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Mexico City
Mexico City
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Mexico City[c] is the capital and largest city of Mexico, as well as the most populous city in North America.[14][15] It is one of the most important cultural and financial centers in the world, and is classified as an Alpha world city according to the Globalization and World Cities Research Network (GaWC) 2024 ranking.[16][17] Mexico City is located in the Valley of Mexico within the high Mexican central plateau, at an altitude of 2,240 meters (7,350 ft). The city has 16 boroughs or demarcaciones territoriales, which are in turn divided into neighborhoods or colonias.

Key Information

The 2020 population for the city proper was 9,209,944,[8] with a land area of 1,495 square kilometers (577 sq mi), making it the second largest Spanish-speaking city proper in the world.[18] According to the most recent definition agreed upon by the federal and state governments, the population of Greater Mexico City is 21,804,515, which makes it the world's sixth-largest metropolitan area and the second-largest urban agglomeration in the Western Hemisphere (behind São Paulo, Brazil).[19] Greater Mexico City has a GDP of $411 billion in 2011, which makes it one of the most productive urban areas in the world.[20] The city was responsible for generating 15.8% of Mexico's GDP, and the metropolitan area accounted for about 22% of the country's GDP.[21] If it were an independent country in 2013, Mexico City would be the fifth-largest economy in Latin America.[22]

Mexico City is the oldest capital city in the Americas and one of two founded by Indigenous people.[d] The city was originally built on a group of islands in Lake Texcoco by the Mexica around 1325, under the name Tenochtitlan. It was almost completely destroyed in the 1521 siege of Tenochtitlan and subsequently redesigned and rebuilt in accordance with the Spanish urban standards. In 1524, the municipality of Mexico City was established, known as México Tenochtitlán,[23] and as of 1585, it was officially known as Ciudad de México (Mexico City).[23] Mexico City played a major role in the Spanish colonial empire as a political, administrative, and financial center.[24] Following independence from Spain, the region around and containing the city was established as the new and only Mexican federal district (Spanish: Distrito Federal or DF) in 1824.

After years of demanding greater political autonomy, in 1997 residents were finally given the right to elect both a head of government and the representatives of the unicameral Legislative Assembly by election. Ever since, left-wing parties (first the Party of the Democratic Revolution and later the National Regeneration Movement) have controlled both of them.[25] The city has several progressive policies,[26][27] such as elective abortions,[28] a limited form of euthanasia,[29] no-fault divorce,[30] same-sex marriage,[31] and legal gender change.[32] On 29 January 2016, it ceased to be the Federal District (DF) and is now officially known as Ciudad de México (CDMX). These 2016 reforms gave the city a greater degree of autonomy and made changes to its governance and political power structures.[33][34] A clause in the Constitution of Mexico, however, prevents it from becoming a state within the Mexican federation, as long as it remains the capital of the country.[35]

Nicknames and mottos

[edit]

Up until 2013, it was common to refer to the city by the initialism "DF" from Distrito Federal de México. Since 2013, use of the abbreviation "CDMX" (Ciudad de México) has been more common, particularly by government.

The city is colloquially known as Chilangolandia after the locals' nickname chilangos.[36] Chilango is used pejoratively by people living outside Mexico City to "connote a loud, arrogant, ill-mannered, loutish person".[37] For their part those living in Mexico City designate insultingly those who live elsewhere as living in la provincia ('the provinces', 'the periphery') and many proudly embrace the term chilango.[37] Residents of Mexico City are formally called capitalinos (in reference to the city being the capital of the country), but "[p]erhaps because capitalino is the more polite, specific, and correct word, it is almost never utilized".[38]

Mexico City was traditionally known as La Ciudad de los Palacios ("the City of the Palaces"), a nickname attributed to Baron Alexander von Humboldt when visiting the city in the 19th century, who, sending a letter back to Germany, said Mexico City could rival any major city in Europe. But it was English politician Charles Latrobe who really penned the following: "... look at their works: the moles, aqueducts, churches, roads—and the luxurious City of Palaces which has risen from the clay-built ruins of Tenochtitlan...", on page 84 of the Letter V of The Rambler in Mexico.[39]

During the colonial period, the city's motto was "Muy Noble e Insigne, Muy Leal e Imperial" (Very Noble and Distinguished, Very Loyal and Imperial).[40][41] During Andrés Manuel López Obrador's administration (2018–24) a political slogan was introduced: la Ciudad de la Esperanza (lit.'The City of Hope'). This motto was quickly adopted as a city nickname but has faded since the new motto, Capital en Movimiento ("Capital in Movement"), was adopted by the administration headed by Marcelo Ebrard; this latter motto is not really treated as a nickname.

History

[edit]

The oldest signs of human occupation in the area of Mexico City are those of the "Peñón woman" and others found in San Bartolo Atepehuacan (Gustavo A. Madero). They were believed to correspond to the lower Cenolithic period (9500–7000 BC).[42] However, a 2003 study placed the age of the Peñon woman at 12,700 years old (calendar age),[43] one of the oldest human remains discovered in the Americas. Studies of her mitochondrial DNA suggest she was either of Asian[44] or European[45] or Aboriginal Australian origin.[46]

The area was the destination of the migrations of the Teochichimecas during the 8th and 13th centuries, people that would give rise to the Toltec, and Mexica (Aztecs) cultures. The latter arrived around the 14th century to settle first on the shores of the lake.

Aztec period

[edit]
The city was the place of Mexico-Tenochtitlan, the Aztec capital.

The city of Mexico-Tenochtitlan was founded by the Mexica people in 1325 or 1327.[47] The old Mexica city that is now referred to as Tenochtitlan was built on an island in the center of the inland lake system of the Valley of Mexico, which is shared with a smaller city-state called Tlatelolco.[48] According to legend, the Mexicas' principal god, Huitzilopochtli, indicated the site where they were to build their home by presenting a golden eagle perched on a prickly pear devouring a rattlesnake.[49]

Between 1325 and 1521, Tenochtitlan grew in size and strength, eventually dominating the other city-states around Lake Texcoco and in the Valley of Mexico. When the Spaniards arrived, the Aztec Empire had reached much of Mesoamerica, touching both the Gulf of Mexico and the Pacific Ocean.[49]

Spanish conquest

[edit]
The panel dedicated to the Tenochtitlan campaign, as depicted in the 1552 Canvas of Tlaxcala. Hernando Cortés and Malintzin (right) meet Moctezuma II in Mexico-Tenochtitlan, 8 November 1519.

After landing in Veracruz, Spanish explorer Hernán Cortés advanced upon Tenochtitlan with the aid of many of the other native peoples,[50] arriving there on 8 November 1519.[51] Cortés and his men marched along the causeway leading into the city from Iztapalapa (Ixtapalapa), and the city's ruler, Moctezuma II, greeted the Spaniards; they exchanged gifts, but the camaraderie did not last long.[52] Cortés put Moctezuma under house arrest at his father's palace, hoping to rule through him.[53]

Tensions increased until, on the night of 30 June 1520 – during a struggle known as "La Noche Triste" – the Aztecs rose up against the Spanish intrusion and managed to capture or drive out the Europeans and their Tlaxcalan allies.[54] Cortés regrouped at Tlaxcala. The Aztecs thought the Spaniards were permanently gone, and they elected a new king, Cuitláhuac, but he soon died; the next king was Cuauhtémoc.[55] Cortés began a siege of Tenochtitlan in May 1521. For three months, the city suffered from the lack of food and water as well as the spread of smallpox brought by the Europeans.[50] Cortés and his allies landed their forces in the south of the island and slowly fought their way through the city.[56] Cuauhtémoc surrendered in August 1521.[50] The Spaniards practically razed Tenochtitlan during the final siege of the conquest.[51]

Cortés first settled in Coyoacán, but decided to rebuild the Aztec site to erase all traces of the old order.[51] He did not establish a territory under his own personal rule, but remained loyal to the Spanish crown. The first Spanish viceroy arrived in Mexico City fourteen years later. By that time, the city had again become a city-state, having power that extended far beyond its borders.[57] Although the Spanish preserved Tenochtitlan's basic layout, they built Catholic churches over the old Aztec temples and claimed the imperial palaces for themselves.[57] Tenochtitlan was renamed "Mexico" because the Spanish found the word easier to pronounce.[51]

Growth of colonial Mexico City

[edit]
Mexico City Metropolitan Cathedral's (1571–1813) 18th century painting. The cathedral was built by the Spaniards over the ruins of the main Aztec temple.

The city had been the capital of the Aztec Empire and in the colonial era, Mexico City became the capital of New Spain. The viceroy of Mexico or vice-king lived in the viceregal palace on the main square or Zócalo. The Mexico City Metropolitan Cathedral, the seat of the Archbishopric of New Spain, was constructed on another side of the Zócalo, as was the archbishop's palace, and across from it the building housing the city council or ayuntamiento of the city. A late seventeenth-century painting of the Zócalo by Cristóbal de Villalpando depicts the main square, which had been the old Aztec ceremonial center. The existing central plaza of the Aztecs was effectively and permanently transformed to the ceremonial center and seat of power during the colonial period, and remains to this day in modern Mexico, the central plaza of the nation. The rebuilding of the city after the siege of Tenochtitlan was accomplished by the abundant indigenous labor in the surrounding area. Franciscan friar Toribio de Benavente Motolinia, one of the Twelve Apostles of Mexico who arrived in New Spain in 1524, described the rebuilding of the city as one of the afflictions or plagues of the early period:

The seventh plague was the construction of the great City of Mexico, which, during the early years used more people than in the construction of Jerusalem. The crowds of laborers were so numerous that one could hardly move in the streets and causeways, although they are very wide. Many died from being crushed by beams, or falling from high places, or in tearing down old buildings for new ones.[58]

Mexico City in 1690. Atlas Van der Hagen.

Preconquest Tenochtitlan was built in the center of the inland lake system, with the city reachable by canoe and by wide causeways to the mainland. The causeways were rebuilt under Spanish rule with indigenous labor. Colonial Spanish cities were constructed on a grid pattern, if no geographical obstacle prevented it. In Mexico City, the Zócalo (main square) was the central place from which the grid was then built outward. The Spanish lived in the area closest to the main square in what was known as the traza, in orderly, well laid-out streets. Indigenous residences were outside that exclusive zone and houses were haphazardly located.[59] The Zócalo was a center of commerce for indigenous people, making Spanish efforts to keep the area segregated difficult to enforce.[60] At intervals Zócalo was where major celebrations took place as well as executions. It was also the site of two major riots in the seventeenth century, one in 1624, the other in 1692.[61]

The city grew as the population did, coming up against the lake's waters. As the depth of the lake water fluctuated, Mexico City was subject to periodic flooding. A major labor draft, the desagüe, compelled thousands of indigenous over the colonial period to work on infrastructure to prevent flooding. Floods were not only an inconvenience but also a health hazard, since during flood periods human waste polluted the city's streets. By draining the area, the mosquito population dropped as did the frequency of the diseases they spread. However, draining the wetlands also changed the habitat for fish and birds and the areas accessible for indigenous cultivation close to the capital.[62] The 16th century saw a proliferation of churches, many of which can still be seen today in the historic center.[57] Economically, Mexico City prospered as a result of trade. Unlike Brazil or Peru, Mexico had easy contact with both the Atlantic and Pacific worlds. Although the Spanish crown tried to completely regulate all commerce in the city, it had only partial success.[63]

Palacio de Minería, Mexico City. The elevation of silver mining as a profession and the ennoblement of silver miners was a development of the eighteenth-century Bourbon Reforms.

The concept of nobility flourished in New Spain in a way not seen in other parts of the Americas. Spaniards encountered a society in which the concept of nobility mirrored that of their own. Spaniards respected the indigenous order of nobility and added to it. In the ensuing centuries, possession of a noble title in Mexico did not mean one exercised great political power, for one's power was limited even if the accumulation of wealth was not.[64] The concept of nobility in Mexico was not political but rather a very conservative Spanish social one, based on proving the worthiness of the family. Most of these families proved their worth by making fortunes in New Spain outside of the city itself, then spending the revenues in the capital, building churches, supporting charities and building extravagant palatial homes. The craze to build the most opulent residence possible reached its height in the last half of the 18th century. Many of these palaces can still be seen today, leading to Mexico City's nickname of "The city of palaces" given by Alexander Von Humboldt.[51][57][64]

The Grito de Dolores ("Cry of Dolores"), also known as El Grito de la Independencia ("Cry of Independence"), marked the beginning of the Mexican War of Independence. The Battle of Guanajuato, the first major engagement of the insurgency, occurred four days later. After a decade of war, Mexico's independence from Spain was effectively declared in the Declaration of Independence of the Mexican Empire on 27 September 1821.[65] Agustín de Iturbide is proclaimed Emperor of the First Mexican Empire by Congress, crowned in the Cathedral of Mexico.

The Mexican Federal District was established by the new government and by the signing of their new constitution, where the concept of a federal district was adapted from the United States Constitution.[66] Before this designation, Mexico City had served as the seat of government for both the State of Mexico and the nation as a whole. Texcoco de Mora and then Toluca became the capital of the State of Mexico.[67]

Battle of Mexico City in the U.S.–Mexican War of 1847

[edit]
The American assault on the Chapultepec Castle, 1847 by Nebel and Bayot

During the 19th century, Mexico City was the center stage of all the political disputes of the country. It was the imperial capital on two occasions (1821–1823 and 1864–1867), and of two federalist states and two centralist states that followed innumerable coups d'états in the space of half a century before the triumph of the Liberals after the Reform War. It was also the objective of one of the two French invasions to Mexico (1861–1867), and occupied for a year by American troops in the framework of the Mexican–American War (1847–1848).

The Battle for Mexico City was the series of engagements from 8 to 15 September 1847, in the general vicinity of Mexico City during the U.S. Mexican War. Included are major actions at the battles of Molino del Rey and Chapultepec, culminating with the fall of Mexico City. The U.S. Army under Winfield Scott scored a major success that ended the war. The American invasion into the Federal District was first resisted during the Battle of Churubusco on 8 August, where the Saint Patrick's Battalion, which was composed primarily of Catholic Irish and German immigrants but also Canadians, English, French, Italians, Poles, Scots, Spaniards, Swiss, and Mexicans, fought for the Mexican cause, repelling the American attacks. After defeating the Saint Patrick's Battalion, the Mexican–American War came to a close after the United States deployed combat units deep into Mexico resulting in the capture of Mexico City and Veracruz by the U.S. Army's 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th Divisions.[68] The invasion culminated with the storming of Chapultepec Castle in the city itself.[69]

During this battle, on 13 September, the 4th Division, under John A. Quitman, spearheaded the attack against Chapultepec and carried the castle. Future Confederate generals George E. Pickett and James Longstreet participated in the attack. Serving in the Mexican defense were the cadets later immortalized as Los Niños Héroes (the "Boy Heroes"). The Mexican forces fell back from Chapultepec and retreated within the city. Attacks on the Belén and San Cosme Gates came afterwards. The treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo was signed in what is now the far north of the city.[70]

Mexican Revolution (1910–1920)

[edit]
Corpses in front of the National Palace during the Ten Tragic Days. Photographer, Manuel Ramos.[71]

The capital escaped the worst of the violence of the ten-year conflict of the Mexican Revolution. The most significant episode of this period for the city was the Decena Trágica ("Ten Tragic Days") of February 1913, when forces counter to the elected government of Francisco I. Madero staged a successful coup. The center of the city was subjected to artillery attacks from the army stronghold of the ciudadela or citadel, with significant civilian casualties and the undermining of confidence in the Madero government. Victoriano Huerta, chief general of the Federal Army, saw a chance to take power, forcing Madero and Pino Suarez to sign resignations. The two were murdered later while on their way to Lecumberri prison.[72] Huerta's ouster in July 1914 saw the entry of the armies of Pancho Villa and Emiliano Zapata, but the city did not experience violence. Huerta had abandoned the capital and the conquering armies marched in. Venustiano Carranza's Constitutionalist faction ultimately prevailed in the revolutionary civil war and Carranza took up residence in the presidential palace.

20th century to present

[edit]
Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera house in San Ángel designed by Juan O'Gorman

In the 20th century the phenomenal growth of the city and its environmental and political consequences dominate. In 1900, the population of Mexico City was about 500,000.[73] The city began to grow rapidly westward in the early part of the 20th century[57] and then began to grow upwards in the 1950s, with the Torre Latinoamericana becoming the city's first skyscraper.[50]

The rapid development of Mexico City as a center for modernist architecture was most fully manifested in the mid-1950s construction of the Ciudad Universitaria, Mexico City, the main campus of the National Autonomous University of Mexico. Designed by the most prestigious architects of the era, including Mario Pani, Eugenio Peschard, and Enrique del Moral, the buildings feature murals by artists Diego Rivera, David Alfaro Siqueiros, and José Chávez Morado. It has since been recognized as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.[74]

The 1968 Olympic Games brought about the construction of large sporting facilities.[57] In 1969, the Mexico City Metro was inaugurated.[50] Explosive growth in the population of the city started in the 1960s, with the population overflowing the boundaries of the Federal District into the neighboring State of Mexico, especially to the north, northwest, and northeast. Between 1960 and 1980 the city's population more than doubled to nearly 9 million.[57]

In 1980, half of all the industrial jobs in Mexico were located in Mexico City. Under relentless growth, the Mexico City government could barely keep up with services. Villagers from the countryside who continued to pour into the city to escape poverty only compounded the city's problems. With no housing available, they took over lands surrounding the city, creating huge shanty towns.

The inhabitants of Mexico City faced serious air pollution and water pollution problems, as well as groundwater-related subsidence.[75] Air and water pollution has been contained and improved in several areas due to government programs, the renovation of vehicles and the modernization of public transportation.

Students in a burned bus during the Tlatelolco massacre 1968

The autocratic government that ruled Mexico City since the Revolution was tolerated, mostly because of the continued economic expansion since World War II. This was the case even though this government could not handle the population and pollution problems adequately. Nevertheless, discontent and protests began in the 1960s leading to the massacre of an unknown number of protesting students in Tlatelolco.[76]

Three years later, a demonstration in the Maestros avenue, organized by former members of the 1968 student movement, was violently repressed by a paramilitary group called "Los Halcones", composed of gang members and teenagers from many sports clubs who received training in the US.

