Tuesday, November 11, 2014

36 Hours in Tulum, Mexico


 
Video | 36 Hours in Tulum, Mexico Once a laid-back resort village with a hippie vibe, Tulum’s pace has quickened, with new shops, restaurants and nightlife options complementing the broad white beaches and yoga retreats.
The good news is that you still can’t flush the toilet paper in Tulum. The plumbing, like the balmy weather and a tenacious iguana population, is deeply rooted in the identity of this town an hour and a half south of Cancún. But even a quasi-functional plumbing infrastructure can’t dissuade tourists. Which leads me to the less good news. If you haven’t been to Tulum in the last few years, a heads-up: It’s a whole lot bigger than you remember. Today’s Tulum has three things many never thought possible: traffic, crowds and restaurants with waiting lists. But don’t despair. In fact, the town (it’s not a village anymore) is more exciting than ever. The beach is still stunning. The ruins are still there. The food is spicy and authentic. And for those willing, there are secret gems a long, dusty way from the beaten path.

Friday

1. Get In Line | 5 p.m.
Unless you travel here in a vacuum, you will be advised many times over to dine at Hartwood Tulum. The line to get in can hover around two hours long. If you didn’t know better, you would show up, scoff at the crowd and go elsewhere. My advice: Don’t. Instead, go early. Hartwood Tulum has no electrical appliances besides a single blender — almost all the food is mashed and blended by hand or thrown on the grill or in the wood-burning oven. That means the expat chef Eric Werner’s roasted whole fish with onions and herbs one evening; grilled octopus with roasted potatoes, chile and Mexican mustard greens the next. The dining area is as open-air as the kitchen, with citronella lanterns providing light and ambience. (Dinner for two without drinks is about 600 Mexican pesos, or about $45, at 13 pesos to the dollar.)

Saturday

2. ­Local Color | 9 a.m.
Zamas, a hotel, bar and restaurant, is the bright, Crayola-colored center of Tulum. To be in Tulum means to eat at Zamas, stay at Zamas, drink at Zamas or just enjoy the pink, blue, yellow and teal tables and chairs at Zamas. The best time to go is morning — when the beach is freshly raked, the waves are gentle and the crowds are thin. Order a cappuccino and the huevos rancheros — fried eggs and black beans served on a crispy corn tortilla (breakfast for two, about 250 pesos). Once the shop owners open their stands and the streets fill up with fashion editors on their way to yoga class, it’s your cue to move on.
3. ­Public Service | 11 a.m.
I don’t care how warm the water is in Corsica or how soft the sand is in Maui. As beaches go, the shores of Tulum will impress even the world’s most discerning snob. Plus, the water is as clear as a fishbowl and gentle enough for a nursery school. Drive — or better yet, bike — away from the main drag and head toward the Mezzanine Hotel. On the far side of the hotel, drop your bike and head down the short path to the beach. There is a good chance you will have a wide stretch of sand to yourself. Bring plenty of water and sunscreen — with the dearth of crowds comes a dearth of places to buy either.
4. ­Secret Beach | 1 p.m.
Every tropical tourist destination has a secret beach joint that locals don’t want you to know about. In Tulum, that place is Chamico’s — a beachside cafe so laid back and charming you will swear you’ve seen it in a movie (you haven’t). Naturally, Chamico’s has no phone, website or address. To get there, turn off the highway onto a small dirt road (look for the sign for the Jashita Hotel) and drive down to Soliman Bay. Give the guard at the makeshift gate a look that says you know what you’re doing. Then drive past palatial villas until the road ends. Claim one of the rickety plastic tables in a thicket of palm trees and settle in. Your menu choices are fried fish or ceviche of whatever was caught that morning, followed by icy Sol beer. (Expect to pay about 300 pesos.) There are only two rules at Chamico’s: cash only and don’t tell your friends. (Open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. — or whenever the owner feels like it.)
5. ­ Fashion Break | 4 p.m.
With an upswell of fashion editors and stylists in Tulum, there’s an upswell of places to spend money. The hardest part will be parking — if you’re up for a walk or a bike ride, this is the time. Otherwise, drive to Hartwood restaurant, and pull in between any two palm trees that don’t have a No Parking sign. All the shops are within feet of each other: Mr. Blackbird is a tiny boutique — you can almost touch both walls at the same time — with a sandy floor, elegant jewelry, strappy leather sandals and well-edited wraps and shawls. Across the street, Josa Tulum carries sundresses in happy, vibrant prints. Hacienda Montaecristo is the place for bags, tops and bohemian dresses with leather details. Or skip clothes entirely, and indulge your newfound appreciation of mezcal at La Tente Rose Mexican Wine and Spirits, a liquor shop where the bottles are displayed like works of art.
6. ­Have a Drink | 7 p.m.
There’s a decent chance that drinks at Gitano could cost more than dinner. This is the new Tulum — the kind of place where it seems reasonable to teeter through the jungle on five-inch stiletto heels. When my husband and I went there with friends, drinks for four (one round each, mind you) plus an appetizer of guacamole, pico de gallo and a Mayan pumpkin seed salsa came to about 700 pesos (about $53). But you’re paying as much to be there as you are to drink the house cocktails. Grab a table somewhere near the disco ball, if only because seeing a disco ball bouncing off palm fronds is as amusing as it is unexpected.
7. ­ Jungle Fever | 9 p.m.
Everything in Tulum is either beach side or jungle side, and no establishment on the jungle side is more jungly than Restaurare. The tables are set under a canopy of palm trees so lush you will think you’d died and woken up on Gilligan’s Island. The open-air kitchen serves only traditional Mayan food — all local, all vegan. The owners Karla Yoana Gonzales Madrazo and José Roberto Terrazas Jimenez tweak the menu seasonally, but if you’re lucky, they’ll be serving oyster mushroom ceviche and Mayan curry with coconut milk. (Dinner for two is about 700 pesos.)

