tearooms, restaurants, bookshops and wine bars.

 

This isn’t its first heyday, however, as can be seen by some of its fine Belle Époque, Art Deco and Art Nouveau architecture.

 

While it’s tatty around the edges, there are enough creatives to confirm its up-and-coming credentials.

Where to stay – La Valise

This cleverly curated, ultra-boutique hotel (a mere three suites) created by French expat and style-meister Emmanuel Picault, sits discreetly on a side street.

 

The 1920s façade is ornate and formal, while Chic By Accident’s interiors are inventive, unexpected and witty one-offs. Black-and-white with blocks of colour (a sizzling hot pink wall, a vermilion rug), copper detailing, and black marble kitchens abound.

 

Apartment 1, El Patio, features a mini courtyard with a Yucatán hammock and trompe-l’oeil Escher-pattern tiles. La Luna has a room-height, time-worn satellite dish that pivots to divide two rooms, while La Terraza’s king-size bed slides on rails onto the balcony, so you can sleep outdoors.

 

Room service is by nearby Rosetta, one of the hottest tickets in town under owner and star chef Elena Reygadas. La Valise has no pool or spa, but it exudes a distinctive, contemporary style.

 

Best feature: We loved the sense of space and that you are in your own private apartment.

 

Price: Suites $340–$460 per night

 

Address: Tonalá 53, Roma

Where to play

To start the day, try Panadería Rosetta for conchas – a sweet, brioche-like bread – and excellent coffee.

 

At the ‘centre for culture’, Casa Lamm, there are gallery spaces and a bookstore in a heritage building. The swanky Nueve Nueve bistro here serves mod Mexican and overlooks Casa Lamm’s sculpture garden.

 

Cafebrería El Péndulo is a bookshop/café/bar with a formidable collection.

 

Both the whimsical Casa Tassel salonCasa Tassel salon de thé with its exotic infusions and the equally tiny Fournier Rousseau, an artisanal bakery, appear to have arrived direct from Paris and make a perfect mid-tour pitstop.

One of many restaurants and cafes that pepper La Condesa.
One of many restaurants and cafes that pepper La Condesa.

La Condesa

La Condesa (the Countess) is a boho, upmarket residential colonia known for its Art Deco and Streamline Moderne apartments (often faded, but still charming), leafy streets and parks peppered with sculpture (not all of it fine quality).

 

The district is amply endowed with cafés, taquarias, smart restaurants, corner bars and a welcoming sense of street life.

Condesa DF hotel in La Condesa, New Mexico.
Condesa DF hotel in La Condesa, New Mexico.

Where to stay – Condesa DF

One of the city’s first design hotels, Condesa DF has moved from quirky new-kid-on-the-block to modern classic.

 

What was once über-hip is perhaps now a little less so, but India Mahdavi’s interiors have definitely retained their cachet.

 

The hotel hides its charm discreetly within a 1928 French-style Art Deco building, distinguished by curved, metal-framed windows and Maya-detailed façade. Interiors are light and airy, with the inner patio like that of a Mexican haçienda.

 

In the restaurant, El Patio, bold aqua walls and dazzling white reflect Mexican colour at its Luis Barragán-best. Guest rooms are minimal: white with dark polished boards.

 

Size-wise, it’s best to opt for a Balcony View, the Top Suite or a Terrace Suite, with a private terrace looking into the jacarandas.

 

There’s a hammam, bikes to hire, movies on Sunday evening and the shady Parque España across the road.

 

Best feature: The rooftop balcony with its bar and leafy outlook.

 

Price: Rooms from $350

 

Address: Avenida Veracruz 102, Condesa

Where to play

The lively restaurant La Capital caters to a sharply dressed, 30-something crowd. Fusion food with Mexican flair is pumped out of the kitchen at a cha-cha pace.

 

The delicious take on a traditional lime soup is served with bowls piled with cubed avocado, queso, lime quarters and chopped chilli.

