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Popular places and events near this IP address
Paseo de la Reforma
Wide avenue in Mexico City
Distance: Approx. 292 meters
Latitude and longitude: 19.43444444,-99.15194444
Paseo de la Reforma (literally "Promenade of the Reform") is a wide avenue that runs diagonally across the heart of Mexico City. It was designed at the behest of Emperor Maximilian by Ferdinand von Rosenzweig during the era of the Second Mexican Empire and modeled after the great boulevards of Europe, such as the Ringstraße in Vienna and the Champs-Élysées in Paris. The planned grand avenue was to link the National Palace with the imperial residence, Chapultepec Castle, which was then on the southwestern edge of town.
Revolución metro station (Mexico City)
Mexico City metro station
Distance: Approx. 410 meters
Latitude and longitude: 19.439561,-99.155431
Revolución is a station on Line 2 of the Mexico City Metro system. It is located in the Colonia Tabacalera and Colonia Buenavista districts in the Cuauhtémoc borough of Mexico City, northwest of the city centre, on Avenida México - Tenochtitlan. It was first opened to the public on 14 September 1970.
Academia de Artes
Art school in Mexico
Distance: Approx. 291 meters
Latitude and longitude: 19.4378544,-99.1520446
The Academia de Artes (AA) is the Mexican academy of arts founded 1967/1968 by CONACULTA for the promotion of Mexican art. Seat of the institution is the Museo Nacional de San Carlos in Mexico City. The slogan of the Academy is elevación por el arte (elevation/refinement through art).
Monumento a la Revolución
Memorial arch in Mexico City, Mexico
Distance: Approx. 58 meters
Latitude and longitude: 19.4362,-99.15464
The Monument to the Revolution (Spanish: Monumento a la Revolución) is a memorial arch commemorating the Mexican Revolution. It is located in the Plaza de la República, near the heart of the major thoroughfares Paseo de la Reforma and Avenida de los Insurgentes in downtown Mexico City.
Palacio Legislativo Federal
Proposed Mexican legislative building
Distance: Approx. 65 meters
Latitude and longitude: 19.436233,-99.154701
The Palacio Legislativo Federal (Federal Legislative Palace) was a never-completed building for the legislative bodies of the Mexican Federal Republic.
Colonia Tabacalera
Neighborhood of Mexico City in Cuauhtémoc
Distance: Approx. 11 meters
Latitude and longitude: 19.43616111,-99.15401389
Colonia Tabacalera is a colonia or neighborhood in the Cuauhtémoc borough of Mexico City, on the western border of the city's historic center. It was created in the late 19th century along with other nearby colonias such as Colonia San Rafael and Colonia Santa María la Ribera. From the early 1900s, it became a mixture of mansions and apartment buildings, with major constructions such as the now Monument to the Revolution and the El Moro skyscraper built in the first half of the century.
Museo Nacional de San Carlos
Distance: Approx. 321 meters
Latitude and longitude: 19.4382,-99.152
The Museo Nacional de San Carlos (English: National Museum of San Carlos) is a Mexican national art museum devoted to European art, located in the Cuauhtémoc borough in Mexico City. The museum is housed in the Palace of the Count of Buenavista, a neoclassical building at Puente de Alvarado No. 50, Colonia Tabacalera, Mexico City.
Monument to Christopher Columbus (Charles Cordier)
Statue in Mexico City, Mexico
Distance: Approx. 345 meters
Latitude and longitude: 19.43305556,-99.15472222
The Monument to Christopher Columbus (Spanish: Monumento a Colón) is a statue by French sculptor Charles Cordier first dedicated in 1877. It was originally located on a major traffic roundabout along Mexico City's Paseo de la Reforma, and was removed on 10 October 2020 in advance of protests. Following months of discussion, the city government announced that Glorieta de las mujeres que luchan and The Young Woman of Amajac monuments would coexist on the roundabout, while the Columbus sculpture would be relocated to the National Museum of the Viceroyalty in Tepotzotlán.
Palace of the Count of Buenavista
Distance: Approx. 321 meters
Latitude and longitude: 19.4381,-99.1519
The Palace of the Count of Buenavista is a Mexican historical building located in Cuauhtémoc (one of the 16 boroughs of Mexico City), precisely at 50 Puente de Alvarado Street, in the Tabacalera neighborhood. It was built between the end of the 18th century and the beginning of the 19th century to serve as the future residence of the Count of Buenavista, who however never lived there. Since 1968 it houses the National Museum of San Carlos.
Bench of Fidel Castro and Che Guevara
Sculpture by Óscar Ponzanelli
Distance: Approx. 267 meters
Latitude and longitude: 19.4377,-99.1522
The Monumento Encuentro (lit. transl. Monument Encounter) refers to two bronze statues seated on a bench in Colonia Tabacalera, Cuauhtémoc, Mexico City, designed by Óscar Ponzanelli in 2017. Otherwise known as the bench of Fidel Castro and Che Guevara and the statues of Fidel Castro and Che Guevara, the artwork features sitting statues of Fidel Castro and Che Guevara, major figures of the Cuban Revolution (1953–1959).
Glorieta de las mujeres que luchan
Anti-monument in Mexico City
Distance: Approx. 345 meters
Latitude and longitude: 19.43305556,-99.15472222
On the afternoon of 25 September 2021, a group of anonymous feminists intervened in the Christopher Columbus roundabout on Paseo de la Reforma Avenue, Mexico City. On an empty plinth surrounded by protective fences, they installed a wooden antimonumenta, a guerrilla sculpture that calls for justice for the recurrent acts of violence against women in Mexico. It was originally called Antimonumenta Vivas Nos Queremos (lit.
Antimonumento +43
Anti-monument in Mexico City, Mexico
Distance: Approx. 434 meters
Latitude and longitude: 19.43527778,-99.15005556
An antimonumento was installed in front of the Superior Court of Justice of Mexico City, on the median strip of Paseo de la Reforma Avenue, in the Cuauhtémoc borough of Mexico City. The work included the installation of a red number 43 made of metal along with a plus symbol, in reference to the forty-three students kidnapped—and possibly killed—in Iguala, Guerrero, in 2014 after being arrested for allegedly committing criminal offenses, plus the six students and witnesses killed during that event, and to honor the more than 150,000 people killed since the start of the Mexican drug war and the 30,000 disappeared persons reported by 2015. The anti-monument was installed by peaceful protesters during a demonstration on 26 April 2015 as a plea for justice and to prevent the case from being forgotten by the authorities and society.
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