First ladies Paloma Cordero of Mexico (left) and Nancy Reagan of the United States (right) with U.S. Ambassador to Mexico, John Gavin observing the damage done by the 1985 earthquake

On 19 September 1985, at 7:19am CST, the area was struck by the 1985 Mexico City earthquake.[77] The earthquake proved to be a disaster politically for the one-party state government. The Mexican government was paralyzed by its own bureaucracy and corruption, forcing ordinary citizens to create and direct their own rescue efforts and to reconstruct much of the housing that was lost as well.[78]

In 1987, the Historic center of Mexico City, a central neighborhood of Mexico City was enlisted as UNESCO World Heritage Site for its large collection of ancient Aztec and colonial architecture.

Geography

[edit]
Satellite image of Mexico City

Mexico City is located in the Valley of Mexico, sometimes called the Basin of Mexico. This valley is located in the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt in the high plateaus of south-central Mexico.[79][80]

It has a minimum altitude of 2,200 meters (7,200 feet) above sea level and is surrounded by mountains and volcanoes that reach elevations of over 5,000 meters (16,000 feet).[81] This valley has no natural drainage outlet for the waters that flow from the mountainsides, making the city vulnerable to flooding. Drainage was engineered through the use of canals and tunnels starting in the 17th century.[79][81]

Mexico City primarily rests on what was Lake Texcoco.[79] Seismic activity is frequent there.[82] Lake Texcoco was drained starting from the 17th century. Although none of the lake waters remain, the city rests on the lake bed's heavily saturated clay. This soft base is collapsing due to the over-extraction of groundwater, called groundwater-related subsidence.

Since the beginning of the 20th century the city has sunk as much as nine meters (30 feet) in some areas, and it continues to sink almost 50 centimetres (20 in) every year.[83] This sinking is causing problems with runoff and wastewater management, leading to flooding problems, especially during the summer.[81][82][84] The entire lake bed is now paved over and most of the city's remaining forested areas lie in the southern boroughs of Milpa Alta, Tlalpan and Xochimilco.[82]

Mexico City geophysical maps
Topography Hydrology Climate patterns

Environment

[edit]
Trajineras in the canals of Xochimilco. Xochimilco and the historic center of Mexico City were declared a World Heritage Site in 1987.

Originally much of the valley lay beneath the waters of Lake Texcoco, a system of interconnected salt and freshwater lakes. The Aztecs built dikes to separate the fresh water used to raise crops in chinampas and to prevent recurrent floods. These dikes were destroyed during the siege of Tenochtitlan, and during colonial times the Spanish regularly drained the lake to prevent floods. Only a small section of the original lake remains, located outside Mexico City, in the municipality of Atenco, State of Mexico.

Architects Teodoro González de León and Alberto Kalach along with a group of Mexican urbanists, engineers and biologists have developed the project plan for Recovering the City of Lakes. If approved by the government the project will contribute to the supply of water from natural sources to the Valley of Mexico, the creation of new natural spaces, a great improvement in air quality, and greater population establishment planning.

Pollution

[edit]
Air pollution over Mexico City. Air quality is poorest during the winter.

By the 1990s Mexico City had become infamous as one of the world's most polluted cities; however, the city has since become a model for drastically lowering pollution levels. By 2014 carbon monoxide pollution had dropped drastically, while sulfur dioxide and nitrogen dioxide were at levels about a third of those in 1992. The levels of signature pollutants in Mexico City are similar to those of Los Angeles.[85] Despite the cleanup, the metropolitan area is still the most ozone-polluted part of the country, with ozone levels 2.5 times beyond WHO-defined safe limits.[86]

To clean up pollution, the federal and local governments implemented numerous plans including the constant monitoring and reporting of environmental conditions, such as ozone and nitrogen oxides.[87] When the levels of these two pollutants reached critical levels, contingency actions were implemented which included closing factories, changing school hours, and extending the A day without a car program to two days of the week.[87] The government also instituted industrial technology improvements, a strict biannual vehicle emission inspection and the reformulation of gasoline and diesel fuels.[87] The introduction of Metrobús bus rapid transit and the Ecobici bike-sharing were among efforts to encourage alternate, greener forms of transportation.[86]

Parks and recreation

[edit]
The Chapultepec was an important park during the Aztecs whose access had been limited to its nobility, was declared open to the public by a decree of Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor in 1530,[88][89] it is one of the world's largest city parks.[88]

Chapultepec, the city's most iconic public park, has history back to the Aztec emperors who used the area as a retreat. It is south of Polanco district, and houses the Chapultepec Zoo the main city's zoo, several ponds and seven museums, including the National Museum of Anthropology. Other iconic city parks include the Alameda Central, it is recognized as the oldest public park in the Americas.[90][91] Parque México and Parque España in the hip Condesa district; Parque Hundido and Parque de los Venados in Colonia del Valle, and Parque Lincoln in Polanco.[92] There are many smaller parks throughout the city. Most are small "squares" occupying two or three square blocks amid residential or commercial districts. Several other larger parks such as the Bosque de Tlalpan [es; no] and Viveros de Coyoacán, and in the east Alameda Oriente [es], offer many recreational activities. Northwest of the city is a large ecological reserve, the Bosque de Aragón [ceb; es; no]. In the southeast is the Xochimilco Ecological Park and Plant Market, a World Heritage Site. West of Santa Fe district are the pine forests of the Desierto de los Leones National Park. Amusement parks include Six Flags México, in Ajusco neighborhood which is the largest in Latin America. There are numerous seasonal fairs present in the city.

Mexico City has three zoos. Chapultepec Zoo, the San Juan de Aragon Zoo [es; no] and Los Coyotes Zoo. Chapultepec Zoo is located in the first section of Chapultepec Park in the Miguel Hidalgo. It was opened in 1924.[93] Visitors can see about 243 specimens of different species including kangaroos, giant panda, gorillas, caracal, hyena, hippos, jaguar, giraffe, lemur, lion, among others.[94] Zoo San Juan de Aragon is near the San Juan de Aragon Park in the Gustavo A. Madero. In this zoo, opened in 1964,[95] there are species that are in danger of extinction such as the jaguar and the Mexican wolf. Other guests are the golden eagle, pronghorn, bighorn sheep, caracara, zebras, African elephant, macaw, hippo, among others.[96] Zoo Los Coyotes is a 27.68-acre (11.2 ha) zoo located south of Mexico City in the Coyoacan. It was inaugurated on 2 February 1999.[97] It has more than 301 specimens of 51 species of wild native or endemic fauna from the area, featuring eagles, ajolotes, coyotes, macaws, bobcats, Mexican wolves, raccoons, mountain lions, teporingos, foxes, white-tailed deer.[98]

Climate

[edit]
Lightning in the background of the Torre Mayor
Mexico City
Climate chart (explanation)
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
 
 
5
 
 
21
6
 
 
5
 
 
23
7
 
 
10
 
 
25
9
 
 
15
 
 
26
11
 
 
40
 
 
26
12
 
 
140
 
 
24
13
 
 
160
 
 
23
12
 
 
150
 
 
23
12
 
 
120
 
 
23
12
 
 
50
 
 
22
11
 
 
10
 
 
21
8
 
 
5
 
 
20
6
Average max. and min. temperatures in °C
Precipitation totals in mm
Imperial conversion
JFMAMJJASOND
 
 
0.2
 
 
70
43
 
 
0.2
 
 
73
45
 
 
0.4
 
 
77
48
 
 
0.6
 
 
79
52
 
 
1.6
 
 
79
54
 
 
5.5
 
 
75
55
 
 
6.3
 
 
73
54
 
 
5.9
 
 
73
54
 
 
4.7
 
 
73
54
 
 
2
 
 
72
52
 
 
0.4
 
 
70
46
 
 
0.2
 
 
68
43
Average max. and min. temperatures in °F
Precipitation totals in inches

Mexico City has a subtropical highland climate (Köppen climate classification Cwb), due to its tropical location but high elevation. The lower region of the valley receives less rainfall than the upper regions of the south; the lower boroughs of Iztapalapa, Iztacalco, Venustiano Carranza and the east portion of Gustavo A. Madero are usually drier and warmer than the upper southern boroughs of Tlalpan and Milpa Alta, a mountainous region of pine and oak trees known as the range of Ajusco. The average annual temperature varies from 12 to 16 °C (54 to 61 °F), depending on the altitude of the borough. The temperature is rarely below 3 °C (37 °F) or above 30 °C (86 °F).[99] At the Tacubaya observatory, the lowest temperature ever registered was −4.4 °C (24 °F) on 13 February 1960, and the highest temperature on record was 34.7 °C (94.5 °F) on 25 May 2024.[100] Overall precipitation is heavily concentrated in the summer months, and includes dense hail.

Snow falls in the city scarcely, although somewhat more often on nearby mountaintops. Throughout its history, the Central Valley of Mexico was accustomed to having several snowfalls per decade (including a period between 1878 and 1895 in which every single year—except 1880—recorded snowfalls[101]), mostly lake-effect snow. The effects of the draining of Lake Texcoco and global warming have greatly reduced snowfalls after the snow flurries of 12 February 1907.[102] Since 1908, snow has only fallen thrice: snow on 14 February 1920;[103] snow flurries on 14 March 1940;[104] and on 12 January 1967, when 8 centimeters (3 in) of snow fell on the city, the most on record.[105] The 1967 snowstorm coincided with the operation of Deep Drainage System that resulted in the total draining of what was left of Lake Texcoco.[101][106] After the disappearance of Lake Texcoco, snow has never fallen again over Mexico City.[101] The region of the Valley of Mexico receives anti-cyclonic systems. The weak winds of these systems do not allow for the dispersion, outside the basin, of the air pollutants which are produced by the 50,000 industries and 4 million vehicles operating in and around the metropolitan area.[107]

The area receives about 820 millimeters (32 in) of annual rainfall, which is concentrated from May through October with little or no precipitation for the remainder of the year.[81] The area has two main seasons. The wet humid summer runs from May to October when winds bring in tropical moisture from the sea, the wettest month being July. The cool sunny winter runs from November to April, when the air is relatively drier, the driest month being December. This season is subdivided into a cold winter period and a warm spring period. The cold period spans from November to February, when polar air masses push down from the north and keep the air fairly dry. The warm period extends from March to May when subtropical winds again dominate but do not yet carry enough moisture for rain to form.[108]

Climate data for Ciudad de México (Tacubaya), normals 1991–2020, extremes 1877–2024
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 28.2
(82.8)
33.5
(92.3)
32.9
(91.2)
33.7
(92.7)
34.7
(94.5)
33.5
(92.3)
29.6
(85.3)
29.4
(84.9)
28.6
(83.5)
29.2
(84.6)
31.5
(88.7)
29.4
(84.9)
34.7
(94.5)
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) 22.4
(72.3)
24.3
(75.7)
26.1
(79.0)
27.5
(81.5)
27.2
(81.0)
25.8
(78.4)
24.7
(76.5)
24.6
(76.3)
23.7
(74.7)
23.5
(74.3)
22.8
(73.0)
22.4
(72.3)
24.6
(76.3)
Daily mean °C (°F) 15.4
(59.7)
16.9
(62.4)
18.6
(65.5)
20.3
(68.5)
20.4
(68.7)
19.8
(67.6)
18.8
(65.8)
18.9
(66.0)
18.4
(65.1)
17.6
(63.7)
16.4
(61.5)
15.4
(59.7)
18.1
(64.6)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) 8.5
(47.3)
9.5
(49.1)
11.1
(52.0)
13.1
(55.6)
13.7
(56.7)
13.8
(56.8)
13.0
(55.4)
13.2
(55.8)
13.1
(55.6)
11.8
(53.2)
9.9
(49.8)
8.5
(47.3)
11.6
(52.9)
Record low °C (°F) −4.2
(24.4)
−4.4
(24.1)
−4.0
(24.8)
−0.6
(30.9)
3.7
(38.7)
0.0
(32.0)
1.0
(33.8)
1.0
(33.8)
1.0
(33.8)
0.0
(32.0)
−3.0
(26.6)
−3.0
(26.6)
−4.4
(24.1)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 11.9
(0.47)
5.7
(0.22)
11.8
(0.46)
24.2
(0.95)
59.4
(2.34)
132.5
(5.22)
174.0
(6.85)
175.6
(6.91)
158.1
(6.22)
71.3
(2.81)
17.4
(0.69)
5.0
(0.20)
846.9
(33.34)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.1 mm) 2.7 2.1 3.8 6.7 11.1 16.3 21.8 20.8 18.2 10.1 3.7 1.2 118.5
Average relative humidity (%) 54.0 48.0 43.5 45.2 52.8 63.7 69.6 69.2 69.9 64.0 57.1 55.3 57.7
Mean monthly sunshine hours 233.4 232.5 262.3 238.6 232.2 180.9 178.6 176.9 148.3 190.9 224.4 226.9 2,525.8
Source 1: Servicio Meteorológico Nacional[109][110]
Source 2: World Meteorological Organization (humidity and sun 1981–2010)[111][112]

Demographics

[edit]
Historical population
YearPop.±%
19503,365,081—    
19605,479,184+62.8%
19708,830,947+61.2%
198013,027,620+47.5%
199015,642,318+20.1%
200018,457,027+18.0%
201020,136,681+9.1%
201921,671,908+7.6%
for Mexico City Agglomeration:[113]

Historically, and since Pre-Columbian times, the Valley of Anahuac has been one of the most densely populated areas in Mexico. When the Federal District was created in 1824, the urban area of Mexico City extended approximately to the area of today's Cuauhtémoc borough. At the beginning of the 20th century, the elites[clarify] began migrating to the south and west and soon the small towns of Mixcoac and San Ángel were incorporated by the growing conurbation. According to the 1921 census, 54.78% of the city's population was considered Mestizo (Indigenous mixed with European), 22.79% considered European, and 18.74% considered Indigenous.[114][failed verification]

Up to the 1990s, the Federal District was the most populous federal entity in Mexico, but since then, its population has remained stable at around 8.7 million. The growth of the city has extended beyond the limits of the city proper to 59 municipalities of the State of Mexico and 1 in the state of Hidalgo.[115] With a population of approximately 19.8 million inhabitants (2008),[116] it is one of the most populous conurbations in the world. Nonetheless, the annual rate of growth of the Metropolitan Area of Mexico City is much lower than that of other large urban agglomerations in Mexico,[117] a phenomenon most likely attributable to the environmental policy of decentralization. The net migration rate of Mexico City from 1995 to 2000 was negative.[118]

Metropolitan area

[edit]
Greater Mexico City and Mexico City

The metropolitan area, Greater Mexico City ('Zona Metropolitana del Valle de México' or 'ZMVM' in Spanish) consists of Mexico City itself plus 60 municipalities in the State of Mexico and one in Hidalgo state. With a population of 21,804,515 (2020 census), Greater Mexico City is both the biggest and the densest metropolitan area in the country. Of the ca. 21.8 million, 9.2 million live in Mexico City proper[8] and 12.4 million in the State of Mexico (ca. 75% of the state's population), including the municipalities of:[8]

Megalopolis

[edit]
The Mexico City Megalopolis as defined prior to 2019. Since then Querétaro state is also included.

Greater Mexico City, in turn, forms part of an even larger megalopolis officially known as the Corona regional del centro de México (Mexico City megalopolis), with a population of 33.4 million, more than one quarter of the country's population according to the 2020 census. The megalopolis as defined by the Environmental Commission of the Megalopolis (CAMe) covers Mexico City and the states of Mexico, Hidalgo, Puebla, Tlaxcala, Morelos, and since 2019, Querétaro,[119] thus encompassing the metropolitan areas of Mexico City, Puebla, Querétaro, Toluca, Cuernavaca, Pachuca, and others.[120]

Growth

[edit]

Greater Mexico City was the fastest growing metropolitan area in the country until the late 1980s. Since then, government policies have supported decentralization with the aim of reducing pollution in Greater Mexico City. While still growing, the annual rate of growth has decreased and is lower than that of Greater Guadalajara and Greater Monterrey.[117]

The net migration rate of Mexico City proper from 1995 to 2000 was negative,[121] which implies that residents are moving to the suburbs of the metropolitan area, or to other states of Mexico. In addition, some inner suburbs are losing population to outer suburbs, indicating the continuing expansion of Greater Mexico City.

Panorama of Mexico City from Torre Latinoamericana

Religion

[edit]
Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe in La Villa de Guadalupe, the main Catholic pilgrimage site in the Americas. It houses the original image of Our Lady of Guadalupe.

The majority (82%) of the residents in Mexico City are Catholic, slightly lower than the 2010 census national percentage of 87%, making it the largest Christian denomination, though it has been decreasing over the last decades.[122] Many other religions and philosophies are also practiced in the city: many different types of Protestant groups, different types of Jewish communities, Buddhist, Islamic and other spiritual and philosophical groups. There are also growing[123] numbers of irreligious people, whether agnostic or atheist. The patron saint of Mexico City is Saint Philip of Jesus, a Mexican Catholic missionary who became one of the Twenty-six Martyrs of Japan.[124]

The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Mexico is the largest archdiocese in the world.[125] There are two Catholic cathedrals in the city, the Mexico City Metropolitan Cathedral and the Iztapalapa Cathedral, and three former Catholic churches who are now the cathedrals of other rites, the San José de Gracia Cathedral (Anglican church), the Porta Coeli Cathedral (Melkite Greek Catholic church) and the Valvanera Cathedral (Maronite church).

