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The Most Beautiful Modern Buildings in Mexico

MUAC
MUAC | © Denis Bocquet / Flickr

Mexico City is a place with many layers, and its architecture is no different. Colonial masterpieces were built atop Mayan ruins that sit alongside Art Deco beauties and glass-covered skyscrapers. If you want a feel of Mexico’s more modern side, here are some spectacular buildings that will sweep you away with their modern beauty.

Torre Latinomericana

The first skyscraper to be built in a seismically active zone, the Torre Latinoamericana was the highest building in Mexico City until the construction of the World Trade Center south of downtown. Its modernist geometry and glorious stretch to the sky still wows tourists and locals alike.

Torre Latinoamericana, Eje Central Lázaro Cárdenas 2, Centro, Mexico City, Mexico, +52 55 5518 7423

Torre Latinoamericana │

Frontón México

An Art Deco classic, the Frontón México opened its doors in 1929, but underwent several years of abandonment and disuse after closing in 1996 due to a labor dispute. The building was renovated and reopened in 2017 and is back to hosting concerts, fronton games and boxing events. It’s a building in the Centro that shouldn’t be missed.

Frontón México, De La República 17, Tabacalera, Mexico City, Mexico, +52 55 5128 3400

Torre Reforma

One of Mexico City’s newest additions to the skyline is the Torre Reforma, built by the Capital Vertical Real Estate Group and finished in 2016. At 246 meters (800 feet) high, the tower is the second-largest skyscraper in Mexico and also the second-largest building to be LEED certified. It houses a restaurant, a mall and various entertainment areas.

Torre Reforma, Calle Arquímedes 3, Polanco, Polanco V Secc, Ciudad de México, CDMX, Mexico

Torre Reforma │

Garden Santa Fe

A masterpiece of modern engineering in Mexico City’s glittering Santa Fe neighborhood (which was once sand mines and landfills), the Garden Santa Fe is a vast underground mall built in 2013. Sinking 35 meters (115 feet) underground, a series of atriums let light filter down into the mall, which houses 90 shops and restaurants.

Garden Santa Fe, Guillermo González Camarena 1205, Santa Fe, Mexico City, Mexico, +52 55 5292 1731

Biblioteca Vasconcelos

This library’s futuristic design includes glass-floored bookshelves and passageways that jut out into the center corridors and hang above patrons like glass beehives in a tree. The building was designed by Alberto Kalach in collaboration with Gustavo Lipkau, Juan Palomar and Tonatiuh Martínez and is one of the most iconic modern buildings in all of Mexico City.

Biblioteca Vasconcelos, Eje 1 Norte Mosqueta S/N, Buenavista, Mexico City, Mexico, +52 55 9157 2800

Biblioteca Vasconcelos │

Museo de Antropología

Inaugurated in 1964, the Anthropolgy musuem was designed to combine the modern and ancient. A beautiful inner courtyard brings life, air and sunshine to museum-goes as they move from room to room learning about Mexico’s rich past. Built by Pedro Ramírez Vázquez in collaboration with Rafael Mijares and Carlos Campuzano, Adolfo López Mateos, president at the time of its creation, requested that the museum be a place where “Mexicans leave proud that they are Mexican.”

Museo de Antropología, Av Paseo de la Reforma & Calzada Gandhi S/N, Chapultepec Polanco, Miguel Hidalgo, Mexico City, Mexico, +52 55 4040 5300

MUAC

Anther famous building created by Teodoro González de León, the University Museum of Contemporary Art has some attention-grabbing elements to its form, like an inclining glass façade and a fountain below it that reflects the building’s surface. The 13,947 square meters (3.4 acres) that now house this museum were once a simple parking lot.

MUAC, Insurgentes Sur 3000, Centro Cultural Universitario, Mexico City, Mexico, +52 55 5622 6972

MUAC

Lotería Nacional

In 1946, this Art Deco gem was the tallest concrete building in the world. It was built by Manuel Ortiz Monasterio, Bernardo Calderón and Luis Ávila, and includes an elastic floatation system to protect it from earthquake damage. It was one of the first buildings to take into account its seismic zone location and was the beginning of a movement to ensure buildings were seismically safe in Mexico City.

Lotería Nacional building, Edificio Edison, Calle Tomas Alva Edison 15, Tabacalera, Mexico City, Mexico, +52 55 5140 7000

Museo de Arte Moderno

Also inaugurated in 1964, the Modern Art Museum in Chapultepec Park was also designed by Pedro Ramírez Vázquez in collaboration with Rafael Mijares. This circular masterpiece combines classic materials of the era—crystal, white marble, aluminum and fiberglass—and has extensive gardens designed by Juan Siles that include 30 or so modern art sculptures.

Museo de Arte Moderno, Reforma y Ghandi S/N, Bosque de Chapultepec I Secc, Mexico City, Mexico, +52 55 8647 5530

Museo de Arte Moderno │

Edificio Basurto

A classic example of Streamline Moderne, a late type of Art Deco, the Basurto building has aerodynamic, yet sumptuous lines and has long been one of the jewels of the Colonia Condesa. Unfortunately, this building was severely damaged in the September 2017 earthquake and may be demolished soon. Come and see it while you still can!

Edificio Basurto, Av México 197, Hipódromo, Ciudad de México, CDMX, Mexico

Museo Tamayo

Home to the private art collection of important Mexican painter and muralist Rufino Tamayo, the museum’s building was built in 1981 by Teodoro González de León and Abraham Zabludovsky and has a boxy geometry that gives the space both grandeur and intimacy. In 2012, Teodoro González de León oversaw an expansion of the museum that followed the architectural style of the original building.

Museo Tamayo, Paseo de la Reforma 51, Bosque de Chapultepec, Bosque de Chapultepec I Secc, Mexico City, Mexico, + 52 55 4122 8200

Museo Tamayo │

Museo Soumaya

In just a few short years, the Museo Soumaya has become an iconic Mexico City building. Built by architect Fernando Romero, the outside surface of the building is covered in 16,000 aluminum hexagons and is home to the vast and meandering art collection of Mexico’s richest man, Carlos Slim.

Museo Soumaya, Boulervard Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra 303, Granada, Miguel Hidalgo, Mexico City, Mexico, +52 55 1103 9800

About the author

Lydia Carey is a freelance writer and translator based out of Mexico City. She has worked as an editor and writer for various publications including Mexico's English–language newspaper The News, Afar, The New Worlder, International Living and The Latin Kitchen among others. Lydia has been blogging and writing in Mexico for over a decade and lives a double life as a local tour guide in her adoptive hometown. You can find her on the street eating tacos or at her blog www.mexicocitystreets.com.

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