 

On a corner that is a capsule of Condesa life, with an open-to-the-street tailor, slick little bar, smart restaurant and mobile coconut-vendor, you’ll find the tiny, friendly organic food café, Ojo de Agua, for mighty salads, mushroom burgers and restorative juices.

 

Check out Galéria Vintage Mexico for vintage furniture, from leather trunks and quirky lamps to Mad Men-era Eames chairs.

Polanco

This is Mexico’s Upper Eastside (metaphorically speaking), the swankiest part of town where everything is a little ritzier, smarter and leafier.

 

It has broad boulevards, five-star hotels, new-wave restaurants, embassies, celebrities, iconic brands (Bulgari, Gucci, Hermès) and lots of small dogs being walked.

 

It’s ground-zero for fine dining and shopping, but also well placed for galleries and the wonderful Chapultepec Park.

Stunning architecture greets you as soon as you enter the foyer of Las Alcobas, New Mexico.
Stunning architecture greets you as soon as you enter the foyer of Las Alcobas, New Mexico.

Where to stay – Las Alcobas

Refined and elegant, Las Alcobas is all international-design restraint and supreme comfort with custom furnishings and a minimalist Armani palette.

 

The foyer’s spiral, rosewood staircase is an object of sculptural beauty (page 87). Service is exemplary, with a subdued ambience that feels more business than holiday.

 

Rooms are double-glazed, blinds slide silently, complimentary soft drinks and Mexican sweets fill the mini bar, while marble bathrooms boast rain showers, hand-knotted Oaxacan rugs and high-tech Bose sound systems.

 

The swish Masaryk Suite, or the lavish Pasaje Penthouse (with indoor/outdoor fireplace) are the top-end options. Under chef Justin Ermini, Anatole caters to the A-list with sophisticated farm-to-table fare, while Martha Ortiz at Dulce Patria does traditional Mex with a modern spin.

 

Toast the evening with a tamarind margarita.

Las Alcobas hotel in Polanco, New Mexico.
Las Alcobas hotel in Polanco, New Mexico.

Best feature: The intimate Aurora spa with its indigenous treatments.

 

Price: Rooms from $480

 

Address: Presidente Masaryk 390, Polanco

Where to play

Museo Nacional de Antropología in Chapultepec Park is a must. It’s brilliant: Aztec, pre-Columbia, Maya – it’s all here in a fabulous Modernist building.

 

Don’t miss the park’s 19th-century castillo with panoramic views before visiting Museo Soumaya, billionaire Carlos Slim’s gallery, for its sculptural architecture, sheathed in hexagonal aluminium tiles.

 

Pujol, chef Enrique Olvera’s fine diner, with its inventive Mexican menu (think smoked baby corn with crushed chicatana ant and chilli) is in the World’s 50 Best Restaurants (ergo you need to book).

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El Centro

Mexico’s Centro Histórico, or El Centro, is the beating heart of one of the world’s largest and oldest cities, and it pulses with life.

 

It’s grand – grandiose even – and a little overwhelming, but it’s worth basing yourself here for a day or two to be within walking distance of some of the capital’s most extraordinary treasures.

 

Although hectic by day, it can be almost eerily quiet at night.

Downtown Mexico, a 17th-century palace recently restored into a hotel in El Centro, New Mexico.
Downtown Mexico, a 17th-century palace recently restored into a hotel in El Centro, New Mexico.

Where to stay – Downtown Mexico

Now part of a UNESCO World Heritage site, this imposing 17th-century palace has been transformed with an industrial chic make-over.

 

The 17 rooms and suites, opening onto inner patios or with street views, are handsome if a little severe with their volcanic rock walls, clay floor tiles, timber beams, vaulted ceilings and stark modern furniture.

 

The lighting tends to be very moody – OK, dim. Totally unexpected was stepping out onto the rooftop to find a lap pool, jacuzzi, canary-yellow sun lounges and brollies, pumping music and up-close views of colonial rooftops and church towers.