Ethnic groups

[edit]

Representing around 18.74% of the city's population, indigenous peoples from different areas of Mexico have migrated to the capital in search of better economic opportunities. Nahuatl, Otomi, Mixtec, Zapotec and Mazahua are the indigenous languages with the greatest number of speakers in Mexico City.[126] According to the 2020 Census, 2.03% of Mexico City's population identified as Black, Afro-Mexican, or of African descent.[127]

Additionally, Mexico City is home to large communities of expatriates and immigrants from the rest of North America (U.S. and Canada), from South America (mainly from Argentina and Colombia, but also from Brazil, Chile, Uruguay and Venezuela), from Central America and the Caribbean (mainly from Cuba, Guatemala, El Salvador, Haiti and Honduras); from Europe (mainly from Spain, Germany and Switzerland, but also from Czech Republic, Hungary, France, Italy, Ireland, the Netherlands, Poland and Romania),[128][129] and from the Arab world (mostly from Lebanon, and other countries like Syria and Egypt).[130]

Mexico City is home to the largest population of Americans living outside the United States. Estimates are as high as 700,000 Americans living in Mexico City, while in 1999 the U.S. Bureau of Consular Affairs estimated over 440,000 Americans lived in the Mexico City Metropolitan Area.[131][132]

Health

[edit]
The XXI Century National Medical Center, managed by the Mexican Social Security Institute (IMSS)

Mexico City is home to some of the best private hospitals in the country, including Hospital Ángeles, Hospital ABC and Médica Sur. The national public healthcare institution for private-sector employees, IMSS, has its largest facilities in Mexico City—including the National Medical Center and the La Raza Medical Center—and has an annual budget of over 6 billion pesos. The IMSS and other public health institutions, including the ISSSTE (Public Sector Employees' Social Security Institute) and the National Health Ministry (SSA) maintain large specialty facilities in the city. These include the National Institutes of Cardiology, Nutrition, Psychiatry, Oncology, Pediatrics, Rehabilitation, among others.

Education

[edit]
El Colegio de México dedicated to higher education and research in the social sciences and humanities, with a particular emphasis on Mexican and Latin American studies.

Among its many public and private schools (K–13), the city offers multi-cultural, multi-lingual and international schools attended by Mexican and foreign students. Best known are the Colegio Alemán (German school with three main campuses), the Liceo Mexicano Japonés (Japanese), the Centro Cultural Coreano en México (Korean), the Lycée Franco-Mexicain (French), the American School, The Westhill Institute (American School), the Edron Academy and the Greengates School (British). Mexico City joined the UNESCO Global Network of Learning Cities in 2015[133] and was designated a "Design City" in 2017.[134]

In the Plaza de las Tres Culturas is the Colegio de Santa Cruz de Tlatelolco that is recognized for being the first and oldest European school of higher learning in the Americas[135] and the first major school of interpreters and translators in the New World.[136] Other, the now-defunct Royal and Pontifical University of Mexico is considered the father of the UNAM, and it was located in the city and was the third oldest university in the Americas.

Central Campus of the University City of the UNAM. Since 2007 the University City is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.[137]

The National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), located in Mexico City, is the largest university on the continent, with more than 300,000 students from all backgrounds. Three Nobel laureates, several Mexican entrepreneurs and most of Mexico's modern-day presidents are among its former students. UNAM conducts 50% of Mexico's scientific research and has presence all across the country with satellite campuses, observatories and research centers. UNAM ranked 74th in the Top 200 World University Ranking published by Times Higher Education (then called Times Higher Education Supplement) in 2006,[138] making it the highest ranked Spanish-speaking university in the world. The sprawling main campus of the university, known as Ciudad Universitaria, was named a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 2007.[137]

The second largest higher-education institution is the National Polytechnic Institute (IPN), which includes among many other relevant centers the Centro de Investigación y de Estudios Avanzados (Cinvestav), where varied high-level scientific and technological research is done. Other major higher-education institutions in the city include the Metropolitan Autonomous University (UAM), the National School of Anthropology and History (ENAH), the Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México (ITAM), the Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education (3 campuses), the Universidad Panamericana (UP), the Universidad La Salle, the Universidad Intercontinental (UIC), the Universidad del Valle de México (UVM), the Universidad Anáhuac, Simón Bolívar University (USB), the Universidad Intercontinental (UIC), the Alliant International University, the Universidad Iberoamericana, El Colegio de México (Colmex), Escuela Libre de Derecho and the Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económica, (CIDE). In addition, the prestigious University of California maintains a campus known as "Casa de California" in the city.[139] The Universidad Tecnológica de México is also in Mexico City.

Politics

[edit]

Political structure

[edit]
The National Palace of Mexico
Senate of the Republic
Legislative Palace of San Lázaro
Offices of the Secretariat of Foreign Affairs
Mexico City's Legislative Assembly building

The Acta Constitutiva de la Federación of 31 January 1824, and the Federal Constitution of 4 October 1824,[140] fixed the political and administrative organization of the United Mexican States after the Mexican War of Independence. In addition, Section XXVIII of Article 50 gave the new Congress the right to choose where the federal government would be located. This location would then be appropriated as federal land, with the federal government acting as the local authority. The two main candidates to become the capital were Mexico City and Querétaro.[141]

Due in large part to the persuasion of representative Servando Teresa de Mier, Mexico City was chosen because it was the center of the country's population and history, even though Queretaro was closer to the center geographically. The choice was official on 18 November 1824, and Congress delineated a surface area of two leagues square (8,800 acres) centered on the Zocalo. This area was then separated from the State of Mexico, forcing that state's government to move from the Palace of the Inquisition (now Museum of Mexican Medicine) in the city to Texcoco. This area did not include the population centers of the towns of Coyoacán, Xochimilco, Mexicaltzingo and Tlalpan, all of which remained as part of the State of Mexico.[142]

In 1854 president Antonio López de Santa Anna enlarged the area of Mexico City almost eightfold from the original 220 to 1,700 km2 (80 to 660 sq mi), annexing the rural and mountainous areas to secure the strategic mountain passes to the south and southwest to protect the city in the event of a foreign invasion. (The Mexican–American War had just been fought.) The last changes to the limits of Mexico City were made between 1898 and 1902, reducing the area to the current 1,479 km2 (571 sq mi) by adjusting the southern border with the state of Morelos. By that time, the total number of municipalities within Mexico City was twenty-two. In 1941, the General Anaya borough was merged with the Central Department, which was then renamed "Mexico City" (thus reviving the name but not the autonomous municipality). From 1941 to 1970, the Federal District comprised twelve delegaciones and Mexico City. In 1970, Mexico City was split into four different delegaciones: Cuauhtémoc, Miguel Hidalgo, Venustiano Carranza and Benito Juárez, increasing the number of delegaciones to 16. Since then, the whole Federal District, whose delegaciones had by then almost formed a single urban area, began to be considered de facto a synonym of Mexico City.[143]

The lack of a de jure stipulation left a legal vacuum that led to a number of sterile discussions about whether one concept had engulfed the other or if the latter had ceased to exist altogether. In 1993, the situation was solved by an amendment to the 44th article of the Constitution of Mexico; Mexico City and the Federal District were stated to be the same entity. The amendment was later introduced into the second article of the Statute of Government of the Federal District.[143]

On 29 January 2016, Mexico City ceased to be the Federal District (Spanish: Distrito Federal or D.F.), and was officially renamed "Ciudad de México" (or "CDMX").[33] On that date, Mexico City began a transition to becoming the country's 32nd federal entity, giving it a level of autonomy comparable to that of a state. It will have its own constitution and its legislature, and its delegaciones will now be headed by mayors.[33] Because of a clause in the Mexican Constitution, however, as it is the seat of the powers of the federation, it can never become a state, or the capital of the country has to be relocated elsewhere.[35]

In response to the demands, Mexico City received a greater degree of autonomy, with the 1987 elaboration the first Statute of Government (Estatuto de Gobierno) and the creation of an assembly of representatives.[144]: 149–150  The city has a Statute of Government, and as of its ratification on 31 January 2017, a constitution,[145][146] similar to the states of the Union. As part of the recent changes in autonomy, the budget is administered locally; it is proposed by the head of government and approved by the Legislative Assembly. Nonetheless, it is the Congress of the Union that sets the ceiling to internal and external public debt issued by the city government.[147]

The politics pursued by the administrations of heads of government in Mexico City at the end of the 20th century have usually been more liberal than those of the rest of the country,[148][149] whether with the support of the federal government, as was the case with the approval of several comprehensive environmental laws in the 1980s, or by laws that were since approved by the Legislative Assembly. The Legislative Assembly expanded provisions on abortions, becoming the first federal entity to expand abortion in Mexico beyond cases of rape and economic reasons, to permit it at the choice of the mother before the 12th week of pregnancy.[150] In December 2009, the then Federal District became the first city in Latin America and one of very few in the world to legalize same-sex marriage.[151]

Boroughs and neighborhoods

[edit]
The 16 boroughs of Mexico City

After the political reforms in 2016, the city is divided for administrative purposes into 16 boroughs (demarcaciones territoriales, colloquially alcaldías), formerly called delegaciones. While they are not fully equivalent to municipalities, the boroughs have gained significant autonomy.[152] Formerly appointed by the Federal District's head of government, local authorities were first elected directly by plurality in 2000. From 2016, each borough is headed by a mayor, expanding their local government powers.[152]

The boroughs of Mexico City with their 2020 populations are:[153]

1. Álvaro Obregón (pop. 759,137)
2. Azcapotzalco (pop. 432,205)
3. Benito Juárez (pop. 434,153)
4. Coyoacán (pop. 614,447)
5. Cuajimalpa (pop. 217,686)
6. Cuauhtémoc (pop. 545,884)
7. Gustavo A. Madero (pop. 1,173,351)
8. Iztacalco (pop. 404,695)

9. Iztapalapa (pop. 1,835,486)
10. La Magdalena Contreras (pop. 247,622)
11. Miguel Hidalgo (pop. 414,470)
12. Milpa Alta (pop. 152,685)
13. Tláhuac (pop. 392,313)
14. Tlalpan (pop. 699,928)
15. Venustiano Carranza (pop. 443,704)
16. Xochimilco (pop. 442,178)

The Human Development Index report of 2005[154] shows that there were three boroughs with a very high Human Development Index, 12 with a high HDI value (9 above .85), and one with a medium HDI value (almost high). Benito Juárez borough had the highest HDI of the country (0.9510) followed by Miguel Hidalgo, which came up fourth nationally with an HDI of (0.9189), and Coyoacán was fifth nationally, with an HDI of (0.9169). Cuajimalpa (15th), Cuauhtémoc (23rd), and Azcapotzalco (25th) also had very high values of 0.8994, 0.8922, and 0.8915, respectively.[154]

In contrast, the boroughs of Xochimilco (172nd), Tláhuac (177th), and Iztapalapa (183rd) presented the lowest HDI values of Mexico City, with values of 0.8481, 0.8473, and 0.8464, respectively, which are still in the global high-HDI range. The only borough that did not have a high HDI was that of rural Milpa Alta, which had a "medium" HDI of 0.7984, far below those of all the other boroughs (627th nationally, the rest being in the top 200). Mexico City's HDI for the 2005 report was 0.9012 (very high), and its 2010 value of 0.9225 (very high), or (by newer methodology) 0.8307, was Mexico's highest.[154]

Law enforcement

[edit]
Federal Police headquarters in Mexico City

The Secretariat of Public Security of Mexico City (Secretaría de Seguridad Pública de la Ciudad de México – SSP) manages a combined force of over 90,000 officers in Mexico City. The SSP is charged with maintaining public order and safety in the heart of Mexico City. The historic district is also roamed by tourist police, aiming to orient and serve tourists. These horse-mounted agents dress in traditional uniforms. The investigative Judicial Police of Mexico City (Policía Judicial de la Ciudad de México – PJCDMX) is organized under the Office of the Attorney General of Mexico City (the Procuraduría General de Justicia de la Ciudad de México). The PGJCDMX maintains 16 precincts (delegaciones) with an estimated 3,500 judicial police, 1,100 investigating agents for prosecuting attorneys (agentes del ministerio público), and nearly 1,000 criminology experts or specialists (peritos).

Between 2000 and 2004 an average of 478 crimes were reported each day in Mexico City; however, the actual crime rate is thought to be much higher "since most people are reluctant to report crime".[155] Under policies enacted by Mayor Marcelo Ebrard between 2009 and 2011, Mexico City underwent a major security upgrade with violent and petty crime rates both falling significantly despite the rise in violent crime in other parts of the country. Some of the policies enacted included the installation of 11,000 security cameras around the city and a very large expansion of the police force. Mexico City has one of the world's highest police officer-to-resident ratios, with one uniformed officer per 100 citizens.[156] Since 1997 the prison population has increased by more than 500%.[157] Political scientist Markus-Michael Müller argues that mostly informal street vendors are hit by these measures. He sees punishment "related to the growing politicization of security and crime issues and the resulting criminalization of the people living at the margins of urban society, in particular those who work in the city's informal economy".[157]

In 2016, the incidence of femicides was 3.2 per 100 000 inhabitants, the national average being 4.2.[158] A 2015 city government report found that two of three women over the age of 15 in the capital suffered some form of violence.[159] In addition to street harassment, one of the places where women in Mexico City are subjected to violence is on and around public transport. Annually the Metro of Mexico City receives 300 complaints of sexual harassment.[160]

International relations

[edit]

Mexico City is twinned with:[161][162]

Economy

[edit]
The Paseo de la Reforma is a wide avenue designed by Ferdinand von Rosenzweig in the 1860s and was modeled after the Champs-Élysées in Paris.[165]

Mexico City is one of the most important economic hubs in Latin America. The city proper produces 15.8% of the country's gross domestic product.[166] In 2002, Mexico City had a Human Development Index score of 0.915,[167] identical to that of South Korea. In 2007, residents in the top twelve percent of GDP per capita holders in the city had a mean disposable income of US$98,517. The high spending power of Mexico City inhabitants makes the city attractive for companies offering prestige and luxury goods. According to a 2009 study conducted by PwC, Mexico City had a GDP of $390 billion, ranking it as the eighth richest city in the world and the richest in Latin America.[168] In 2009, Mexico City alone would rank as the 30th largest economy in the world.[169]

Mexico City is the greatest contributor to the country's industrial GDP (15.8%) and also the greatest contributor to the country's GDP in the service sector (25.3%). Due to the limited non-urbanized space at the south—most of which is protected through environmental laws—the contribution of Mexico City in agriculture is the smallest of all federal entities in the country.[166] The economic reforms of President Carlos Salinas de Gortari had a tremendous effect on the city, as a number of businesses, including banks and airlines, were privatized. He also signed the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). This led to decentralization[170] and a shift in Mexico City's economic base, from manufacturing to services, as most factories moved away to either the State of Mexico, or more commonly to the northern border. By contrast, corporate office buildings set their base in the city.

Mexican Stock Exchange

Mexico City offers an immense and varied consumer retail market, ranging from basic foods to ultra high-end luxury goods. Consumers may buy in fixed indoor markets, in mobile markets (tianguis), from street vendors, from downtown shops in a street dedicated to a certain type of good, in convenience stores and traditional neighborhood stores, in modern supermarkets, in warehouse and membership stores and the shopping centers that they anchor, in department stores, in big-box stores, and in modern shopping malls. In addition, "tianguis" or mobile markets set up shop on streets in many neighborhoods, depending on day of week. Sundays see the largest number of these markets.

The city's main source of fresh produce is the Central de Abasto. This in itself is a self-contained mini-city in Iztapalapa borough covering an area equivalent to several dozen city blocks. The wholesale market supplies most of the city's "mercados", supermarkets and restaurants, as well as people who come to buy the produce for themselves. Tons of fresh produce are trucked in from all over Mexico every day. The principal fish market is known as La Nueva Viga, in the same complex as the Central de Abastos.[171] The world-renowned market of Tepito occupies 25 blocks, and sells a variety of products. A staple for consumers in the city is the omnipresent "mercado". Every major neighborhood in the city has its own borough-regulated market, often more than one. These are large well-established facilities offering most basic products, such as fresh produce and meat/poultry, dry goods, tortillerías, and many other services such as locksmiths, herbal medicine, hardware goods, sewing implements; and a multitude of stands offering freshly made, home-style cooking and drinks in the tradition of aguas frescas and atole.

Street vendors ply their trade from stalls in the tianguis as well as at non-officially controlled concentrations around metro stations and hospitals; at plazas comerciales, where vendors of a certain "theme" (e.g. stationery) are housed; originally these were organized to accommodate vendors formerly selling on the street; or simply from improvised stalls on a city sidewalk.[172] In addition, food and goods are sold from people walking with baskets, pushing carts, from bicycles or the backs of trucks, or simply from a tarp or cloth laid on the ground.[173] In the center of the city informal street vendors are increasingly targeted by laws and prosecution.[157] The weekly San Felipe de Jesús Tianguis is reported to be the largest in Latin America.[174]

The Historic Center of Mexico City is widely known for specialized, often low-cost retailers. Certain blocks or streets are dedicated to shops selling a certain type of merchandise, with areas dedicated to over 40 categories such as home appliances, lamps and electricals, closets and bathrooms, housewares, wedding dresses, jukeboxes, printing, office furniture and safes, books, photography, jewelry, and opticians.[175]

Santa Fe is one of the centers of greatest economic activity in the city.[176]

Tourism

[edit]
The Turibus runs through many of the most important tourist attractions in the city.

Mexico City is a destination for many foreign tourists. The Historic center of Mexico City (Centro Histórico) and the "floating gardens" of Xochimilco in the southern borough have been declared World Heritage Sites by UNESCO. Landmarks in the Historic Center include the Plaza de la Constitución (Zócalo), the main central square with its epoch-contrasting Spanish-era Metropolitan Cathedral and National Palace, ancient Aztec temple ruins Templo Mayor ("Major Temple") and modern structures, all within a few steps of one another. (The Templo Mayor was discovered in 1978 while workers were digging to place underground electric cables).

The most recognizable icon of Mexico City is the golden Angel of Independence on the wide, elegant avenue Paseo de la Reforma, modeled by the order of the Emperor Maximilian of Mexico after the Champs-Élysées in Paris. This avenue was designed over the Americas' oldest known major roadway in the 19th century to connect the National Palace (seat of government) with the Castle of Chapultepec, the imperial residence. Today, this avenue is an important financial district in which the Mexican Stock Exchange and several corporate headquarters are located. Another important avenue is the Avenida de los Insurgentes, which extends 28.8 km (17.9 mi) and is one of the longest single avenues in the world.

Chapultepec Park houses the Chapultepec Castle, now a museum on a hill that overlooks the park and its numerous museums, monuments and the national zoo and the National Museum of Anthropology (which houses the Aztec Calendar Stone).