Sunday

8. ­ Yoga by the Beach | 8:30 a.m.
Coming to Tulum and not taking a yoga class is like swearing off wine in Tuscany. It’s everywhere and inescapable. One of the most serene places to find your third eye is Maya Tulum. After checking in for a class, make your way down the sandy path to the yoga studio. A word of caution: Don’t be misled by your teacher’s innate calm. Just when you think he’s about to get too spiritual for real sweat, you will notice every muscle below your earlobes straining. But under a tropical palapa roof with a breeze blowing through and the light drenching the room, offering the sun a few friendly salutations feels less like working out and more like gratitude. (Drop-in classes are $15.)
9. ­ To The Bat Cave | 11 a.m.
The Yucatán Peninsula is full of cenotes (sinkholes in caves), and they range from small and claustrophobic to enormous and claustrophobic. Anyone with children will appreciate Aktun Chen, a combination cenote, wildlife preserve and zip line. Ask your guide (you’ll meet him when you check in — no one goes into the caves without one) for an abbreviated tour. (Tours of the caves only are $33 per adult; $16.50 for a child. For the full cave-cenote-wildlife preserve tour, it’s $102.) They’ll try to talk you out of the shorter tour, but stand your ground and do what I do: Point to your kids and shrug — the universal gesture for “What are you gonna do?” If you do the tour in 30 minutes, you’ll still see the bats and get to walk on the creepy underground bridge.
10. ­ Turtle Watching | 1 p.m.
Tulum’s beaches are world class, but to get closer to the action underwater, head to Akumal. Twenty minutes up the coast, Akumal is Tulum’s less bohemian cousin, and its public beach is wide, clean and dotted with overpriced quesadilla joints. Right in the middle is the Akumal Dive Center. It offers plenty of group classes — but no one ever stood on a beach with a dozen sunburned strangers in flippers and snorkels, walking backward into the water without feeling ridiculous. Instead, my husband and I rented the gear ($18 for flippers, mask, snorkel and life jacket), skipped the class and followed the advice of a guide: “Swim to the right.” Then we spent the next hour following a very friendly sea turtle throughout the tiny bay — until he finally dove deep and left us, presumably to go home to his family. And we did the same.
LODGING
Just outside the rooms at Maya Tulum, ( Tulum-Boca Paila Km 7; mayatulum.com; from $110) is the world’s most powdery beach, reason No. 1 to stay in one of the hotel’s thatch-roofed bungalows. Yoga classes; delicious, organic food; and a general air of Zen are reasons 2, 3 and 4.
For center-of-it-all action, you can’t do better than Zamas (Tulum-Boca Paila Km. 5; zamas.com; from $100). The 20 rooms — some on the beach, some in the jungle, some in a coconut grove — are bright and colorful and close to pretty much everything.

http://mobile.nytimes.com/2014/11/09/travel/things-to-do-in-36-hours-in-tulum-mexico.html?referrer=&_r=1