 

There’s a lively rooftop bar, which can ramp-up on balmy evenings. Padrino’s cantina, with its funky vertical garden, has a casual vibe and at Azul Histórico, beneath a canopy of trees in the courtyard, you can sample traditional moles with Oaxaca chocolate.

 

Best feature: You can hit the tourist sites easily and early. The rooftop terrace is also pretty nifty.

 

Price: Rooms from $250

 

Address: Isabel La Católica 30, Colonia Centro

Where to play

In Downtown Mexico’s arcaded galleries, shops include Harto Diseño Mexicano, a well-edited collection of furniture, fashions and jewellery; Caracol Púrpura with folk art; Biwua for silver jewellery and Que Bo! for handmade chocolates.

 

Flanking El Zócalo, the city square, is the Catédral Metropolitana with its elaborate Spanish Baroque façade, begun in 1525.

 

Diego Rivera’s famous murals capture the history of the Mexican people at the enormous Palacio Nacional.

 

Nearby are the ruins of the Aztec city of Tenochtitlan and the remains of the 15th-century Templo Mayor.

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Join whale researchers on this private luxury island in Panama

    Kassia Byrnes Kassia Byrnes
    This luxury private island stay in Central America is taking whale watching to a whole new level.

    The only thing better than spotting humpback whales as they make their yearly migration? Doing so during a stay on a private 14-island archipelago set off Panama’s Pacific coast. Which is exactly what you can experience during the soon-to-be-launched Whale Weeks program on Islas Secas, as part of its wider Marine Safari experience for guests.

    What is Islas Secas?

    islas secas aerial
    Islas secas is nestled off Panama’s Pacific coast.

    Located 20 miles off Panama’s Pacific coast, and on the doorstep to the region’s incredible marine environments, Islas Secas offers luxury accommodation across three properties: Casitas, Tented Casitas and Casa Cavada. The latter is the crown jewel, a four-bedroom exclusive-use super-villa perched high on the cliffs for seemingly endless views of the ocean. Not to mention it’s surrounded by tranquil rainforest. On the property itself, find a semi-Olympic-sized infinity pool, and indoor and outdoor dining areas.

    Islas Secas sits within a vast marine ecosystem, boasting abundant wildlife, the largest Pacific coral reefs in Panama and two protected marine parks. This is why the property focuses on guest experiences to deepen the learning and engagement of the environment around them.

    What to expect from Whale Weeks?

    Humpback Whale jumping on its back near islas secas
    The resort’s marine program will focus on humpback whales in August.

    Whale Weeks will be a month-long program starting in August, designed to showcase the annual humpback whale migration. Guests will have direct access to the waters, researchers and conservation work surrounding this annual event.

    Hear first-hand field stories from, and ask questions of, marine mammal scientists working for Panacetacea, who will be living on site for the entire month. Join expert-led whale-watching expeditions, take part in Whale Songs & Science sessions exploring humpback behaviour and acoustic monitoring and listen to whale vocalisations recorded through hydrophones.

    Once they’ve left the water, guests can become part of the research team by uploading whale photographs to Happywhale, contributing to a global database that helps researchers and citizen scientists identify individual whales and track migration patterns.

    While the focus may be on the humpbacks, guests will get a look into other underwater residents as well – including Panacetacea’s recent confirmation of a resident population of Bryde’s whales. Guests will be able to learn how scientists use field observation, drone work, acoustic monitoring and habitat mapping to understand their behaviour and distribution.

    Whale Week sits within Islas Secas’ wider Marine Safari offering, which also includes snorkelling, scuba diving, kayaking, stand-up paddleboarding, nature cruises, conservation talks, birdwatching and private island excursions.

    The details

    islas secas pool
    Spend your downtime relaxing by the pool.

    Dates: Whale Weeks run throughout the month of August, but wider Marine Safari offerings can be enjoyed year-round
    Cost:
    Starting from $3500 per night on an all-inclusive basis, including all dining and drinks, one spa treatment per guest/per stay and a variety of activities on and off-island.
    Contact:
    islassecas.com or call 800-377-8877.