The Aztec sun stone in the National Museum of Anthropology

Another piece of architecture is the Palacio de Bellas Artes, a white marble theater/museum whose weight is such that it has gradually been sinking into the soft ground below. Its construction began during the presidency of Porfirio Díaz and ended in 1934, after being interrupted by the Mexican Revolution in the 1920s.

The Plaza de las Tres Culturas, in this square are located the College of Santa Cruz de Tlatelolco, that is the first and oldest European school of higher learning in the Americas,[135] and the archeological site of the city-state of Tlatelolco, and the shrine and Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe are also important sites. There is a double-decker bus, known as the "Turibus", that circles most of these sites, and has timed audio describing the sites in multiple languages as they are passed.

In addition, according to the Secretariat of Tourism, the city has about 170 museums—is among the top ten of cities in the world with highest number of museums[177]—over 100 art galleries, and some 30 concert halls, all of which maintain a constant cultural activity during the whole year. Many areas (e.g. Palacio Nacional and the National Institute of Cardiology) have murals painted by Diego Rivera. He and his wife Frida Kahlo lived in Coyoacán, where several of their homes, studios, and art collections are open to the public. The house where Leon Trotsky was initially granted asylum and finally murdered in 1940 is also in Coyoacán. In addition, there are several haciendas that are now restaurants, such as the San Ángel Inn, the Hacienda de Tlalpan, Hacienda de Cortés and the Hacienda de los Morales.

Transportation

[edit]

Airports

[edit]
Mexico City International Airport

Mexico City International Airport is Mexico City's primary airport (IATA Airport Code: MEX), and serves as the hub of Aeroméxico (Skyteam). Felipe Ángeles International Airport (IATA Airport Code: NLU) is Mexico City's secondary airport, and was opened in 2022, rebuilt from the former Santa Lucía Air Force Base. It is located in Zumpango, State of Mexico, 48.8 kilometres (30 mi) north-northeast of the historic center of Mexico City by car.[178]

Sistema de Movilidad Integrada

[edit]

In 2019, the graphic designer Lance Wyman was engaged to create an integrated map of the multimodal public transportation system; he presented a new logo for the Sistema de Movilidad Integrada, describing eight distinct modes of transportation. The head of the government, Claudia Sheinbaum, said the branding would be used for a new single payment card to streamline public transportation fare collection.[179]

Metro

[edit]
Mexico City Metro

Mexico City is served by the Mexico City Metro, a 225.9 km (140 mi) metro system, which is the largest in Latin America. The first portions were opened in 1969 and it has expanded to 12 lines with 195 stations, transporting 4.4 million people every day.[180]

Tren Suburbano

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A suburban rail system, the Tren Suburbano serves the metropolitan area, beyond the reach of the metro, with one line serving to municipalities such as Tlalnepantla and Cuautitlán Izcalli, but with future lines planned to serve e.g. Chalco and La Paz.

Electric transport other than the metro also exists, in the form of several Mexico City trolleybus routes and the Xochimilco Light Rail line, both of which are operated by Servicio de Transportes Eléctricos. The central area's last streetcar line (tramway, or tranvía) closed in 1979.

Bus

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Metrobús rapid transit bus stop station at Mina

Mexico City has an extensive bus network, consisting of public buses, bus rapid transit, and trolleybuses.

Roads

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Mexico City has a large road network, and relatively high private car usage, estimated at more than 4.5 million in 2016.[181] There is an environmental program, called Hoy No Circula ("Today Does Not Run", or "One Day without a Car"), whereby vehicles that have not passed emissions testing are restricted from circulating on certain days according to the ending digit of their license plates, in an attempt to cut down on pollution and traffic congestion.[182][183][184]

Cycling

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Bicycles available for rental in Zona Rosa

The Mexico City local government oversees the administration of Ecobici, North America's second-largest bicycle sharing system. Established to promote sustainable urban transportation, Ecobici facilitates convenient access to bicycles for residents and visitors alike. As of September 2013, the system comprised 276 stations strategically positioned across an expansive area extending from the Historic center to Polanco, a prominent district in the city. Within this network, approximately 4,000 bicycles are available for public use, enabling individuals to navigate the metropolitan landscape efficiently and reduce reliance on traditional motorized modes of transportation. Ecobici serves as a model for environmentally conscious urban mobility initiatives, reflecting Mexico City's commitment to fostering sustainable development and enhancing the quality of life for its populace.[185][186][187]

Culture

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Art

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The monument "To the Meritorious Benito Juárez", Mexico City

Secular works of art of this period include the equestrian sculpture of Charles IV of Spain, locally known as El Caballito ("The little horse"). This piece, in bronze, was the work of Manuel Tolsá and it has been placed at the Plaza Tolsá, in front of the Palacio de Mineria (Mining Palace). Directly in front of this building is the Museo Nacional de Arte (Munal) (the National Museum of Art).

The Receptions Hall at the Museo Nacional de Arte

During the 19th century, an important producer of art was the Academia de San Carlos (San Carlos Art Academy), founded during colonial times, and which later became the Escuela Nacional de Artes Plásticas (the National School of Arts) including painting, sculpture and graphic design, one of UNAM's art schools. Many of the works produced by the students and faculty of that time are now displayed in the Museo Nacional de San Carlos (National Museum of San Carlos).

One of the students, José María Velasco, is considered one of the greatest Mexican landscape painters of the 19th century. Porfirio Díaz's regime sponsored arts, especially those that followed the French school. Popular arts in the form of cartoons and illustrations flourished, e.g. those of José Guadalupe Posada and Manuel Manilla. The permanent collection of the San Carlos Museum also includes paintings by European masters such as Rembrandt, Velázquez, Murillo, and Rubens.

The monument to Lázaro Cárdenas (outstretched hand welcoming Spanish immigrants), Parque España

After the Mexican Revolution, an avant-garde artistic movement originated in Mexico City: muralism. Many of the works of muralists José Clemente Orozco, David Alfaro Siqueiros and Diego Rivera are displayed in numerous buildings in the city, most notably at the National Palace and the Palacio de Bellas Artes. Frida Kahlo, wife of Rivera, with a strong nationalist expression, was also one of the most renowned of Mexican painters. Her house has become a museum that displays many of her works.[188]

The former home of Rivera muse Dolores Olmedo houses the namesake museum. The facility is in Xochimilco borough in southern Mexico City and includes several buildings surrounded by sprawling manicured lawns. It houses a large collection of Rivera and Kahlo paintings and drawings, as well as living Xoloizcuintles (Mexican Hairless Dog). It also regularly hosts small but important temporary exhibits of classical and modern art (e.g. Venetian Masters and Contemporary New York artists).

In the 20th century, many artists immigrated to Mexico City from different regions of Mexico, such as Leopoldo Méndez, an engraver from Veracruz, who supported the creation of the socialist Taller de la Gráfica Popular (Popular Graphics Workshop), designed to help blue-collar workers find a venue to express their art. Other painters came from abroad, such as Catalan painter Remedios Varo and other Spanish and Jewish exiles. It was in the second half of the 20th century that the artistic movement began to drift apart from the Revolutionary theme. José Luis Cuevas opted for a modernist style in contrast to the muralist movement associated with social politics.

Museums

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A reconstruction of the entrance to the Hochob temple in the National Museum of Anthropology
The Museo Soumaya

Mexico City has numerous museums dedicated to art, including Mexican colonial, modern and contemporary art, and international art. The Museo Tamayo was opened in the mid-1980s to house the collection of international contemporary art donated by Mexican painter Rufino Tamayo. The collection includes pieces by Picasso, Klee, Kandinsky, Warhol and many others, though most of the collection is stored while visiting exhibits are shown. The Museo de Arte Moderno is a repository of Mexican artists from the 20th century, including Rivera, Orozco, Siqueiros, Kahlo, Gerzso, Carrington, Tamayo, and regularly hosts temporary exhibits of international modern art. In southern Mexico City, the Carrillo Gil Museum showcases avant-garde artists, as does the Museo Universitario Arte Contemporáneo, designed by Mexican architect Teodoro González de León, inaugurated in late 2008.

The Museo Soumaya, named after the wife of Mexican magnate Carlos Slim, has the largest private collection of original Rodin sculptures outside of France.[189] It also has a large collection of Dalí sculptures, and recently began showing pieces in its masters collection including El Greco, Velázquez, Picasso and Canaletto. The museum inaugurated a new futuristic-design facility in 2011 just north of Polanco, while maintaining a smaller facility in Plaza Loreto in southern Mexico City.

The Colección Júmex is a contemporary art museum located on the sprawling grounds of the Jumex juice company in the northern industrial suburb of Ecatepec. It has the largest private contemporary art collection in Latin America and hosts pieces from its permanent collection as well as traveling exhibits. The Museo de San Ildefonso, housed in the Antiguo Colegio de San Ildefonso in Mexico City's historic downtown district is a 17th-century colonnaded palace housing an art museum that regularly hosts world-class exhibits of Mexican and international art. The Museo Nacional de Arte is also located in a former palace in the historic center. It houses a large collection of pieces by all major Mexican artists of the last 400 years and also hosts visiting exhibits.

Jack Kerouac, the noted American author, spent extended periods of time in the city, and wrote his 1959 masterpiece volume of poetry Mexico City Blues here. Another American author, William S. Burroughs, also lived in Colonia Roma where he accidentally shot his wife. Most of Mexico City's museums can be visited from Tuesday to Sunday from 10am to 5pm, although some of them have extended schedules, such as the Museum of Anthropology and History, which is open to 7pm. In addition to this, entrance to most museums are free on Sunday. In some cases a modest fee may be charged.[190]

The Memory and Tolerance Museum, inaugurated in 2011, showcases historical events of discrimination and genocide. Permanent exhibits include those on the Holocaust and other large-scale atrocities. It also houses temporary exhibits; one on Tibet was inaugurated by the Dalai Lama in September 2011.[191]

Music, theater and entertainment

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The City Theatre, built in 1918

Mexico City is home to a number of orchestras offering season programs. These include the Mexico City Philharmonic,[192] which performs at the Sala Ollin Yoliztli; the National Symphony Orchestra, whose home base is the Palacio de Bellas Artes (Palace of the Fine Arts), a masterpiece of art nouveau and art decó styles; the Philharmonic Orchestra of the National Autonomous University of Mexico (OFUNAM),[193] and the Minería Symphony Orchestra,[194] both of which perform at the Sala Nezahualcóyotl, which was the first wrap-around concert hall in the Western Hemisphere when inaugurated in 1976. There are also many smaller ensembles that enrich the city's musical scene, including the Carlos Chávez Youth Symphony, the Cuarteto Latinoamericano, the New World Orchestra (Orquesta del Nuevo Mundo), the National Polytechnical Symphony and the Bellas Artes Chamber Orchestra (Orquesta de Cámara de Bellas Artes).

Mexico City is a leading center of popular culture and music. There are a multitude of venues hosting Spanish and foreign-language performers. These include the 10,000-seat National Auditorium that regularly schedules the Spanish and English-language pop and rock artists, as well as many of the world's leading performing arts ensembles, the auditorium also broadcasts grand opera performances from New York's Metropolitan Opera on giant, high definition screens. In 2007, the National Auditorium was selected world's best venue by multiple genre media.

Other sites for pop-artist performances include the 3,000-seat Teatro Metropolitan, the 15,000-seat Palacio de los Deportes, and the larger 50,000-seat Foro Sol Stadium, where popular international artists perform on a regular basis. The Cirque du Soleil has held several seasons at the Carpa Santa Fe, in the Santa Fe district in the western part of the city. There are numerous venues for smaller musical ensembles and solo performers. These include the Hard Rock Live, Bataclán, Foro Scotiabank, Lunario, Circo Volador and Voilá Acoustique. Recent additions include the 20,000-seat Arena Ciudad de México, the 3,000-seat Pepsi Center World Trade Center, and the 2,500-seat Auditorio Blackberry.

The Centro Nacional de las Artes (National Center for the Arts) has several venues for music, theater, dance. UNAM's main campus, also in the southern part of the city, is home to the Centro Cultural Universitario (the University Culture Center) (CCU). The CCU also houses the National Library, the interactive Universum, Museo de las Ciencias,[195] the Sala Nezahualcóyotl concert hall, several theaters and cinemas, and the new University Museum of Contemporary Art (MUAC).[196] A branch of the National University's CCU cultural center was inaugurated in 2007 in the facilities of the former Ministry of Foreign Affairs, known as Tlatelolco, in north-central Mexico City.

The Biblioteca Vasconcelos

The José Vasconcelos Library, a national library, is located on the grounds of the former Buenavista railroad station in the northern part of the city. The Papalote Museo del Niño (Kite Children's Museum), which houses the world's largest dome screen, is located in the wooded park of Chapultepec, near the Museo Tecnológico, and Aztlán Parque Urbano, an amusement park. The theme park Six Flags México (the largest amusement park in Latin America) is located in the Ajusco neighborhood, in Tlalpan borough, southern Mexico City. During the winter, the main square of the Zócalo is transformed into a gigantic ice skating rink, which is said to be the largest in the world behind that of Moscow's Red Square.

The Cineteca Nacional [es] (Mexican Film Library), near the Coyoacán suburb, shows a variety of films, and stages many film festivals, including the annual International Showcase, and many smaller ones ranging from Scandinavian and Uruguayan cinema, to Jewish and LGBT-themed films. Cinépolis and Cinemex, the two biggest film business chains, also have several film festivals throughout the year, with both national and international movies. Mexico City has a number of IMAX theaters, providing residents and visitors access to films ranging from documentaries to blockbusters on these large screens.

Cuisine

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Street tacos in Mexico City

Once considered plebeian fare, by the 19th century tacos was a standard of Mexico City's cuisine. As authorities struggled to tax local taquerias, imposing licensing requirements and penalties, they recorded some details of the types of foods being served by these establishments. The most frequent reference was for tacos de barbacoa. Also mentioned were enchiladas, tacos de minero and gorditas, along with oyster shops and fried fish stands. There is evidence of some regional specialties being made available for recent migrants; at least two shops were known to serve pozole, a type of stew similar to hominy that is a staple of Guadalajara, Jalisco.[197]

Mexico City is known for having some of the freshest fish and seafood in Mexico's interior. La Nueva Viga Market is the second largest seafood market in the world after the Tsukiji fish market in Japan.

Mexico City offers a variety of cuisines: restaurants specializing in the regional cuisines of Mexico's 31 states are available in the city, and the city also has several branches of internationally recognized restaurants. These include Paris' Au Pied de Cochon and Brasserie Lipp, Philippe (by Philippe Chow); Nobu, Quintonil, Morimoto; Pámpano, owned by Mexican-raised opera singer Plácido Domingo. There are branches of Japanese restaurant Suntory, Italian restaurant Alfredo, as well as New York steakhouses Morton's and The Palm, and Monte Carlo's BeefBar. Three of Lima's Haute restaurants, serving Peruvian cuisine, have locations in Mexico City: La Mar, Segundo Muelle and Astrid y Gastón.

For the 2023 list of World's 50 Best Restaurants as named by the British magazine Restaurant, Mexico City ranked 13th best with the Mexican avant-garde restaurant Pujol, owned by Mexican chef Enrique Olvera.[198] Also notable is the Basque-Mexican fusion restaurant Biko, run and co-owned by Bruno Oteiza and Mikel Alonso, which placed outside the list at 59th, but in previous years has ranked within the top 50.[199] Other that has been placed on the list in 2019 is the restaurant Sud 777 at 58th place.[200] In 2024, seven restaurants in the city received Michelin stars.[201] At the other end of the scale are working class pulque bars known as pulquerías, a challenge for tourists to locate and experience.

Media

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The Televisa headquarters in Mexico City

Mexico City is Mexico's most important hub for the printed media and book publishing industries. Dozens of daily newspapers are published, including El Universal, Excélsior, Reforma and La Jornada. Other major papers include Milenio, Crónica, El Economista and El Financiero.[202][203] Leading magazines include Expansión, Proceso, Poder, as well as dozens of entertainment publications such as Vanidades, Quién, Chilango, TV Notas, and local editions of Vogue, GQ, and Architectural Digest.

It is also a leading center of the advertising industry. Most international ad firms have offices in the city, including Grey, JWT, Leo Burnett, Euro RSCG, BBDO, Ogilvy, Saatchi & Saatchi, and McCann Erickson. Many local firms also compete in the sector, including Alazraki, Olabuenaga/Chemistri, Terán, Augusto Elías, and Clemente Cámara, among others. There are 60 radio stations operating in the city and many local community radio transmission networks.

The two largest media companies in the Spanish-speaking world, Televisa and TV Azteca, are headquartered in Mexico City. Televisa often presents itself as the largest producer of Spanish-language content.[204] Other local television channels include:

XHDF 1 (Azteca Uno),[205] XEW 2 (Televisa W),[206] XHCTMX 3, XHTV 4, XHGC 5, XHTDMX 6, XHIMT 7, XEQ 9, XEIPN 11, XHUNAM 20, XHCDM 21, XEIMT 22, XHTRES 28, XHTVM 40 and XHHCU 45.

Sports

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Mexico City Arena

Association football is Mexico's most popular and most televised franchised sport. Its important venues in Mexico City include the Azteca Stadium, home to the Mexico national football team and giants América and Cruz Azul, which can seat 91,653 fans, making it the biggest stadium in Latin America. The Olympic Stadium in Ciudad Universitaria is home to the football club giants Universidad Nacional, with a seating capacity of over 52,000. The Sports City Stadium, which seats 33,042 fans, is near the World Trade Center Mexico City in the Nochebuena neighborhood, and is home to the historical Atlante.

América, Cruz Azul and Universidad Nacional are based in Mexico City and play in the First Division; they are also part, with Guadalajara-based giants Club Deportivo Guadalajara, of Mexico's traditional "Big Four". The city's three derbies are the "Clásico Joven", played between América and Cruz Azul, the capital's two most popular and successful teams; the "Clásico Capitalino", between América and Universidad Nacional, and the "Clásico Metropolitano", between Cruz Azul and Universidad Nacional.