Mexico Offers Something for Everyone

Mexico Offers Something for Everyone
PHOTO: Puerto Vallarta combines art, culture and food with sun and fun.
Mexico offers an astounding number of vacation options, with each region boasting a unique set of tourist attractions. Visitors can take in the pristine beaches of Cancun and Riviera Maya, visit ancient Maya ruins or travel to Acapulco, a city known for its legendary nightlife and La Quebrada cliff divers who leap from heights of 148 feet into the water.
Travelers can also choose to visit Huatulco’s nine gorgeous bays, with 36 beaches, and inlets and coves, or take in the myriad festivities of Carnival in Mazatlan. There’s also Puerto Vallarta, which offers exquisite dining and a unique blend of city and beach attractions.
Following is a snapshot of 10 Mexican destinations, which feature a wide-ranging appeal for an eclectic array of travelers.
1. Acapulco
In 2012 the state of Guerrero launched the Sun Triangle initiative, which promotes the state’s three top tourism destinations: Acapulco, Ixtapa-Zihuatanejo and Taxco.
For its part, Acapulco is undergoing a major tourism renaissance, thanks to citywide urban renewal and private development investment. For starters, the corridor from the airport into Acapulco has been transformed into a polished, landscaped boulevard.
Comprising part of the Playa Revolcadero and a swath of the adjacent Puerto Marques, Diamante is one of Latin America’s most ambitious lifestyle projects and serves as the heart of modern Acapulco. This area sports Acapulco’s finest golf courses (four), luxury condos and resorts, and La Isla Shopping Village. It also includes Mexico’s premier performing arts venue, the Forum Mundo Imperial, which features live performances throughout the year.
In tandem with the Diamante development, infrastructure improvements are underway, including a new Acabus system that will run from the Traditional Zone to the Diamante area. A Macrotunel project is creating a roadway through the mountain that separates Acapulco Bay from the Diamante area.
A new advisory council has been charged with protecting, rehabilitating and revitalizing Traditional Acapulco. The council has proposed initiatives ranging from a marine museum, road and sidewalk improvements and new hotel developments. The cruise ship terminal has already been remodeled.
2. Cancun
Cancun is probably best known for its 14 miles of immaculate beaches. The destination, however, features a rich Mayan history and plenty of activities both in and out of the water. Although Cancun’s history is ancient, the city itself is relatively new, dating back to 1967 when the Mexican government began developing the area as a tourism destination.

PHOTO: Cancun is best known for its 14 miles of beaches.
Here, travelers can snorkel in an underwater museum, swim with whale sharks and climb Coba’s Nohoch Muul Pyramid, the tallest in the Yucatan Peninsula. Coba is not the only Maya site in the mix. Travelers can also take excursions to Tulum or Chichen Itza as well. They can also visit picturesque Isla Mujeres and Cozumel, which are short ferry rides away.
There are plenty of beach-based activities as well: swimming, snorkeling, diving, sailing, fishing, water-skiing and parasailing. Travelers will also find plenty of top-notch golf courses and excellent shopping options.
Cancun is home to hundreds of varieties of protected flora and fauna. The wildlife refuge Isla Contoy harbors 114 species of protected birds and marine and land animal life. Travelers can also visit the Cancun Underwater museum, which features 500 life-size sculptures in the waters surrounding Cancun and Isla Mujeres. At the eco-parks Xcaret, Xel-há, Xplora, and Selvática, they can spend the day swimming through underwater caves or with dolphins.
3. Huatulco
Set in the state of Oaxaca at the edge of the Sierra Madre Mountains, Huatulco stretches along 20 miles of Mexico’s Pacific coastline between the Coyula and Copalita rivers.
Fonatur, the government tourism development agency, targeted the area for resort development in 1980. By 1988 the Bahias de Huatulco (Bays of Huatulco National Park) was designated as a protected reserve. Today, it is home to a wide array of hotels, restaurants, nightclubs, discos and golf courses.
The centerpiece of Huatulco’s appeal is the area’s nine bays, comprising 36 beaches, and inlets and coves. A three-hour boat ride, which can be arranged by local operators, will introduce travelers to the area’s beaches, and flora and fauna.
Huatulco’s placid bays are a perfect setting for an array of watersports, including swimming, snorkeling, jetskiing, windsurfing, sailing, diving and snorkeling. Tangolunda and Santa Cruz boast the best watersports facilities of the nine bays.
Travelers may want to consider taking an excursion to the verdant hillside town of Puerto Escondido, located about 68 miles up the coast from Huatulco. The destination has also earned a reputation for world-class surfing due to the formidable waves found at Zicatela Beach.
4. Ixtapa/Zihuatanejo
Ixtapa and Zihuatanejo are often visited in the same trip but offer travelers decidedly different experiences.
Ixtapa boasts high-rise hotels, all-inclusive resorts, air-conditioned restaurants and upscale shopping options. For its part, Zihuatanejo is more low key, with meandering streets replete with galleries and folk art shops, boutique hotels and palapa-style restaurants.
Conceived and developed by Fonatur, Ixtapa was born in the 1970s, and features an ecology-minded master plan that requires half the land in the development be kept as ecological reserve. The destination has matured nicely, with the town appointed in a tropical canopy of verdant tropical foliage. A complex of handicraft stalls, boutiques, designer stores, bars, coffee shops and restaurants run parallel to the Hotel Zone. Taxis are rarely needed to access attractions.
For its part, Zihuatanejo has evolved from a quiet fishing village to a vacation destination. It comprises three side-by-side coves linked by a road that rises over hills and cliffs into the Pacific. The stone-paved streets of
Zihuatanejo’s Paseo del Pescador take visitors past the panga fishing fleet, public art displays and small boutiques and cafés and bars.
Active vacationers can stay busy with watersports, golf, deep sea fishing and boat excursions. The destination also offers eco-adventures and educational tours.
Taxco is an authentic 16th-century Spanish mining town, featuring a hillside maze of narrow cobblestoned streets and red-roofed residences. At every turn, travelers will find stores that sell its locally produced silver jewelry.
The town’ showpiece is the Santa Prisca church, set against the dramatic Sierra Madre Mountains. The surrounding area includes nature parks, waterfalls, caves 16th-century haciendas and rural communities. Travelers here will find a range of eco-adventure activities.
5. Los Cabos
Los Cabos comprises three distinct areas: San José del Cabo, Cabo San Lucas and the 20-mile Corridor, or highway, connecting them.

