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View of the interior of the library Front of the library Interior, photo taken during Wikimania 2015 Gabriel Orozco's Ballena (Whale). Biblioteca Vasconcelos, also known as the Megabiblioteca by the press, is a library in the Buenavista neighborhood of Mexico City.
The Biblioteca Palafoxiana is a library in Puebla City's historic centre, in the Mexican state of PueblaFounded in 1646, it is recognized by the UNESCO for being the first and oldest public library in the Americas, [1] [2] [3] It has more than 45,000 books and manuscripts, ranging from the 15th to the 20th century.
Central Library of the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) is the main library in the Ciudad Universitaria Campus. [1] It holds one of the largest collections in Mexico . It has a multidisciplinary approach for all the university courses from the adjacent faculties.
Original store in the historic center of Mexico City. Librería Porrúa Hermanos y Compañía S.A. de C.V. is a bookseller and publishing company in Mexico, and is one of the longest-established businesses operating in the Mexican book trade.
Today, there are 34 different Gandhi Bookstores; 17 are located within Mexico City and 17 in other parts of the country. One store is located inside El Palacio de Hierro in the country's capital, and more exist in select Walmart Supercenters, and also in Mexico City's airport. They also have an online store that sells books internationally ...
The Library of the Congress of Mexico (Spanish: Biblioteca del Honorable Congreso de la Unión) is a public library which contains most of the records of the country's legislative sessions since its Independence. It is located at 29 Tacuba Street, near the corner with Bolivar in the historic center of Mexico City. [1]
Rebeca Gonzalez works at a California Walmart and got a last-minute call to come in. She bought a lottery ticket on her way out and won $1 million.
Forum Buenavista is a 37,250-square-metre (401,000 sq ft) [1] shopping mall built atop the Buenavista Station in Colonia Buenavista, central Mexico City, where Avenida de los Insurgentes meets Eje 1 Norte. It was developed by GICSA, opened in 2009, and as of 2015 it was one of the ten largest malls in Greater Mexico City. [1]