Mexico hosted the FIFA World Cup in 1970 and 1986, and Azteca Stadium is the first stadium in World Cup history to host the final twice. The city will be one of the host cities for the 2026 FIFA World Cup.[207] Mexico City is the first Latin American city to host the Olympic Games, having held the Summer Olympics in 1968, winning bids against Buenos Aires, Lyon and Detroit. The city hosted the 1955 and 1975 Pan American Games, the latter after Santiago and São Paulo withdrew. The ICF Flatwater Racing World Championships were hosted here in 1974 and 1994. Lucha libre is a Mexican style of wrestling, and is one of the more popular sports throughout the country. The main venues in the city are Arena México and Arena Coliseo.

The Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez

The Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez is the main venue for motorsport, and hosts the Formula 1 Mexican Grand Prix since its return to the sport in 2015, the event being held in the past from 1962 to 1970, and again from 1986 to 1992. Since 2016, it also hosts the Formula E Mexico City ePrix. From 1980 to 1981 and again from 2002 to 2007, the circuit hosted the Champ Car World Series Gran Premio de México. Beginning in 2005, the NASCAR Nationwide Series ran the Telcel-Motorola México 200. 2005 also marked the first running of the Mexico City 250 by the Grand-Am Rolex Sports Car Series. Both races were removed from their series' schedules for 2009.

Baseball is another sport played professionally in the city. Mexico City is home of the Mexico City Red Devils of the Mexican League, which is considered a Triple-A league by Major League Baseball. The Devils play their home games at Estadio Alfredo Harp Helú[208] designed by international Mexican-American architect FGP Atelier Founder Francisco Gonzalez Pulido in collaboration with local architect Taller ADG. Mexico City has some 10 Little Leagues for young baseball players. In 2005, Mexico City became the first city to host an NFL regular season game outside of the United States, at the Azteca Stadium. The crowd of 103,467 people attending this game was the largest ever for a regular season game in NFL history until 2009.[209]

The city has also hosted several NBA pre-season games and has hosted international basketball's FIBA Americas Championship, along with north-of-the-border Major League Baseball exhibition games at Foro Sol. In 2017, NBA commissioner Adam Silver expressed interest in placing an NBA G League expansion team in Mexico City as early as 2018. This came to fruition on 12 December 2019 when commissioner Silver announced at a press conference in Mexico City Arena that LNBP team, Capitanes de la Ciudad de México will be joining the G League in the 2020–21 season on a five-year agreement.

Other sports facilities in Mexico City are the Palacio de los Deportes indoor arena, Francisco Márquez Olympic Swimming Pool, the Hipódromo de Las Américas, the Agustin Melgar Olympic Velodrome, and venues for equestrianism and horse racing, ice hockey, rugby, American-style football, baseball, and basketball. Prior to the 2025 ban on traditional bullfights enacted by Mexico City's Congress, bullfighting was held every Sunday during the season at the 50,000-seat Plaza México, the world's largest bullring. Mexico City's golf courses have hosted Women's LPGA action, and two Men's Golf World Cups. Courses throughout the city are available as private as well as public venues.

See also

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Notes

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

Mexico City is the capital and largest city of , situated in the Valley of Mexico at an elevation of 2,240 meters (7,350 feet) above sea level. Built atop the ruins of the Aztec capital , which was founded circa 1325 CE on an island in , the city was conquered by in 1521 and rebuilt as the viceregal capital of . Its metropolitan area, encompassing over 22 million residents as of 2025 estimates, ranks among the world's most populous urban agglomerations.
As Mexico's political, cultural, and financial hub, Mexico City generates nearly one-quarter of the national GDP through diverse sectors including finance, manufacturing, and services. The city boasts a rich architectural legacy, from pre-Columbian causeways and temples to colonial cathedrals and modern skyscrapers, alongside world-class museums and universities that underscore its intellectual prominence. However, it grapples with profound environmental and infrastructural strains, including land subsidence rates exceeding 40 cm annually in some zones due to excessive groundwater extraction, heightened vulnerability to earthquakes from its tectonic setting and soft lakebed soils, and persistent air quality degradation from vehicular emissions and industrial activity. These factors, rooted in rapid post-war urbanization and resource overexploitation, amplify flood risks and infrastructure decay, demanding ongoing engineering adaptations.

History

Pre-Columbian Foundations

The Valley of Mexico, a highland basin surrounded by volcanoes and mountains, supported successive pre-Columbian civilizations long before the arrival of the people. , established around 100 BCE and peaking between the 1st and 7th centuries CE, emerged as a major urban center with a population exceeding 100,000, featuring monumental pyramids and a planned grid layout that influenced later Mesoamerican societies. Following 's decline around 550 CE, attributed to internal strife and environmental factors, smaller polities like the Toltecs at Tula rose in the 10th-12th centuries, fostering militaristic Nahua cultures amid ongoing migrations into the valley. The , a Nahua-speaking nomadic group originating from , migrated southward over centuries, guided by oral traditions of their deity Huitzilopochtli, reaching the Valley of Mexico around 1250 CE as subordinates to established city-states like Culhuacan and . Initially viewed as uncouth outsiders, they served as mercenaries, gaining autonomy through alliances and conflicts. In 1325 CE, per Mexica codices and chronicles, they founded on a marshy island in , interpreting an eagle devouring a serpent atop a nopal cactus as a divine sign for settlement, enabling defensive advantages via water barriers and floating gardens for intensive agriculture. Archaeological excavations, including those at the since 1978, corroborate the island city's engineered expansion through causeways linking it to the mainland and hydraulic systems sustaining high-density habitation. By the late 15th century, under leaders like and , evolved into the dominant power of the Triple Alliance (formed 1428 CE with Texcoco and ), controlling tribute networks across central and supporting an estimated 200,000 residents through maize-based yields equivalent to modern intensive farming. This urban core, with its ceremonial precinct of layered temples and multi-ethnic barrios, exemplified Mesoamerican adapted to lacustrine subsidence risks.

Spanish Conquest and Colonial Era

Hernán Cortés landed on the coast of modern-day Mexico in February 1519 with around 500 men, initiating the conquest of the . Marching inland, he formed alliances with indigenous groups like the Tlaxcalans, who resented Aztec domination, bolstering his forces to over 1,000 by the time he reached in November 1519. Cortés seized Emperor as a , exploiting internal divisions, but Aztec resistance grew after Moctezuma's death during the Spanish retreat known as on June 30, 1520, where hundreds of Spaniards and thousands of allies perished. Reinforced and supported by brigantines on , Cortés laid to on May 26, 1521, with a coalition exceeding 80,000, including Spanish forces and native warriors. The 93-day combined Spanish steel weapons, horses, and with devastating epidemics that decimated the Aztec population, already weakened by prior outbreaks killing up to 25% of residents. fell on August 13, 1521, after intense ; estimates suggest 40,000 to 100,000 Aztec defenders died from combat, starvation, and disease, while Spanish losses were around 900. The city, once home to 200,000-300,000 inhabitants, lay in ruins, razed by the victors who filled canals with rubble from pyramids and temples. Mexico City was founded on the site's ruins on August 13, 1521, by Cortés, who designated it the capital of . The Viceroyalty of New Spain was formally established in 1535, with Mexico City as its administrative center under , governing territories from to parts of modern . Spanish authorities implemented the system, granting conquerors labor rights over indigenous populations, though it often devolved into exploitation amid demographic collapse; the central valley's native population plummeted from about 1 million in 1519 to 70,000 by 1620 due to epidemics, overwork, and violence. The colonial economy centered on silver mining from sites like , discovered in 1546, fueling exports worth over 150,000 tons of silver to by 1800, alongside hacienda-based agriculture producing , , and on drained lake beds. Urban development transformed the grid-like layout, with the Metropolitan Cathedral begun in 1573 on the Aztec Templo Mayor's site, symbolizing Christian overlay on indigenous foundations, completed in phases over two centuries. Mexico City grew to 100,000 residents by 1650, becoming the largest city in the , though stratified by : peninsulares, criollos, mestizos, and indigenous under Spanish rule, with the established in 1571 enforcing orthodoxy. Floods from subsidence and remnants prompted engineering like the 1604 , highlighting environmental challenges in the highland basin. Social tensions simmered, with indigenous revolts like the 1624 famine uprising and criollo grievances over trade monopolies, yet the viceregal structure maintained control until independence movements in the 19th century. Architectural landmarks, including the Palacio de Minería designed in the 18th century for silver processing, underscored economic priorities, while universities like the Royal and Pontifical University of Mexico, founded 1551, advanced colonial education under Church auspices.

Independence, Wars, and 19th-Century Turbulence

Mexico City remained under Spanish viceregal control throughout much of the War of Independence, which began with Miguel Hidalgo's Grito de Dolores on September 16, 1810, as insurgent movements initially failed to capture the capital despite advances toward it. Royalist forces held the city against repeated challenges, including José María Morelos's campaigns, until the Plan of Iguala in 1821 unified conservative and insurgent elements under Agustín de Iturbide. On September 27, 1821, Iturbide's entered Mexico City unopposed, marking the effective end of Spanish rule, with Viceroy signing the Treaty of Córdoba shortly thereafter to recognize independence. As the capital of the newly independent Mexican Empire under Iturbide, proclaimed on July 21, 1822, Mexico City transitioned to the center of a fragile , but Iturbide's in 1823 amid economic woes and opposition led to the establishment of a in . The early republic era saw profound political turbulence, with 16 presidents and 33 provisional executives between 1824 and 1857, alongside approximately 800 revolts from 1821 to 1875, driven by factional strife between federalists, centralists, liberals, and conservatives, often culminating in coups and in the capital. Figures like dominated through multiple terms, exacerbating instability with policies shifting between and centralism, while the city endured from damages and disrupted . The Mexican-American War of 1846–1848 brought foreign invasion to Mexico City's gates, as U.S. General Winfield Scott's forces, after landing at in March 1847, advanced inland and captured on following intense fighting that killed or wounded over 100 U.S. troops and nearly 2,000 Mexican defenders. U.S. troops entered the capital on September 14, 1847, facing sporadic urban resistance before occupying it until June 12, 1848, under a that maintained order amid looting and resentment, contributing to the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo's cession of vast territories. Internal conflict intensified with the (1857–1861), pitting liberal reformers under against conservatives defending church privileges and military fueros; liberals seized Mexico City in January 1861 after conservative defeats, enacting anticlerical laws that expropriated church properties and secularized education, though fighting displaced populations and strained urban resources. Conservative defeat invited the Second French Intervention in 1862, when French forces under , rebuffed at the on May 5, regrouped to occupy Mexico City by June 1863, installing Archduke Maximilian as emperor in 1864 amid urban renovations but widespread guerrilla opposition. French withdrawal in 1866–1867 enabled Juárez's republican forces to reclaim the capital without a major , restoring the by July 1867, though the era's repeated occupations left Mexico City economically depleted and politically scarred. Turbulence persisted into the late , with Porfirio Díaz's seizure of power in 1876 via the Plan de Tuxtepec ending the immediate cycle of coups, ushering in the Porfiriato's authoritarian stability focused on infrastructure like railways and trams in the capital, yet built on suppressed dissent and foreign investment that favored elites.

Mexican Revolution and Early 20th-Century Modernization

The Mexican Revolution (1910–1920) brought direct conflict to Mexico City, transforming the capital into a battleground during key episodes. The Decena Trágica (Ten Tragic Days), from February 9 to 19, 1913, saw General Victoriano Huerta's forces overthrow President Francisco I. Madero through intense urban combat, including artillery shelling that damaged buildings in the downtown area and marked the first major revolutionary violence in the city. Prior to this, Mexico City had largely escaped the widespread destruction affecting rural regions and northern battlefields. In August 1914, Constitutionalist troops under and captured the capital, ousting Huerta's regime. Revolutionary leaders and then entered the city on December 6, 1914, establishing a joint administration that enforced agrarian reforms but also led to episodes of looting and resource strain. Carranza reoccupied Mexico City in January 1915, consolidating power amid ongoing factional tensions. These occupations disrupted commerce, public services, and infrastructure, with municipal assessments in 1918 estimating damage to approximately 4,000 kilometers of roads serving the federal capital. Post-revolutionary stabilization under Obregón's presidency (1920–1924) initiated reconstruction and modest modernization. The city's expanded from around 470,000 in 1910 to over 1 million by 1930, driven primarily by rural migrants attracted to industrial and service opportunities. Obregón's administration addressed immediate urban needs, including food aid for the poor following military occupations, while broader policies emphasized , labor protections, and cultural projects like muralism to foster . During the and , infrastructure developments focused on road networks to promote and national sovereignty, reflecting debates over motor transportation's role in post-revolutionary development. Peripheral proletarian colonias emerged to accommodate working-class influxes, marking early efforts at organized urban expansion. The era blended revolutionary reconstruction with continued Porfirian-era influences, as seen in the completion of the in 1934, originally conceived in 1904 but halted by the revolution. These changes laid groundwork for later explosive growth, prioritizing stability and basic amenities over rapid industrialization.

Post-1940s Urban Explosion and Institutional Reforms

Following World War II, Mexico's adoption of import-substitution industrialization (ISI) policies concentrated manufacturing and economic activity in the capital, attracting massive rural-to-urban migration as peasants sought industrial jobs amid stagnant agrarian productivity. This influx, combined with natural population increase, triggered an urban explosion; the Mexico City metropolitan area's population surged from over 3 million in 1950 to approximately 9 million by 1970 and 14 million by 1980. The growth was largely unplanned, manifesting in sprawling informal settlements known as colonias populares, where migrants self-built housing on peripheral lands, overwhelming infrastructure and leading to deficits in water, sanitation, and transport systems. The (PRI), dominant since the 1920s, managed this expansion through centralized control of the , appointing regents as heads of government and deploying patronage networks to distribute housing subsidies, public services, and political favors, thereby co-opting urban migrants and maintaining one-party rule. This system harnessed demographic pressures for political stability but stifled local accountability, as federal oversight limited autonomous decision-making on and budgeting. Economic crises in the 1980s, including debt defaults and , exacerbated urban strains, fueling demands for democratic reforms amid PRI's eroding legitimacy nationwide. Key institutional shifts began in the late with partial , but pivotal change occurred on , 1997, when Mexico City held its election for , resulting in a PRI defeat by the Party of the Democratic Revolution's (PRD) , who secured 48% of the vote and broke decades of appointed governance. This electoral opening introduced competitive politics, enabling opposition-led policies on alleviation and , though PRI retained influence through legislative majorities until further national shifts. Culminating these reforms, a 2016 abolished the Federal District's subordinate status, redesignating it as Mexico City (CDMX) with full state-like powers, including authority to draft its own , levy taxes independently, and manage metropolitan coordination without routine federal veto. These changes aimed to address the megalopolis's governance challenges by fostering localized responsiveness to ongoing demographic and infrastructural demands.

Late 20th Century to Present: Neoliberal Shifts, Crises, and Recent Developments

In the 1980s, Mexico's national debt crisis of 1982 prompted a shift toward neoliberal economic policies, including austerity measures, privatization of state enterprises, and trade liberalization, which impacted Mexico City as the country's financial and industrial hub by fostering foreign investment but exacerbating urban inequality and informal employment. The 1985 earthquake, measuring 8.0 in magnitude and striking on September 19, killed approximately 10,000 people, injured 30,000, and caused $3-4 billion in damage, with 412 buildings collapsing and over 3,500 severely affected, primarily in the soft-soil zones amplifying seismic waves; the government's slow response highlighted PRI regime weaknesses and galvanized grassroots civil society organizations in reconstruction efforts. The (NAFTA), implemented on January 1, 1994, advanced neoliberal integration by eliminating tariffs and promoting export-oriented manufacturing, yet Mexico's overall GDP growth remained modest at 1.2-2.5% annually post-NAFTA, with Mexico City experiencing increased activity and but persistent wage stagnation and agricultural displacement affecting peri-urban migrants. That same year, the Tequila Crisis erupted following the December 20 peso devaluation, triggering , a crunch, and GDP contraction of 6.2% in 1995, which strained Mexico City's banking sector and market, leading to widespread bankruptcies and heightened poverty in informal settlements. Political reforms culminated in Mexico City's first direct mayoral election on July 6, 1997, where of the (PRD) defeated the PRI candidate, marking the end of seven decades of PRI dominance and ushering in opposition governance focused on social programs over national neoliberal orthodoxy. Subsequent PRD administrations under (2000-2006) and (2006-2012) expanded public infrastructure like the Metrobús system while critiquing federal privatization; by 2018, Claudia Sheinbaum's Morena-led term emphasized anti-corruption and mobility projects amid neoliberal critiques of inequality. In 1995, constitutional changes granted the greater autonomy, establishing its own and decentralizing federal control. Into the , neoliberal legacies persisted with Mexico City's GDP reaching $142.85 billion in 2020 (15.8% of national total), driven by services and , though sluggish post-pandemic recovery—averaging 2% annual growth since 1980—compounded by and affordability declines, with 42% of residents reporting worsened costs by 2024. The May 3, 2021, collapse of an elevated section on 12 killed 26 and injured 79, attributed to flaws, poor , and neglected under prior administrations, prompting investigations revealing political pressures and oversight lapses. Recent Morena governance under Clara Brugada since 2024 has prioritized investments to combat and , amid national debates on reversing neoliberal policies through state intervention, though empirical data shows limited divergence from export dependence.

Geography and Geology

Location, Topography, and Urban Layout

Mexico City is situated in the Valley of Mexico, a highland basin on the central , at geographic coordinates approximately 19°26′N 99°08′W and an average elevation of 2,240 meters (7,350 feet) above . The valley forms part of the , enclosed by mountain ranges including the Sierra de Guadalupe to the north and volcanic peaks such as Ajusco to the south, which rise to over 3,900 meters. The city's topography reflects its origins on the bed of , a shallow that once dominated the valley floor alongside interconnected saline and freshwater bodies. Pre-Columbian was constructed on an island within the lake, utilizing chinampas—artificial islands for agriculture—and causeways for access. Spanish colonizers initiated drainage efforts in the early 1600s with the construction of the Nochistongo Tunnel (desagüe) to mitigate recurrent flooding, though major reclamation of the lakebed occurred through the 19th and 20th centuries via canals, dikes, and pumping systems. This process transformed the central area into a flat, sediment-rich plain vulnerable to , while peripheral zones feature steeper slopes and volcanic soils. The urban layout centers on the historic in the borough of , radiating outward in a pattern shaped by colonial grids and 20th-century sprawl. Mexico City proper encompasses 1,485 square kilometers divided into 16 boroughs (alcaldías), each administering distinct neighborhoods (colonias) with varying densities and functions—from dense commercial cores to sprawling residential peripheries. The broader metropolitan area, known as or the Zona Metropolitana del Valle de México, extends across 7,866 square kilometers, incorporating municipalities in the states of México and Hidalgo, fostering a polycentric structure with subcenters along radial avenues like Insurgentes and Reforma. This expansion, driven by post-1940s surges, has integrated former rural highlands into continuous urban fabric, though uneven terrain limits development in elevated fringes.