PHOTO: Unspoiled beaches are a highlight of the Los Cabos Corridor.
On Sept. 14, Hurricane Odile made landfall at the destination, causing serious devastation. Rebuilding efforts, however, have been swift and effective, with many hotels already opened again, along with local businesses, attractions and golf courses. Air service has also been restored to the region.
San Jose del Cabo retains the look and ambiance of a traditional Mexican town, with cobblestone streets, intimate restaurants and boutiques. Cabo San Lucas, meanwhile, features a livelier vibe, with a diverse array of bars and the Luxury Avenue Mall centered around the marina.
Many of the destination’s luxury resorts and championship golf courses are located along the Corridor, which is also home to some of the area’s best beaches for watersports.
Los Cabos is also firmly entrenched as a golf destination, offering courses designed by such notables as Norman and Weiskopf, which can be found along the 25-mile Corridor between Cabo San Lucas and San José del Cabo. Big game fishing is another major attraction here, and Cabo San Lucas’ marina has 380 slips accommodating vessels up to 200 feet. Other activities include scuba diving, snorkeling, kayaking quiet-riding ATVs, cycling and horseback riding.
6. Manzanillo
Mazatlan serves as a popular weekend getaway for Guadalajara residents and also attracts its fare share of Americans and Canadians. In 1996 its downtown area was restored. More recent renovations include a harbor-side esplanade and a “dancing fountain” robotic water show.
Just a few miles up the coastline is the destination’s resort zone. Bahia Manzanillo to the south carries most of the development, while Bahia San Diego, farther up the coast, is largely undeveloped.
Known as the Sailfish Capital of the World, Manzanillo’s waters are filled with marlin and sailfish, as well as a variety of other marine life. Manzanillo hosts annual fishing tournaments that attract sports fisherman from around the globe. But fishing is not its only draw. Visitors to Cuyutlán beach can snorkel, scuba dive and surf. The destination also has two world-class golf courses.
For scenic touring outside Manzanillo, travelers can head north along the Costalegre and Highway 200, into the neighboring state of Jalisco. The 153-mile highway runs between Manzanillo and Puerto Vallarta, and takes in the sites of fruit plantations, deserted beaches and tranquil fishing villages.
Nature enthusiasts can take advantage of Costalegre’s cliff-top trails, which shelter beautiful, isolated beaches. Stringent gentrification campaigns have kept 150 miles of shoreline between Manzanillo, Colima and Puerto Vallarta virtually untouched. The area also offers hiking, horseback riding, tennis, golf and watersports options.
7. Mazatlan
This colonial city on the beach offers guests equal amounts of cultural and outdoor tourism options. The city is the only beach resort in Mexico with a downtown filled with beautifully restored 19th-century buildings. No trip to Mazatlan would be complete without a walk along the 11-mile Malecon, which extends from the beachfront resort district to Old Mazatlan.
The Zona Dorada (Golden Zone) was created in the 1960s and is the site of many major hotels, shops, bars and restaurants, along with beautiful beaches. Old Mazatlan or the Centro Historico (Historic Center), is where life hearkens back to another time, as evidenced in the area’s markets, cafés, churches, plazas and traditional neighborhoods. A third area, Nuevo Mazatlan, is where many newer major resorts are found, as well a marina and two new golf courses.
The destination is renowned as one of Mexico’s best fishing venues, with its waters featuring 800 species of fish. Travelers can also explore its jungle-lined canals, kayak and surf.
