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Today, Polanco is best known as a shopping district. Polanco is known for having one of the country's densest concentrations of luxury shopping, with the most upscale restaurants, high-net-worth individuals, upscale hotels, and diplomatic missions and embassies. It is one of the most expensive real estate markets in Latin America. [2]
The Eye of Mexico (Spanish: El Ojo de México) is an outdoor digital sculpture in Mexico City. It is located in Ampliación Granada, Miguel Hidalgo, at the mixed-use development Neuchâtel Polanco, developed by the Canadian real estate company Ivanhoé Cambridge. The artwork was created by the Turkish artist Ferdi Alıcı and it was selected ...
Nuevo Polanco (English, "New Polanco") is an area of Mexico City formerly consisting of warehouses and factories, bordering the upscale Polanco on the north across Avenida Ejército Nacional. [2] Officially it consists of two colonias, Granada and Ampliación Granada. Railroad to Cuernavaca crossing Marina Nacional, 1910s.
Pasaje Comercial along Avenida Presidente Masaryk in the Polanquito district of Polanco, built in 1938 in Colonial Californiano style. Pasaje Polanco, originally Pasaje Comercial, is an architecturally significant open-air shopping court with apartments on the upper levels along Avenida Masaryk in the Polanquito section of the Polanco neighborhood of Mexico City.
Plaza Uruguay is a park in Polanco, Mexico City, Mexico. The park features a bronze sculpture depicting José Gervasio Artigas, a national hero of Uruguay. [1]
Nápoles - home of the World Trade Center Mexico City and the iconic Midcentury monument the Polyforum Cultural Siqueiros. San Ángel - Historic residential and shopping area. Santa Fe - Financial, business district and upscale residential neighborhood. Polanco - Shopping, business and tourist area.
Miyana is a mixed-use residential and commercial development of Gigante Grupo Mobiliario in Nuevo Polanco district of Mexico City.It is located on a 43,501 square metres (468,240 sq ft) lot with 520,000 square metres (5,600,000 sq ft), making it one of the largest such developments in the metropolis, with an investment of 7 billion pesos (approx. US$400 million).
A reviewer for Condé Nast Traveler said it is a landmark eatery in Mexico City. [20] A writer from Fodor's said that the visit was an "educational and hedonistic" experience. [21] A critic from Bon Appétit recommended visiting Pujol and its taco omakase. [13] Leslie Yeh from Lifestyle Asia considered the restaurant a must when visiting Mexico ...