Subsidence and Sinking Phenomenon

Mexico City is situated on the bed of the former Lake Texcoco, consisting of compressible lacustrine clays and sediments that undergo consolidation when dewatered. The primary cause of subsidence is the excessive extraction of groundwater from underlying aquifers to meet the water demands of the city's 22 million metropolitan residents, as surface water supplies prove insufficient. This pumping compacts the soil skeleton irreversibly, with no significant elastic rebound observed even in areas where extraction has been reduced. Historical records indicate subsidence began in the early following initial deep around 1900, but rates escalated post-1940s amid rapid and . Leveling surveys spanning 115 years reveal average subsidence rates stabilizing at up to 50 cm per year since 1950 in central zones, with total cumulative sinking exceeding 10 meters in some locations by the . levels have dropped by an average of 107 meters over the past 70 years, corresponding to 65-70 km³ of extracted volume. Contemporary measurements using (InSAR) from satellites such as and Sentinel confirm ongoing differential , with rates exceeding 35 cm/year in the historic core and varying up to 500 mm/year locally. GPS stations and InSAR validate these findings, showing non-uniform sinking that tilts structures and strains like the Metro system, where angular distortions have damaged tracks and stations. Over 500 sinkholes formed between 2017 and 2020 due to this process, exacerbating surface hazards. Projections based on persistent extraction trends indicate continued sinking without substantial mitigation, as recharge remains inadequate and compaction is largely permanent. Approximately 15% of the resides in high-risk subsidence zones, heightening vulnerability to flooding and structural failures. Efforts to import water and regulate pumping have not reversed the phenomenon, underscoring the causal link to unsustainable reliance.

Seismic Activity and Vulnerability

Mexico City lies approximately 400 kilometers inland from the , where the Cocos Plate subducts beneath the North American Plate at a rate of about 7 centimeters per year, generating frequent seismic activity along the Mexican subduction zone. This tectonic setting produces intraslab and interface earthquakes that can propagate significant shaking to the city, despite the distance from the trench. The city's vulnerability is exacerbated by its geological foundation on the dried bed of , comprising unconsolidated lacustrine sediments up to 100 meters thick in central areas, which amplify ground motion through site effects such as basin resonance and . Seismic waves in these soft clay layers can be magnified up to 100 times compared to firm ground, with low-frequency resonances matching the period of many mid-rise buildings, leading to disproportionate damage in the former lake zone versus hilly peripheries. The most devastating event was the September 19, 1985, earthquake (Mw 8.0-8.1), with an 400 kilometers southwest off , which struck at 7:19 a.m. and caused in the lake basin sediments, resulting in over 10,000 deaths, 3,000 buildings demolished, and 100,000 more seriously damaged in Mexico City alone, with total economic losses estimated at $3-5 billion. Failures were primarily in non-ductile frames and unreinforced , worsened by liquefaction-induced differential settlement and corner column collapses in soft-soil zones. In response, Mexico City updated its building code in 1987, incorporating soil-specific design spectra, ductility requirements, and mandatory microzonation for high-risk areas, which reduced relative damage in subsequent events. However, the September 19, 2017, intraslab earthquake (Mw 7.1), centered near Puebla about 120 kilometers southeast, still caused 228 deaths and over 40 building collapses in the city, highlighting persistent risks from irregular structures, poor enforcement, and amplified shaking in legacy lake-bed districts. Ongoing assessments identify vulnerabilities in , historic unreinforced constructions, and over 10,000 potentially hazardous pre-1985 buildings, with probabilistic models forecasting scenarios of thousands of collapses from nearby Mw 7+ events due to the zone's recurrence intervals of decades. includes programs and early-warning systems that provided 10-20 seconds of alert in 2017, but systemic challenges like uneven compliance and compounding soil instability persist.

Climate and Environment

Climatic Patterns and Seasonal Variations

Mexico City features a subtropical highland classified as Cwb under the Köppen-Geiger system, marked by mild s moderated by its of 2,240 meters (7,350 feet) above , which tempers the tropical latitude's potential heat. Annual average s hover around 16°C (61°F), with diurnal ranges typically spanning 10–15°C due to clear nights and . The varies seasonally from average highs of 21°C (70°F) and lows of 7°C (45°F) in to highs of 26°C (79°F) and lows of 13°C (55°F) in May, rarely exceeding 30°C (86°F) or dropping below 3°C (37°F). Extreme records include a high of 34.7°C (94.5°F) on May 25, 2024, during a regional event, and occasional winter frosts approaching 0°C, though snowfall is exceptional, last occurring in 1940. Precipitation totals approximately 850 mm (33 inches) annually, concentrated in a pronounced from May to , when the brings convective thunderstorms, often in afternoons, accounting for over 80% of yearly rainfall. Monthly peaks reach 160 mm (6.3 inches) in and , driven by moisture influx from the and Pacific, while the from November to April sees minimal totals below 10 mm (0.4 inches) per month, with and averaging under 5 mm (0.2 inches). Hailstorms occur sporadically during the , sometimes damaging , as in the severe event of May 25, 2015, which dropped hail accumulations up to 30 cm (12 inches) in some areas.
MonthAverage Maximum (°C)Average Mean (°C)Average Minimum (°C)Average Precipitation (mm)
January2114712
February231585
March25171010
April26181125
May26191355
June251812160
July241812160
August241812150
September241812130
October24171065
November2215812
December211475
Seasonal variations reflect topographic and atmospheric influences: the dry winter features low (30–50%), abundant sunshine (over 200 hours monthly), and stable conditions conducive to thermal inversions that trap pollutants, while the wet summer introduces higher (60–80%), reducing solar radiation, and occasional tropical disturbances from the south. These patterns result from the city's basin location amid the and Oriental, which channels northerly fronts in winter and blocks extreme cold snaps, maintaining relative thermal consistency compared to lowland Mexican regions. Wind speeds average 10–15 km/h (6–9 mph) year-round, with gusts during frontal passages or thunderstorms occasionally exceeding 50 km/h (31 mph). Mexico City's air pollution has historically been exacerbated by its geographic setting in a high-altitude prone to inversions, which trap emissions from vehicles, industry, and other sources, leading to elevated levels of (O3) and particulate matter (PM10 and PM2.5). In the and , the city experienced severe episodes, with concentrations frequently exceeding 200 parts per billion (ppb) and PM10 levels averaging over 100 micrograms per cubic meter (μg/m³) annually, prompting multiple environmental contingency declarations. By the early , annual average PM10 concentrations had declined to around 50-60 μg/m³, attributed partly to regulatory measures like the phase-out of leaded and mandatory catalytic converters, though peaks persisted due to (VOC) and (NOx) emissions from a growing vehicle fleet. Recent trends show continued but uneven improvements, with metropolitan area-wide reductions of approximately 68% and PM10 reductions of 47% from 1995-1999 baselines to projected 2010 levels, alongside annual PM2.5 averages stabilizing around 20-30 μg/m³ in the 2020s, still exceeding guidelines of 5 μg/m³ for annual PM2.5. (AQI) data indicate modest fluctuations, with yearly averages of 53 in 2021, 55 in 2022-2023, 51 in 2024, and rising to 58 in early 2025, reflecting seasonal winter spikes from inversions and conditions. Despite these gains, exceedances of national standards for PM2.5 and O3 remain common, particularly during dry seasons, with no full compliance to benchmarks. Mitigation efforts began intensifying in the with the establishment of the Air Program, which included emissions testing, fuel quality upgrades, and industrial relocation or closure. The "Hoy No Circula" program, implemented in and expanded in 2016 and 2024 to restrict circulation based on plate numbers, aimed to reduce emissions but has shown limited effectiveness; econometric analyses found no measurable air quality improvements across major pollutants and evidence of counterproductive effects, such as increased pollution from older, less efficient vehicles used on permitted days. Complementary measures, including expansion of the Metro public transit system and promotion of low-emission buses, have contributed to fleet modernization and indirect emission reductions, though enforcement challenges and rebound effects from have tempered outcomes. In the and , policies shifted toward integrated approaches, such as the 2017 Air Quality Improvement Program outlining 38 actions across sectors, including stricter industrial emission controls and incentives for electric vehicles, alongside real-time monitoring via the network of over 40 stations. Recent developments emphasize public engagement and technology, like apps for alerts, but evaluations highlight persistent gaps in addressing non-vehicle sources like dust and biomass burning, with overall progress reliant on sustained enforcement rather than standalone restrictions. While these efforts have averted worse deterioration amid urban expansion, independent studies underscore that causal impacts remain modest without broader economic incentives for cleaner technologies.

Water Scarcity, Supply Systems, and Crisis Dynamics

Mexico City's water supply primarily derives from groundwater aquifers, which account for approximately 60% of the total, extracted via over 10,000 wells across the Valley of Mexico basin. The remaining 40% comes from sources, including inter-basin transfers such as the Sistema Cutzamala, which delivers about 25% through a network of 45 miles of canals, 26 miles of tunnels, six siphons, six pumping stations, and 11 dams originating from the watershed over 100 miles away. Local rivers and reservoirs contribute the rest, but historical drainage of has eliminated most natural bodies, rendering the city dependent on engineered imports and subsurface pumping. Aquifer overexploitation has led to severe depletion, with levels dropping by up to 10 meters per decade in central areas, triggering differential rates of 35-50 centimeters per year in the historic core due to from reduced pore pressure. This geological feedback exacerbates infrastructure failures, as uneven sinking fractures pipes and aqueducts, resulting in 40% loss through leaks and infiltration. pressures from the 21 million metropolitan residents, combined with inefficient distribution—evidenced by a 30% consumption spike during the —intensify extraction, perpetuating a cycle where worsens leaks, demanding further pumping to compensate. The 2024 crisis dynamics highlighted acute vulnerabilities, as multi-year droughts and reduced Cutzamala reservoirs to 25% capacity by June, prompting an 8% supply cut by Mexico's National Water Commission (Conagua) in October and warnings of "Day Zero" rationing for millions. Increased reliance on aquifers accelerated , while and poor maintenance amplified shortages, with some neighborhoods receiving water only every third day. Late 2024 rains and emergency measures, including trucked deliveries and reduced industrial use, averted total collapse, but 2025 developments show persistent deficits despite reservoir recoveries to over 65% in Cutzamala by August, underscoring reliance on seasonal precipitation over structural reforms. Long-term crisis drivers include inadequate recharge—managed efforts remain limited—and failures, such as delayed upgrades despite known risks since the 1970s Cutzamala expansions. Projections indicate sustained high stress, with potentially reaching 20 inches annually without extraction curbs, threatening metro systems and buildings; however, proposed inter-basin projects like Mezquital transfers face environmental opposition and high costs, delaying causal interventions.

Demographics and Society

Population Size, Density, and Metropolitan Growth

The population of Mexico City, officially designated as Ciudad de México (CDMX), stood at 9,209,944 inhabitants according to the conducted by Mexico's National Institute of Statistics and (INEGI). This figure reflects a slight decline from the census total of 8,851,080, attributable to factors including , negative net migration, and falling rates below replacement levels. Estimates for mid-2024 place the city proper's population at approximately 9.2 million, with INEGI and CONAPO projections indicating approximately 9,013,000 inhabitants for 2025, reflecting a slight decline from the 2020 census due to negative net migration. Spanning a land area of roughly 1,485 square kilometers, CDMX exhibits a of about 6,200 inhabitants per square kilometer as of recent measurements, among the highest in major global cities and concentrated in central boroughs like and . This density arises from historical vertical urban expansion and informal settlements, exacerbating infrastructure strains such as housing shortages and , though peripheral areas remain less dense due to topographical constraints in the Valley of Mexico basin. The broader Mexico City metropolitan area, known as the Zona Metropolitana del Valle de México and including CDMX plus adjacent municipalities in the and Hidalgo, housed 21,804,515 residents in 2020, making it North America's largest urban agglomeration by . Covering approximately 7,800 square kilometers, the metro area's density averages around 2,800 people per square kilometer, with higher concentrations near the urban core. From 2020 to 2025, the metropolitan has grown at an annual rate of about 1.0-1.1%, adding roughly 200,000-250,000 residents per year, driven primarily by natural increase and inflows from rural regions rather than the explosive mid-20th-century migration surges that tripled the metro between 1950 and 1980. Recent estimates project a 2025 metro exceeding 22.7 million, though this growth trajectory has moderated amid economic decentralization to cities like and Guadalajara, alongside challenges like and seismic risks prompting some reversal migration.

Ethnic and Racial Composition

Mexico City's ethnic and racial composition is characterized by a predominant population, resulting from centuries of admixture between indigenous American groups and European settlers following the Spanish conquest in 1521. Official censuses do not systematically track self-identified racial categories beyond indigenous and afromexican affiliations, leading to reliance on genetic studies for admixture estimates. A 2017 genetic analysis of a sample from Mexico City revealed average ancestral contributions of 59% indigenous American, 35% European, and 6% African, reflecting the city's colonial history and subsequent mixing. Similar findings from earlier studies on urban indicate 57-59% indigenous, 40% European, and 2-3% African ancestry, underscoring that while self-perceptions emphasize identity, underlying genetic diversity varies by socioeconomic group, with higher European components often observed in urban elites. Indigenous self-identification is notable, driven by from rural areas where native languages and cultures persist. The 2020 INEGI identified 825,325 residents of Mexico City who self-recognized as indigenous, comprising approximately 9% of the city's total of 9.21 million. This figure exceeds the national indigenous speaker rate of 6.1% but aligns with urban concentrations of migrants from states like and , where , , and Zapotec speakers predominate among city dwellers. Afromexican self-identification remains marginal, mirroring national trends where 2% of the population claims African descent, primarily tracing to colonial-era imports of enslaved Africans. In Mexico City, historical communities in areas like and Yanga influences are diluted, with genetic traces of African ancestry appearing in 2-6% of mestizos but rarely leading to distinct ethnic grouping. Predominantly European-descended populations, concentrated in affluent neighborhoods such as Polanco and , form a , bolstered by 19th- and 20th-century European immigration waves from , , and . While national estimates place this group at 10%, urban centers like Mexico City likely host a higher proportion due to selective migration and among elites, though self-identification as "white" is uncommon amid the prevailing narrative. Smaller immigrant enclaves include Lebanese Arabs (from early 20th-century migrations), Asians (primarily Chinese and Koreans in commerce), and recent arrivals from the and , collectively under 1% of residents but contributing to cosmopolitan pockets.

Migration Inflows, Internal Displacement, and Socioeconomic Stratification

Mexico City continues to attract substantial from rural regions and other states, driven primarily by economic opportunities in services, , and informal sectors, though net inflows have moderated since the as secondary cities like and Guadalajara absorb more migrants. The 2020 national census recorded over 15 million internal migrants across , with many originating from southern states such as , , and heading to urban centers including the capital for better wages and employment. This pattern reflects longstanding rural-urban shifts, where and limited agricultural viability in origin areas push households toward the metropolitan area's labor market, which employs over 60% of its workforce in non-agricultural roles. International migration inflows to Mexico City remain limited compared to internal flows, with the city hosting a portion of Mexico's 76,000 new long-term immigrants in 2022, many from and seeking transit or settlement amid U.S. border restrictions. These arrivals often concentrate in informal economies, exacerbating urban pressures, though official data undercounts irregular entries, estimated at over 782,000 nationwide in 2023. Internal displacement due to violence and has surged, displacing nearly 400,000 people nationwide, with many relocating to Mexico City as a perceived safer urban refuge despite its own challenges. In 2021 alone, violence displaced 28,867 individuals from 10 states, tripling prior figures, often forcing families into peripheral neighborhoods where strain under influxes from states like and . This displacement, linked to territorial disputes among armed groups controlling 80% of Mexican territory, manifests as an urban phenomenon, with IDPs integrating into low-wage informal sectors or facing . These migration dynamics underpin Mexico City's acute socioeconomic stratification, evidenced by a Gini coefficient of 0.46 in 2022—the second-highest among Mexican states—reflecting disparities where affluent central districts contrast with impoverished outskirts housing migrants in informal settlements. Municipal variations amplify this: Milpa Alta's Gini of 0.364 in 2020 indicates relative equity in rural boroughs, while wealthier areas like Cuauhtémoc exhibit higher inequality due to concentrated elite assets. Internal migrants and displacees disproportionately occupy bottom strata, with over 40% of the metropolitan population in informal housing or poverty, perpetuating cycles of limited mobility as remittances and low-skill jobs fail to bridge gaps widened by unequal access to education and capital. This structure arises causally from policy failures in rural development and urban planning, channeling human capital into underregulated peripheries while central elites benefit from agglomeration economies.