Mazatlan also plays host to huge numbers of revelers who come to the destination for Carnival in last week of February or the beginning of March.
8. Puerto Vallarta
Last year, the Mexico Tourism Board announced a $10 million advertising campaign to jointly promote Puerto Vallarta and Riviera Nayarit. The two destinations, however, are also still promoted individually as well.
Nestled on the shores of the Bay of Banderas, Puerto Vallarta is divided by the Cuale River into north and south.
On the southern end is the charming Romantic Zone and the Playa los Muertos, which draws legions of beach enthusiasts. Further south are seaside villages of Boca de Tomatlan and Mismaloya, where “The Night of the Iguana” was filmed. North of the river is the Old Town with its Plaza de Armas (main square) and Los Arcos amphitheater, featuring daily performances.
The city’s venerable Malecon with is whimsical bronze sculptures runs from the Romantic Zone to the start of the Hotel Zone. Further north, travelers will find the Hotel Zone and marina, the site of many resorts and restaurants.
Virtually every imaginable watersport is available along Puerto Vallarta’s miles of shoreline, including whale watching, surfing, deep-sea fishing, kayaking, snorkeling, scuba diving and sailing.
On the weekends, the city’s main square and Malecon come alive with artists displaying their works, food stands and strolling tourists and locals. Puerto Vallarta also offers great shopping from local artists and craft fairs. In fact, the city boasts one of the most dynamic art scenes in Mexico.
9. Riviera Maya
The Riviera Maya comprises an 86-mile corridor, located in the northeast coast of the Yucatan Peninsula in the state of Quintana Roo. The destination starts in the village of Puerto Morelos, located about 22 miles south of Cancun, and extends south to the Sian Ka’an Biosphere through the town of Punta Allen.
It includes the resort towns of Playa del Carmen, Puerto Aventuras, Akumal and Tulum.
More than 2,000 years ago, the Maya built cities, which are still evidenced today in three archaeological sites: Cobá, Muyil and Tulum. Tulum is the most picturesque, as it’s the only Mayan city built seaside.
The Playa del Carmen region boasts excellent venues for zip-lining, scuba and snorkeling, fishing and ATV tours. Other highlights include exploring sinkholes (called cenotes); visiting the theme parks of Xplor, Hidden Worlds and Aventuras Mayas and Xcaret.
Golfers will find a range of championship golf courses in the Riviera Maya, many of which are carved out of jungle, mangroves and beaches and are available for year-round play.
10. Riviera Nayarit
Set between the Pacific Ocean and the Western Sierra Madre Mountains, Riviera Nayarit spans the Pacific coastline for nearly 200 miles, with its southern border just 10 minutes north of the Puerto Vallarta International Airport.
Areas include Sayulita, a popular beach village on the coast; Punta Mita, which boasts a portfolio of resorts of all types, as well as two Jack Nicklaus golf courses; San Blas, a quiet town known for it’s Old-World charm; Nuevo Vallarta, with its myriad all-inclusive resorts; and Litibu, a relatively new resort area that includes a new Greg Norman golf course.
All told, Riviera Nayarit features six golf courses to choose from. The destination also offers adventurous travelers such activities as ATV excursions and canopy zip-lining tours, horse-riding on the beach, 4x4 off-road excursions and the baby sea turtle release, just to name a few.
The region also offers its fair share of pristine beaches and watersports options. Travelers can swim with dolphins, scuba diver, surf and whale watch.

 http://www.travelpulse.com/articles/destinations/mexico-offers-something-for-everyone.html
Monday, November 3, 2014

Prince Charles in Mexico on Day of the Dead

Prince Charles of Wales (2-L) and his wife Camilla (C), Duchess of Cornwall, listen to their translator during a tour of the British cemetery at the Real del Monte community in Hidalgo State on November 2, 2014
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Real del Monte (Mexico) (AFP) - Britain's Prince Charles and his wife Camilla began a four-day trip to Mexico on Sunday, visiting a cemetery of English migrants on the Latin American nation's Day of the Dead.
After a five-day tour of Colombia, the royal couple landed in Mexico City and immediately headed to the mountain town of Real del Monte in the central state of Hidalgo.
Hundreds of people lined the cobblestone streets, waving the Union Jack as the couple toured the town considered the birthplace of British-Mexican relations.
In 1825, miners from Cornwall sailed to Mexico to help revive the country's silver industry, settling in Real del Monte and bringing football and their southwest English region's pasty dish with them.
Charles and Camilla, who are also the duke and duchess of Cornwall, visited the town's English cemetery, home to nearly 300 tombs of Cornish miners and their descendants, some dating back to 1834.
They lay a small wreath at a monument for John Vial, the only Mexican-Briton known to have fought in World War I. He died at the Battle of the Somme at age 22.
Their visit coincided with Mexico's Day of the Dead, a two-day celebration in which people visit cemeteries to honor their fallen relatives, bringing flowers and their favorite foods in a centuries-old tradition mixing pre-Hispanic and Catholic beliefs.
The prince and duchess then visited the main square of this town of 14,000 people, where they were shown an altar to the dead bedecked with marigolds and food offerings.
Accompanied by Foreign Minister Jose Antonio Meade and Hidalgo Governor Jose Francisco Olvera, they were later driven to Real del Monte's Pasty Museum.
- 'An English town' -
Mexicans have made pasties their own, calling them "pastes" and making them with local ingredients like beans or local "mole" sauce instead of potatoes or curry.
Townspeople said they were proud to be visited by the heir to the British throne and voiced hope it would boost the local economy, which relies on tourism.
"It is a prestigious visit for our town," said Guillermo Rodriguez, 31, whose family runs Real del Monte's oldest pasty restaurant, Pastes El Billar.
"It's an English town. The climate is similar with the fog and light rain. And there's football of course. The English brought it," said Rodriguez.
His great-grandmother worked for English immigrants and learned to make pasties from them. The restaurant makes cornish potato pasties spiced up with Mexican chiles.
Griselda Garcia Rodriguez, a 55-year-old retired doctor, waited for the couple's arrival at the town center.
"My great-grandfather was English," she said. "At home, we drank tea in the morning, afternoon and evening."
After Hidalgo, Prince Charles and the duchess will visit Mexico City on Monday to meet with President Enrique Pena Nieto.
They will then tour the Edzna ruins, a Mayan archeological site in the eastern state of Campeche, before heading to the industrial hub of Monterrey in the north.
The Latin American tour was made at the request of the British government, following invitations from the presidents of Mexico and Colombia, to boost relations with both nations.
It is the prince's fifth visit to Mexico since 1966.

 http://news.yahoo.com/prince-charles-visits-mexico-day-dead-205056317.html

Mexico City: The Monarch takes flight


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With a massive population, a new REIT regime, and an airport on the way, Mexico City is ready for more investments. Christopher O’Dea reports
Every autumn, a magical event takes place – the annual Monarch butterfly migration to Mexico. Navigating by instinct alone, butterflies migrate from America and Canada to mountains in Mexico where they have never been before.
Another migration to Mexico is creating its own kind of magic – the flow of investment capital into commercial property projects in Mexico City. An autonomous federal district, Mexico City is a sprawling megalopolis that covers more land area than Los Angeles, and has twice as many people as LA. The property boom is in turn creating a vibrant real estate investment sector. Growth is being fuelled by industrial migration to the most optimal locations for manufacturing, while an expanding digital supplier and customer support services sector also takes up space. Regulatory reforms have created a sophisticated real estate investment trust market that is attracting talent and expertise to a city eager to make its mark as a global destination.
Mexico’s ambitions are many and, as the federal capital, Mexico City is at the forefront of the country’s charge into the 21st century. With output worth of nearly $200bn (€156bn) per year, Mexico City’s economy ranks as the eighth largest urban economy in the world. The ministry of economy says, if it were a country, it would be the fifth largest economy in Latin America. Recent reforms aimed at modernising the energy, education and telecommunications industries, while reducing government bureaucracy, are expected to boost Mexico’s GDP, starting in 2015. In real estate, the creation of REIT-like investment vehicles called FIBRAs has stimulated creation of a professional property investing market. It has also spurred an organised capital market focused on commercial property, creating pools of capital large enough to sustain significant future development.

The industrial and manufacturing resurgence is fuelling development across commercial property sectors, including offices, retail and hotels. “The success of the structural change that the Mexican economy is experiencing lies in both the economic and the political agreements that the country’s different economic stakeholders have achieved,” according to CBRE’s Q2 outlook for Mexico City office. “This sends a message of confidence to investors,” which is illustrated by “the dynamism that we see in the search for spaces by companies that are expanding or looking to establish for the first time in the city.”
As car companies, appliance manufacturers and electronics firms bring production capacity back from China and the Far East, Mexico is becoming an industrial hub and manufacturing platform for North America. According to the 2014 KPMG Competitive Alternatives guide, Mexico is an important country for the international automotive industry, offering car companies not only a good geographic location, but also a network of business agreements and a qualified workforce. 
The State of Mexico, which lies to the north of Mexico City, ranks third nationally in vehicle manufacturing, with 12.5% of the market, behind only Coahuila and Puebla. The reversal of outsourcing – or reshoring – over the past two decades is well under way, and already fuelling a second stage marked by the rise of call centres and back-office tech support.
Mexico’s national statistics and geography institute INEGI reported that, during the first four months of 2014, industrial activity grew 1.1% compared with the same period in 2013. The influx is challenging Mexico City industrial park developers, says CBRE. The firm says there is “growing, rapid demand for industrial space – mainly due to the arrival of new investment and the expansion of other large consolidated companies in the region – since Mexico City is considered a hub for distribution and logistics.”
The Mexico City Metropolitan Area (ZMCM), has 5.8m sqm of class-A industrial plant inventory, and nearly 400,000sqm under construction. ZMCM is expected to have more than 6m sqm in inventory by the end of 2014, says CBRE. Among recent projects in and around Mexico City, Walmart de México y Centroamérica will invest MXN1.07bn in the construction of new units and the expansion of a distribution centre in the State of Mexico, and possibly a second dedicated to perishables. 