Health Outcomes, Inequality, and Family Structures

Mexico City's life expectancy at birth stood at 76.3 years in 2018, surpassing the national average of approximately 75 years reported in 2023. rates in the city benefit from better urban healthcare access compared to rural areas, though national figures indicate 12.65 deaths per 1,000 live births in 2021, with exposure in Mexico City contributing to elevated respiratory and developmental risks among infants. Chronic non-communicable diseases dominate health burdens, including rates among the highest globally in the greater , where fine particulate matter (PM2.5) exposure correlates with increased prevalence and incidence. awareness and control remain suboptimal even in the capital, with surveys revealing gaps in treatment adherence despite high prevalence. , persistently high despite mitigation efforts, exacerbates cardiovascular risks and metabolic disorders, linking environmental factors causally to poorer outcomes in densely populated zones. Income inequality in Mexico City manifests in stark spatial divides, with affluent neighborhoods like Polanco contrasting impoverished peripheries such as , though the city's aligns closely with national trends around 0.39-0.45 as of 2024-2025. affects 28.9% of residents, lower than the national rate of about 36% in recent measurements, reflecting urban economic opportunities but underscoring persistent stratification driven by informal labor and limited . These disparities causally influence , as lower-income groups face higher exposure to and poorer access to quality care, perpetuating cycles of disadvantage independent of institutional narratives on equity. Family structures in Mexico City have shifted toward smaller, nuclear units amid urbanization, with average household sizes declining in parallel to national fertility trends, which fell to 1.94 children per woman in 2022—below replacement level. Fertility rates in the capital are even lower due to higher education, female workforce participation, and economic pressures, contributing to aging demographics and reduced extended family cohabitation. Marriage rates have declined, while divorces rose over 50% nationally in the past decade, reaching 33.3 per 100 marriages in 2024, with Mexico City exhibiting similar patterns driven by legal reforms and shifting social norms rather than cultural erosion alone. Single-parent households, often headed by women, are more prevalent in low-income areas, correlating with elevated child poverty and health vulnerabilities. These changes reflect causal responses to opportunity costs of large families in a high-cost urban environment, rather than imposed ideological shifts.

Government and Politics

Administrative Divisions and Local Governance

Mexico City functions as an autonomous federal entity within , with its government structured under a separation of powers comprising executive, legislative, and judicial branches, as established by Article 122 of the Mexican Constitution. The executive branch is headed by the Jefa de Gobierno, elected by popular vote for a single six-year term without immediate reelection; Clara Brugada Molina has held this position since October 5, 2024. This office oversees city-wide policy, budgeting, public services, and coordination with federal authorities, exercising authority over the alcaldías while maintaining centralized control over major , transportation, and security initiatives. The legislative branch resides in the unicameral Congreso de la Ciudad de México, consisting of 66 deputies: 30 elected by majority vote in single-member districts and 36 by to reflect party strength. This body, elected every three years, enacts local laws, approves the budget, and oversees the executive, with sessions held in the city legislature building. The judicial branch operates through the Tribunal Superior de Justicia de la Ciudad de México, which handles civil, criminal, and administrative cases at the local level, independent from federal courts but subject to constitutional supremacy. Administratively, Mexico City is subdivided into 16 alcaldías, a structure formalized by the 2018 political reform that transformed the prior delegaciones into entities with enhanced autonomy akin to municipalities, including authority over local , zoning, markets, and . This change, enacted via amendments to the city's and the federal of Alcaldías, aimed to decentralize administration while preserving the Jefa de Gobierno's and budgetary oversight powers. Each alcaldía is governed by an or alcaldesa, elected every three years alongside local cabildos (councils) of representatives, responsible for tailored services like and parks within their boundaries, which vary significantly in size, population, and socioeconomic profile—from densely urban Cuauhtémoc to rural Milpa Alta. The 16 alcaldías are: Álvaro Obregón, Azcapotzalco, Benito Juárez, Coyoacán, Cuajimalpa de Morelos, , Gustavo A. Madero, Iztacalco, Iztapalapa, Magdalena Contreras, Miguel Hidalgo, Milpa Alta, Tláhuac, Tlalpan, Venustiano Carranza, and Xochimilco. This division dates to 1970 under the delegación system but gained substantive powers post-2018, enabling alcaldías to collect certain fees and manage development plans, though fiscal dependence on central transfers persists, limiting full independence. Elections for alcaldes occur concurrently with federal and state votes, with the most recent in June 2024 determining the 2024-2027 term amid varying party control across boroughs.

Dominant Political Parties and Electoral Dynamics

Mexico City's political landscape has been characterized by the dominance of left-leaning parties since the introduction of direct elections for in 1997. The (PRD) controlled the position uninterrupted from 1997 to 2018, with winning the inaugural election at 47.8% of the vote, followed by successors including (2000–2005, 53.6%) and (2006–2012, 50.7%). This era reflected the city's urban, progressive electorate, which prioritized social welfare policies amid historical grievances against the long-ruling (PRI). However, PRD's influence waned due to internal scandals and factionalism, paving the way for the National Regeneration Movement (Morena), founded in 2014 as a breakaway leftist force emphasizing anti-corruption and poverty alleviation. Morena assumed dominance in 2018 when secured 47.1% of the vote against PRD's Alejandra Barrales (9.4%) and PAN's Marko Cortés (9.0%), capturing the position and a legislative majority in the Mexico City . This shift aligned with Morena's national ascent under López Obrador, leveraging populist appeals to low-income voters in densely populated boroughs like and . In the 2024 election, Morena's Clara Brugada won with 51.9% against opposition coalitions, including PAN-PRI-PRD's Santiago Taboada (28.8%) and Movimiento Ciudadano's Alessandra Rojo de la Vega (9.4%), solidifying control over both executive and legislative branches. Morena now holds approximately 40 of 66 seats in the unicameral , enabling policy continuity on issues like expansion and social programs, though critics attribute this to federal resource transfers favoring the party. Electoral dynamics in Mexico City feature high relative to national averages, driven by urban mobilization and ideological polarization rather than rural-style . Turnout reached 62.5% in the 2024 race, exceeding the national presidential figure of 60.9%, with strong participation among younger and middle-class demographics in central boroughs like . Opposition coalitions, such as the PAN-PRI-PRD alliance, have consolidated to challenge Morena's hegemony, focusing on crime reduction and fiscal transparency, but face structural disadvantages from the ruling party's incumbency and media presence. occurs sporadically in peripheral areas but is less systemic than in provincial states, with empirical studies indicating urban voters respond more to programmatic promises than material inducements. Challenges persist, including allegations of unequal campaign financing and judicial interference, though the National Electoral Institute (INE) has enforced competitive rules, as evidenced by Morena's narrow legislative margins requiring cross-party negotiations on contentious reforms.

Corruption Scandals, Institutional Weakness, and Policy Failures

Mexico City's government has been marred by high-profile scandals, particularly involving infrastructure projects and public funds mismanagement. During Marcelo Ebrard's tenure as from 2006 to 2012, the construction of Metro Line 12, completed in 2012 at a cost exceeding 20 billion pesos, faced allegations of irregularities, including overpricing and substandard materials supplied by firms linked to political donors. Investigations later revealed design flaws and inadequate welding, exacerbated by deferred maintenance, contributing to the line's overpass collapse on May 3, 2021, which killed 26 people and injured over 80. Although the incident occurred under Claudia Sheinbaum's administration (2018–2023), probes attributed foundational and oversight lapses to Ebrard's , with forensic audits showing 20% of contracts awarded without competitive bidding. Miguel Ángel Mancera's administration (2012–2018) drew scrutiny for financial opacity, including the disappearance of approximately 1 billion pesos from public accounts, as tracked by the Mexico City Attorney General's Office in 2021 investigations into illicit enrichment. Mancera's financial operator was arrested in 2020 on charges related to fund diversion, while separate probes uncovered unauthorized operations targeting political opponents, indicating abuse of surveillance resources for personal gain. These cases reflect broader patterns where local officials evaded , with Mexico City's impunity rate for exceeding 90% according to national audits, undermining trust in institutions. Institutional weakness manifests in chronic underfunding of oversight bodies and politicized appointments, fostering environments where thrives unchecked. The 2017 earthquake exposed systemic in building inspections, with at least 28 collapsed structures linked to falsified safety certifications, resulting in over 200 deaths in Mexico City alone; reports indicated inspectors accepted bribes averaging 50,000–100,000 pesos per certification to ignore violations of seismic norms. Similarly, the 2021 Metro disaster highlighted deferred maintenance budgets slashed by 40% under prior administrations, prioritizing political spending over engineering integrity, as confirmed by independent engineering assessments. Such failures stem from fragmented , where prosecutor's office and auditing agencies lack , often staffed by appointees loyal to ruling parties like Morena or PRD, perpetuating a cycle of . Policy failures compound these issues, as evidenced by inadequate responses to urban risks. Post-1985 earthquake reforms promised stricter enforcement but faltered due to graft, with the 2017 disaster repeating patterns of non-compliance in 40% of inspected high-risk buildings. Sheinbaum's administration faced criticism for slow accountability in the collapse, initially resisting full forensic transparency and blaming predecessors without implementing structural reforms, leading to public protests chanting against negligence. Overall, these scandals illustrate causal links between corrupt procurement, weak enforcement, and catastrophic outcomes, with Mexico City's sub-scores reflecting local governance as a national low point, scoring below 30/100 in urban audits.

Economy

Major Industries and GDP Contributions

Mexico City's economy is predominantly service-oriented, with the tertiary sector accounting for 84.2% of its (GDP) in 2022, reflecting its role as 's financial, commercial, and administrative hub. The secondary sector, encompassing and , contributed 10.3%, while primary activities such as were negligible at 0.0%. Net taxes on products added 5.4% to the total. In nominal terms, the city's GDP reached 4.29 trillion pesos in 2022, representing approximately 16-17% of 's national GDP, a share that held at 14.8% in 2023. Within the tertiary sector, trade and transportation form the largest subcomponent, comprising about 32% of the economy, driven by wholesale and retail commerce as well as supporting the metropolitan area's population and businesses. Professional and business services, including , , legal, and technical consulting, contribute roughly 19.5%, bolstered by the concentration of , banks, and international firms in districts like Polanco and Reforma. Other significant tertiary activities include information and media services, which grew 13.9% in 2022, and transportation, which expanded 15.2% that year, underscoring the sector's dynamism amid urban expansion and digital integration. The secondary sector remains limited compared to national averages, with manufacturing focused on niche areas such as food processing, textiles, chemicals, and metal products rather than heavy industry, which has largely shifted to peripheral states like Estado de México. Construction, a key driver within secondary activities, saw a 29.9% increase in 2022, fueled by infrastructure projects and real estate development despite regulatory hurdles and urban density constraints. This modest industrial footprint aligns with the city's evolution from a manufacturing center in the mid-20th century to a post-industrial economy, where services leverage human capital and centrality rather than resource extraction or assembly lines. Overall, these sectors propelled 4.6% real GDP growth in 2022 and 4.3% in 2023, outpacing national averages but vulnerable to federal policy shifts and global trade disruptions.

Informal Sector Prevalence and Labor Market Realities

The informal sector constitutes a significant portion of Mexico City's labor market, encompassing unregistered activities such as street vending, small-scale services, and domestic work that evade formal regulation and taxation. According to official indicators from Mexico's National System of Statistical and Geographical Information (SNIEG), the informal employment rate in Mexico City stood at 44.1% in the most recent reported period, substantially lower than the national average of approximately 54.8% in the second quarter of 2025. This disparity reflects the capital's concentration of formal economic activities in sectors like , , and , yet the sector persists due to barriers to formalization, including high compliance costs, bureaucratic hurdles, and limited enforcement of labor laws. Informal workers, often migrants from rural areas or other states, face chronic , with many desiring more hours or better pay but constrained by market saturation and lack of skills matching formal demands. Labor market dynamics in Mexico City reveal low official masking deeper structural issues, with the rate at 3.43% in the first quarter of 2025 amid a labor participation rate of 63.2%. affects a notable share, particularly in informal roles, where workers earn below potential levels and lack access to social security, , or pensions—benefits enjoyed by only about half the . Average daily wages in formal sectors exceed those in informal ones, with national figures at 623 Mexican pesos per day in September 2025, though Mexico City's urban economy likely commands premiums in registered jobs; informal earnings, however, frequently hover near or below the of around 250 pesos daily, perpetuating cycles and reducing incentives for skill investment. For context, the monthly cost of living for a single person is estimated at 13,000 to 15,000 MXN excluding rent, and 25,000 to 35,000 MXN including rent for a one-bedroom apartment in central or mid areas, covering food, transport, utilities, leisure, and basics, based on 2024-2025 data; exact figures for 2026 are unavailable due to uncertainties like inflation and economic changes. This duality contributes to high income inequality, as formal growth in tech and services contrasts with stagnant informal , hindering overall despite the city's GDP dominance. The prevalence of informality underscores causal factors like weak institutional enforcement and overregulation, which deter small enterprises from formalizing, while generous welfare expansions may disincentivize formal job-seeking. Empirical data from INEGI's National Survey of Occupation and Employment (ENOE) indicate that informal units represent over 60% of economic establishments nationally, contributing minimally to —around 3%—suggesting low efficiency and leakage that strains public finances without commensurate growth benefits. In efforts to integrate informal workers through simplified registration have yielded limited success, as evidenced by persistent rates, highlighting the need for to foster transitions to higher-productivity formal roles.

Tourism, Foreign Investment, and Remittances

Tourism represents a key economic driver for Mexico City, drawing visitors to sites such as the Historic Center, Teotihuacán pyramids, and the National Museum of Anthropology, though high crime rates and urban congestion constrain its full potential despite post-pandemic recovery. In 2024, international air arrivals to Mexico City totaled 1.63 million, reflecting a 20.6% increase from prior periods, contributing to broader national inflows of approximately 45 million visitors. Hotel-related economic activity from tourists amounted to $5.9 billion in 2019, underscoring the sector's pre-COVID scale, while average visitor spending reached 9,277 pesos in early 2024 amid rising arrivals. Foreign direct investment (FDI) flows heavily favor Mexico City as the nation's financial and administrative core, capturing nearly 40% of total national FDI in 2024, equivalent to roughly $14.75 billion from a national total of $36.87 billion. These inflows primarily target services, real estate, and manufacturing hubs in the surrounding metropolitan area, driven by proximity to the U.S. market and established infrastructure, though regulatory hurdles and security concerns in some districts temper investor confidence. Cumulative FDI trends highlight Mexico City's dominance, with sectors like information services recording $14.1 billion from 1999 to September 2024. Remittances provide supplementary income to Mexico City households, totaling $4.9 billion in recent flows, compared to the national record of $64.75 billion in 2024, which declined sharply in 2025 amid U.S. economic pressures affecting migrant workers. While less proportionally dependent on remittances than rural states like or , these transfers—predominantly from the U.S.—bolster local consumption and alleviation in lower-income neighborhoods, representing about 7-8% of the city's share versus national totals. The 2025 downturn, with monthly drops up to 16.2%, signals vulnerability to external labor market fluctuations.

Public Security and Crime

Historical Patterns of Violence and Gang Activity

Mexico City's history of violence includes peaks during the Mexican Revolution (1910–1920), when urban clashes, strikes, and military interventions in the capital led to outbreaks of unrest, such as those documented near the National Palace with visible casualties from suppressions of protests and skirmishes. Post-revolutionary stabilization brought relative calm, with overall criminal violence rates declining significantly by the mid-20th century amid economic growth and state consolidation, reaching historic lows around 7 homicides per 100,000 inhabitants nationally by the early 2000s before the drug war escalation. Rapid urbanization from the 1950s onward concentrated poverty in peripheral colonias like and central barrios such as , fostering youth street gangs (pandillas) engaged in petty , , and localized amid and weak policing. These groups, often rooted in neighborhood identities rather than transnational maras, proliferated in the 1980s– era, with emerging as a hub for informal markets intertwined with early criminal networks. A notable wave in the late –early involved hundreds of kidnappings annually, driven by economic desperation post-1994 peso , targeting middle-class residents and prompting private security booms. The 2006 launch of the national "" under President spilled influence into the capital, transforming local gangs into proxies for microtrafficking and enforcement; homicide rates in Mexico City rose from pre-2007 lows, though remaining below national peaks of over 20 per 100,000 by 2010. La Unión Tepito, formed in 2009 in the barrio under initial alliances with the Beltrán-Leyva and figures like Édgar Valdez , exemplifies this shift, controlling rackets, sales, and human while clashing with rivals. Leadership arrests, such as that of Francisco Hernández Gómez (" Cayagua") in 2018, fragmented the group, sparking turf wars that drove a 2013 violence surge with heightened homicides and public executions. Patterns reveal cyclical escalation tied to state interventions disrupting hierarchies, leading to decentralized cells perpetuating economies affecting small businesses and residents; by the , dispersed Unión splinters and competitors like the Anti-Union maintained low-level violence, with clusters in and adjacent areas showing persistent hotspots per spatial crime analyses. Despite federal deployments, rates exceeding 90% for violent crimes sustain resilience, rooted in institutional and urban marginalization rather than solely flows.

Cartel Penetration, Extortion, and Organized Crime

Organized crime groups, including affiliates of major cartels, have deeply penetrated Mexico City, transforming the capital into a hub for , microtrafficking, and territorial disputes despite its and federal oversight. Local syndicates such as La Unión , originating from the neighborhood, dominate street-level operations, enforcing control through violence and corruption of local authorities. These groups maintain alliances with larger cartels like the for logistics and , enabling the flow of , , and through the city's markets and distribution networks. La Unión , formed in 2009, specializes in rackets targeting small vendors and informal traders, often demanding weekly or monthly "" fees equivalent to 10-30% of revenues, with non-compliance leading to , assaults, or assassinations. Extortion has surged in Mexico City, with reported cases nearly doubling to 498 in the first five months of 2025 from 249 in the same period of 2024, though underreporting remains rampant due to threats against victims and witnesses—official surveys indicate over 90% of business crimes go unreported. Cartel-linked cells, including those tied to the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG), have expanded into urban extortion by infiltrating supply chains, such as fuel theft and cargo hijackings on highways leading to the city, while local groups like La Unión Tepito splinter into factions vying for dominance in boroughs like Gustavo A. Madero and Iztapalapa. This fragmentation has fueled retaliatory killings, with over 200 homicides linked to organized crime in the capital in 2024 alone, often involving sicarios using high-caliber weapons smuggled from the U.S. The economic toll is substantial, with cartels extracting an estimated $1.3 billion annually nationwide through , a portion of which funds operations in Mexico City by undercutting legitimate commerce and inflating costs for goods like construction materials and consumer staples. Businesses, from street vendors to multinational subsidiaries, face systematic shakedowns, prompting closures and relocations; for instance, in , entire market blocks have shuttered after repeated threats. Larger cartels provide operational support, such as encrypted communications and hit squads, allowing local cells to sustain influence despite periodic arrests, as evidenced by the persistence of La Unión Tepito following the 2019 detention of key leaders. This penetration reflects a broader strategy of diversification beyond narcotics, where control of urban territories yields steady revenue streams less vulnerable to than border trafficking routes.