Infrastructure and energy
One of the most significant signs of Mexico’s ambitions is the plan to make Mexico City a flight destination as important to the global business community as the countryside is to the Monarch butterfly. 
Mexico City’s airport, opened in 1931, is the second busiest in Latin America after Sao Paulo Guarulhos. It is surrounded by one of the highest density cities in the world, and despite recent renovations, the traffic – nearly 32 million passengers in the past year – is straining the aviation infrastructure and restricting building new logistics and other facilities to accommodate Mexico City’s economic resurgence. 
The airport is also a tourist gateway – Mexican tourism has grown, especially with US travellers looking for affordable city and resort breaks. Several airlines in Europe, Asia and Africa reportedly been denied landing slots due to lack of capacity.
In September, the government announced that world-renowned British architect Norman Foster and Mexican architect Fernando Romero, a son-in-law of billionaire Carlos Slim, had won the bid to design a futuristic new airport for Mexico City. The project will pump funds into every sector connected with real estate. The new airport is expected to cost $9.2bn and generate $19.6bn in additional tourism revenue between now and 2040 (see Airport Infrastructure for more detail).
The biggest impact is expected from energy-sector reform that will open the market for private companies to bid on potential production fields from 2015. “The constitutional amendments that were passed… only last December are really a game changer,” says Jesus Reyes Heroles, former Pemex general director and now executive president of EnergeA, an energy consultancy. “Now private investment in Mexico’s energy sector is possible,” he adds.
CBRE says: “Once the energy reforms take effect, industrial sector growth is expected to become more dynamic, due to the new investments it is expected to stimulate,” says CBRE. Construction and plant location data, it adds, “indicates that 2014 will turn out to be a highly dynamic year for the industrial market in Mexico City, and 2015 is expected to have major new sources of supply and stable prices with slight, upward trends.”
CBRE has focused strategically on the federal capital, identifying nine sub-markets in Mexico City, where the availability rate of class-A industrial spaces is just 9.5%. Although that is above the 4% vacancy rate in late 2012, CBRE says the rate declined nearly two percentage points in Q2 2014 – a drop that had not occurred since vacancies began rising in Q4 2012. 
The drop reflected strong demand that absorbed new supply; during the quarter nearly 198,000sqm of space were added to the market, while just over 305,000sqm were absorbed. Some Mexico City industrial sub-markets have no class-A space, and this is attracting capital to modernisation projects. “One could expect this effect to be reversed with the new projects that are planned for both sub-markets, which are considered as B and C reconversion in class-A spaces,” says CBRE.
With more than 48m sqft of office space – nearly four times as much as runner-up Monterrey – Mexico City is home to the majority of office space in the country. Demand for class-A and A-plus office space has been increasing consistently and is reflected in the absorption of new space and in the increase in rents. Absorption of A and A-plus corporate space in Mexico City exceeded 162,000sqm in the first half of the year, CBRE reports, with significant demand from the financial sector and technology companies.
Google, for example, rented 8,700sqm in the Lomas Palmas sub-market, one of Mexico City’s three prime office districts. The city and federal governments are investing heavily in digital labs and tech incubators, leveraging the concentration of universities, media and financial companies in the capital to attract ‘clean industry’. The digital know-how is paying off – the call-centre industry is worth $6bn, handling customer service calls, billing and IT support. From 2005-10, the sector more than doubled in size, and it is expected to maintain that rate of growth. 
TeleTech, a 30-year-old company based in Denver, Colorado, runs a major call centre at the heart of Mexico City. Like the half-dozen other major call centres in the City, TeleTech works only with US companies. Many of its workers used to live in the US, a key factor for success in call centre operation – companies today want employees who possess not only language skills but cultural affinity with the customers they serve. Financial services companies that have already located in Mexico City are also building call centres, according the Mexican ministry of economy.
Total office inventory in the city’s 10 sub-markets in the second quarter was 7m sqm, including five new buildings that added 60,000sqm, according to Colliers International’s Mexico City market research manager Flavio Gomez. Class-A-plus space represented 35% of the total, with 24% for class-A and 41% for class-B. The quarter saw an overall vacancy rate of 9% for Mexico City, with 16% in class-A-plus space, and 6% each in class-A and class-B. Colliers says the office market is near the line between expansion and oversupply, but space is being occupied gradually when buildings are brought on line. But the practice of opening buildings that are not fully leased presents a risk that vacancies might rise.