Policing Strategies, Failures, and Civilian Impacts

Mexico City's policing is primarily handled by the Secretaría de Seguridad Ciudadana (SSC), which oversees approximately 80,000 officers focused on preventive patrolling, emergency response, and . Since , the SSC has implemented data-driven strategies, including an policy that integrates real-time analytics from cameras, citizen reports, and predictive modeling to target high-impact crimes like and , resulting in a reported reduction of over 50% in such offenses by 2023. Additional efforts include enhanced officer training programs, which studies show improve citizen interactions and decrease instances of misconduct, such as unnecessary arrests or excessive force. Under former mayor (–2023), reforms emphasized intelligence-led operations, with communities, and deterrence through increased patrols in hotspots, contributing to a rate of 10 per 100,000 residents in 2024—lower than the national average but still elevated compared to global urban benchmarks. Despite these initiatives, policing in Mexico City suffers from systemic failures rooted in and institutional weakness. Widespread graft within the SSC, including officers colluding with criminal groups for bribes or protection rackets, undermines enforcement; surveys indicate that perceived directly correlates with low public trust and underreporting of crimes. Past reform attempts, such as those in the and 2000s aimed at professionalizing the force, collapsed due to politicization, inadequate vetting, and resistance from entrenched interests, leading to persistent rates exceeding 90% for felonies. Excessive remains a documented issue, with reports of brutality linked to unaddressed , exacerbating community alienation rather than resolving threats from . Federal interventions, including deployments in the city since 2019, have supplemented local efforts but often prioritize militarized containment over building civilian-led capacity, yielding mixed outcomes amid ongoing cartel incursions. These shortcomings impose severe burdens on civilians, fostering a climate of pervasive insecurity that disrupts daily life and economic activity. In 2024–2025, over 60% of urban residents, including those in Mexico City, reported feeling unsafe in their neighborhoods, driving avoidance of public spaces and reliance on private security. Extortion schemes, often enforced by local gangs with police complicity, target small businesses and individuals, contributing to an 80% national rise in such incidents by mid-2025 and forcing closures or relocations in affected boroughs like Iztapalapa and Gustavo A. Madero. Homicides, while declining, still claimed hundreds of lives annually in the city, with ripple effects including family displacements and psychological trauma; organized crime violence has also led to thousands of disappearances nationwide, with Mexico City recording clusters tied to territorial disputes. The interplay of ineffective policing and crime erodes social cohesion, as citizens face heightened risks of victimization without reliable recourse, perpetuating cycles of fear and informal self-protection measures.

Infrastructure and Urban Mobility

Transportation Networks and Public Transit

The Mexico City metropolitan area's transportation networks integrate a dense public transit system with roadways and hubs to serve over 21 million residents, though chronic underinvestment and rapid contribute to and inefficiencies. accounts for the majority of daily trips, with the Zona Metropolitana del Valle de México (ZMVM) handling over 73% of national urban passenger volume in late 2024, including a 1.6% year-over-year increase in users by December. The backbone comprises the Metro subway, (BRT), conventional buses, , trolleybuses, cars, and suburban , supplemented by an extensive but congested road grid and two major airports. Despite expansions, the system grapples with capacity strains, where demand often exceeds design limits, exacerbating delays and safety risks. The , operational since 1969, features 12 lines covering about 226 kilometers with 195 stations, designed for a daily capacity of 4.5 million passengers but routinely handling up to 5.5 million amid peak-hour surges. In December 2024 alone, it transported approximately 90 million passengers, underscoring its centrality despite persistent issues like degradation from wear, track fractures, and inadequate maintenance. High-profile failures, including the May 2021 Line 12 overpass collapse that killed 26 people due to substandard and oversight lapses, highlight systemic vulnerabilities tied to and deferred upkeep, as noted in analyses of institutional shortcomings. remains acute, particularly on lines like Line 1, where rush-hour densities impede boarding and elevate accident risks, though digitalization efforts have reduced emissions per passenger by nearly 30% in recent years via optimized operations. Bus systems form a critical feeder network, with the Metrobús BRT comprising seven lines spanning 140 kilometers and over 280 stations, serving 1.8 million daily riders as of recent assessments. It employs dedicated lanes and prepaid cards integrated with the Metro, costing 6 pesos per ride with two-hour transfers, though peak crowding mirrors subway challenges. The Red de Transporte de Pasajeros (RTP) operates thousands of conventional routes intersecting Metro stations, providing broad coverage but varying in reliability due to aging fleets. Suburban extensions like Mexibús in the northern periphery and recent electric pilots, including the May 2025 "Elevado" interstate line, aim to enhance connectivity, while Metrobús Line 8, under development in early 2025, will extend the network's longest corridor with added electric buses to phase out diesel. Aerial systems, introduced since 2021, target hilly terrains: Lines 1 and 2 serve eastern districts, Line 3 links Chapultepec Park to Santa Fe since 2024, and Line 4—slated for 2025—will span the world's longest urban cable route at over 11 kilometers, connecting to 3 with electric gondolas for hard-to-reach areas. Road networks include ring roads like the Anillo Periférico and major highways such as the México-Puebla and México-Toluca, totaling thousands of kilometers but plagued by severe congestion that ranks Mexico City among the world's most gridlocked urban areas. TomTom's 2024 Traffic Index data indicate peak-hour delays inflate travel times by over 60% on average, costing the billions annually through lost and waste, with incidents contributing to high collision rates—954 road deaths in 2012 alone, per historical benchmarks reflective of ongoing patterns. The Tren Ligero and expanding Tren Suburbano alleviate some pressure, with the latter's 23-kilometer extension to (AIFA) underway as of late 2024 to integrate suburban flows. Aviation hubs anchor intercity links: (AICM), the primary facility, managed 45.3 million passengers in 2024, down 6.2% from 2023 due to capacity caps and saturation, handling most international traffic amid criticism for outdated . The newer AIFA, operational since March 2022, saw 6.3 million passengers in 2024—a 140% surge—positioning it as the eighth-busiest in , though its remote location and limited routes have drawn scrutiny for underutilization relative to projections. Overall public transit ridership rose 4.1% in 2024, signaling recovery and policy pushes toward electrification, yet experts attribute persistent bottlenecks to mismatched supply-demand dynamics rather than external factors alone.

Housing Developments, Slums, and Gentrification Pressures

Mexico City's housing landscape is marked by extensive informal settlements, stemming from decades of rapid driven by rural-to-urban migration and high birth rates, which overwhelmed formal planning capacities. Unregulated land invasions, particularly on steep hillsides and peri-urban fringes due to topographic constraints and insufficient government enforcement of , have resulted in sprawling s lacking basic . Nationally, approximately 11.1% of the urban population resided in slum conditions as of 2014, with Mexico City exhibiting higher concentrations in irregular settlements, where up to 25% of the urban populace lives in characterized by overcrowding, insecure property rights, and inadequate services. These informal areas, often termed colonias populares, face persistent vulnerabilities including poor , risks exacerbated by on the former lakebed, and limited access to utilities, perpetuating cycles of amid the city's 22 million metropolitan residents. responses have included regularization programs, but implementation gaps due to and fiscal constraints have sustained sprawl, with urban growth patterns favoring low-elevation, road-proximate fringes over contained development. Efforts to address deficits through formal housing developments have accelerated under recent administrations. In 2025, President announced a national plan to construct 1.1 million affordable units by the end of her term, targeting costs of 700,000 to 1.2 million pesos ($35,000–$60,000) per home, with Mexico City slated for 26,000 such units over five years to curb displacement. Collaborations between the National Chamber of the Housing Development Industry (CANADEVI) and the National Workers' Fund (INFONAVIT) aim to deliver 400,000 homes in the capital region, emphasizing job creation and investment, though critics note potential overemphasis on peripheral sprawl rather than densification. Private projects, including mixed-use towers and rehabilitated structures, focus on central zones but often prioritize mid-to-high-end markets. Gentrification pressures intensify in historic core neighborhoods like Roma and , where property values surged notably from 2013–2014 onward, fueled by domestic middle-class recovery and post-pandemic influxes of foreign digital nomads and investors. This has driven rent hikes and service dollarization, displacing lower-income residents and sparking 2025 protests in 's Parque México against perceived foreign-driven cost escalation, with vandalism targeting businesses. Transnational elements, including proliferation, exacerbate tensions, though some analyses highlight broader market dynamics over , as local revitalization predates recent expat booms. These shifts underscore conflicts between economic renewal and equitable access, with informal vendors and longtime tenants bearing disproportionate burdens.

Utilities, Energy, and Digital Connectivity

Mexico City's water utilities are overseen by the Sistema de Aguas de la Ciudad de México (SACMEX), which supplies the metropolitan area through a combination of local aquifers, interbasin transfers like the Cutzamala System, and rainwater harvesting, amid persistent shortages driven by aquifer depletion, high demand from 9.2 million residents, and infrastructure losses exceeding 40% from leaks. The Cutzamala System, accounting for approximately 27% of supply, reached critically low levels of 28% capacity in May 2024, prompting protests and rationing, while per capita availability remains at 74.32 cubic meters per inhabitant annually, far below sustainable thresholds. SACMEX's 2024 initiatives include 46 projects for source protection, but systemic overexploitation and urban sprawl continue to strain resources, with domestic per capita use declining due to conservation efforts and restrictions. Electricity provision falls under the state monopoly of the (CFE), which delivers power via the national grid to Mexico City's high-density loads, contributing to national consumption growth of 3.1% year-over-year through 2024 amid rising urban and industrial needs. The city's energy mix mirrors national trends, dominated by fossil fuels— and —at around 78% of generation in 2024, with renewables like hydro and solar comprising only 22%, a share stagnant or declining due to policy emphasis on state-controlled fossil infrastructure over private renewable investments. High temperatures in 2024 triggered rolling blackouts, exposing grid vulnerabilities from insufficient capacity additions and maintenance shortfalls under recent administrations. , increasingly imported from the at record volumes exceeding 6 billion cubic feet daily nationally, fuels much of CFE's thermal plants serving the capital, though residential distribution relies on private networks. Digital connectivity in Mexico City exceeds national averages, with penetration surpassing 90% in urban cores as of early 2024, supported by widespread / mobile coverage nearing 98% and fixed from providers like Totalplay achieving median download speeds of 134 Mbps in the second half of 2024. The Federal Telecommunications Institute (IFT) regulates a competitive telecom sector, where mobile subscriptions outnumber inhabitants, enabling high data usage for and , though fixed-line disparities persist in peripheral boroughs due to uneven rollout. National figures of 107.3 million users at 83.2% penetration underscore the capital's role as a connectivity hub, bolstered by fiber-optic expansions, yet challenges include affordability barriers for low-income households and occasional service disruptions from urban congestion.

Culture and Heritage

Artistic Traditions, Museums, and Architectural Legacy

Mexico City's artistic traditions span pre-Columbian, colonial, and modern eras, reflecting layered cultural influences. Pre-Columbian Aztec art, dominant in the region after the settled around 1325, emphasized monumental stone sculptures, intricate featherwork, and ritual objects symbolizing cosmology and warfare, as evidenced by artifacts from the complex. These works, often depicting deities like Huitzilopochtli, integrated functional and symbolic elements tied to imperial power and practices. Colonial art from the 16th to 19th centuries blended European techniques with indigenous motifs, primarily in religious and produced under Spanish oversight. Artists trained at the Academy of San Carlos, founded in 1781, created altarpieces and paintings, though indigenous elements persisted in motifs like feathered serpents. This period's output served evangelization efforts, with cathedrals featuring hybrid iconography that adapted Mesoamerican aesthetics to Christian narratives. The 20th-century Mexican muralism movement, spurred by the 1910-1920 Revolution, marked a nationalist resurgence led by artists , , and . Commissioned for public buildings, murals like Rivera's Man, Controller of the Universe (1934) in the glorified indigenous heritage, labor, and anti-capitalist themes, drawing from fresco techniques revived from pre-Columbian methods. Siqueiros's experimental polyforum murals (1968) incorporated industrial materials, while Frida Kahlo's introspective paintings, housed in her former home, explored personal identity amid Surrealist influences. Key museums preserve these traditions. The National Museum of Anthropology, opened in 1964, holds the world's largest collection of Mesoamerican artifacts, including the (circa 1502-1520) and murals, with over 600,000 objects documenting 3,000 years of history. The (1934) features permanent murals by , Orozco, and Siqueiros alongside modern Mexican works. , established in 1994 by , displays 70,000 pieces from Rodin bronzes to colonial , attracting 1 million visitors annually without admission fees. The (Casa Azul), opened in 1958, exhibits her paintings and personal items in the house where she lived from 1907 to 1954. Architecturally, Mexico City's legacy integrates Aztec engineering with colonial and modern styles. The Templo Mayor, excavated starting in 1978, reveals dual pyramids dedicated to Tlaloc and Huitzilopochtli, built in seven phases from 1325 to 1521, demonstrating advanced hydraulic and stonework amid Lake Texcoco. The Metropolitan Cathedral (1573-1813) exemplifies Baroque design on Aztec foundations, with sinking foundations due to subsidence. Porfirian-era structures like the Palacio Postal (1907) introduced Art Nouveau, while 20th-century icons such as the Palacio de Bellas Artes fuse Art Deco and neoclassical elements, completed under Rivera’s influence. Modern contributions include Luis Barragán's minimalist residential designs, emphasizing color and light in response to urban density.

Culinary Evolution and Street Food Economy

Mexican City's culinary traditions originated with indigenous Mesoamerican practices centered on the "three sisters" crops—maize, beans, and squash—supplemented by chilies, tomatoes, avocados, and cacao, which formed the basis of Aztec sustenance in the Valley of Mexico. Spanish colonization from 1521 introduced Old World elements including wheat, rice, pork, beef, dairy products, and olive oil, creating hybrid dishes like mole poblano through the blending of native grinding techniques with European frying and livestock rearing. This fusion persisted into the 19th century, with street foods such as tamales tracing roots to pre-Hispanic nixtamalized corn dough wrapped in corn husks, later incorporating cheese and cream by the late 1800s. The 20th century brought further diversification via immigration: Lebanese arrivals in the early 1900s adapted to tacos using pork on vertical spits, while French influences during the era (1876–1911) popularized baked goods and dairy-heavy . Post-1940s spurred mass production of corn tortillas and widespread taquerías, reflecting industrial-scale amid population booms. Contemporary evolution features global fusions in Mexico City's dining scene, with Michelin-recognized restaurants elevating indigenous ingredients alongside Asian and Middle Eastern techniques, though traditional staples dominate daily consumption. Street food vending constitutes a cornerstone of Mexico City's informal economy, employing an estimated 200,000 to 500,000 vendors, the majority focused on foodstuffs like tacos, elotes, and quesadillas sold from carts or fixed stalls. Nationally, street food sales reached $11,500 million by 2023, with Mexico City accounting for a disproportionate share due to its 9 million residents and dense urban fabric, where vendors comprise up to 55% of food retailers in surveyed central districts. These operations sustain low-income households through accessible, affordable —average vendor earnings hovered around 4,500 MXN monthly in recent data—while evading formal taxation and regulations, thus buffering economic shocks but straining municipal infrastructure. Health risks from inconsistent persist, as informal setups often lack standardized , contributing to foodborne illnesses despite cultural reliance on fresh, vendor-prepared meals. Government efforts to formalize vending, such as relocation programs since the , have yielded mixed results, balancing economic vitality against urban order.

Media, Entertainment, Sports, and Social Norms

Mexico City's media landscape is dominated by television networks and , which control the majority of broadcast content and reach over 90% of households through channels. Print media includes longstanding newspapers such as Reforma, El Universal, and , with Reforma known for investigative reporting on and , circulating primarily in the capital. Digital platforms have grown, with El Universal online and Milenio.com providing real-time news, though traditional outlets face challenges from cartel influence and due to violence against journalists, resulting in ranking among the deadliest countries for media workers. Radio remains vital with over 1,400 stations nationwide, many local to the city offering news, music, and talk shows in Spanish. Entertainment in Mexico City thrives on a mix of film, theater, and music, centered in venues like the Palacio de Bellas Artes, which hosts operas, ballets, and concerts in its Art Nouveau and Art Deco halls. The Cineteca Nacional screens classic Mexican cinema and international films, preserving over 100,000 titles and drawing cinephiles to retrospectives of directors like Alfonso Cuarón. Music festivals such as Vive Latino, held annually since 1998, feature rock, hip-hop, and Latin genres at Foro Sol, attracting over 200,000 attendees in 2025 with acts blending local mariachi influences and global pop. Theater districts in the Historic Center stage contemporary plays and revivals at spots like Teatro de la Ciudad, while nightlife pulses in Roma and Condesa with jazz clubs like Zinco and electronic events. Sports culture emphasizes soccer, with teams playing at (capacity 87,523), site of two finals in 1970 and 1986, and UNAM Pumas at (72,000 seats). wrestling draws crowds to for masked bouts featuring archetypes like rudos (heels) and técnicos (faces), a tradition rooted in carnivals. Baseball's Diablos Rojos compete in the Mexican League at , while boxing events at Arena Ciudad de México showcase heavyweight talents, reflecting the city's history of producing champions like . Social norms in Mexico City retain strong familial ties, with extended families often living multigenerationally and prioritizing collectivism over , as evidenced by high household sizes averaging 3.7 persons in urban areas. Catholicism predominates, influencing 80% of residents who participate in rituals like quinceañeras and observances, though rises among youth. Gender roles persist as patriarchal, with men historically holding authority in public and economic spheres while women manage domestic duties and childcare, a pattern reinforced by culture that values male and provider roles amid economic pressures. tempers these norms, with increasing female workforce participation at 45% in the capital, yet traditional expectations endure, contributing to lower rates (around 15 per 1,000 marriages) compared to Western averages. Corruption tolerance and informal economies shape interpersonal trust, fostering resilience but also to state inefficiencies.

References

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