It is common for tenants in Mexico not to commit to leases until a building is near completion, says CBRE, which leads to last-minute activity. CBRE foresees the average asking rent remaining stable between now and 2016, despite a full construction pipeline. As of April, 45 buildings totalling 1.1m sqm of class-A and class-A-plus space were under construction, with 610,000sqm due for delivery by the end of 2014. Although nearly 70% of that space is being built in the three most expensive sub-markets, CBRE expects it will continue to be absorbed in the wake of favourable economic conditions.
Airport infrastructure
Covering more than half a million square meters, the new airport planned for Mexico City aims to be the world’s most sustainable airport. 
Instead of traditional warehouse-style terminals, it will use a single giant structure wrapped in a unique skin that lets in natural light and air and collects rainwater. The outer skin will incorporate daylight reflectors to reduce heat, and photovoltaic panels to collect solar energy; support buildings and fields on the site will hold more solar panels, ultimately providing 50MW of peak power.
The six-runway project, with an ultimate capacity for 120m travellers a year, will be built on government-owned land close to Lake Texcoco, just east of the existing airport. The first phase envisions two runways and capacity for 50m passengers. Construction is expected to start in mid-2015 and continue through 2018. Speculation about the impact on the real estate sector focuses in the first instance on which entity will be awarded the construction contract. In mid-September, Luís Zarate, the president of Mexico’s Chamber of the Construction Industry,  nine Mexican construction firms, including Grupo Ica, a private Mexican infrastructure construction company, and Grupo Carso, a company owned by Slim, formed a committee to bid for the airport. Analysts say numerous other companies are likely to bid on the work, such as Spain’s Obrascon Huarte Lain SA, which has experience in the sector and in Mexico, while many firms will benefit, such as Promotora y Operadora de Infraestructura SAB, which operates toll roads near the new site.
Billionaire Carlos Slim’s involvement with the airport in part reflects the Mexican government’s reform programme. His telecommunications empire, the source of his $88bn fortune, is being reined in by the reforms, and the airport contract would mark a major expansion of his construction activities. 
Some major names are readying new high-end buildings. Reichmann International is developing the 33-story Torre Diana, an office tower along the city’s central boulevard, El Paseo de la Reforma, for completion in mid-2015. One partner in Torre Diana is Fibra Uno, one of the new breed of real estate investment trusts, most of which are controlled by Mexican families with deep roots in the country’s property markets and public sector. The FIBRAs are emerging as major players in the Mexico’s property resurgence. 
According to CBRE, André Elman, director of Fibra Uno, said it will acquire 15 properties of commercial and industrial buildings in Mexico City, and other areas at a cost of MXN23.5bn. One of the trophies on the list is the Hotel Hilton Centro Histórico, a 40,000sqm property containing 458 rooms. Acquired for a price of $90m, the hotel is expected to generate MXN8.3m in net annual operating revenue.
In a recent report on Mexican real estate, Goldman Sachs says FIBRAs are a new asset class with strong growth potential. Since being introduced in 2011, FIBRAs now account for 3.5% of Mexican market cap. Curent regulations allow Mexican pension funds that are investing in FIBRAs to benefit from tax-free dividends, and Goldman Sachs says the funds have room to increase their ownership in FIBRAs in a structured securities allocation. President Nieto’s reforms also give the sector a tailwind.
“We expect strong structural demand for real estate assets in Mexico,” the report says. “In addition, we see room for a gradual convergence in prices per square meter of Mexican real estate towards Latin American peers, which are currently 40% more expensive on average.” 
And if the tailwind continues, the new trusts will help international property capital migrate to Mexico City as regularly as the Monarch butterflies.

http://realestate.ipe.com/markets-/regions/americas/mexico-city-the-monarch-takes-flight/10004250.article
 
Thursday, October 30, 2014

El Festival de la Calaca, San Miguel de Allende

TRAVELER

El Festival de la Calaca, San Miguel de Allende

Muestra de las tradiciones mexicanas.

FECHA DE PUBLICACIÓN:2014-10-24     AUTOR: Cindy Adriana Morales
Hombres y mujeres disfrazados de catrinas desfilan por las calles de esta ciudad Patrimonio de la Humanidad. A dos años de su nacimiento, este festival único en su tipo, ha logrado atraer a turistas de todo el orbe. Llegan fascinados por las tradiciones mexicanas que celebran la vida y la muerte.
La fiesta del Día de muertos coincide con el final del ciclo anual del maíz y celebra el retorno temporal de los seres queridos fallecidos a sus hogares, las familias los esperan con ofrendas, les preparan sus alimentos preferidos, ponen velas en los cementerios, los decoran con flores y adornos de papel picado. De ahí la inspiración para el festival que, además de desfile de catrinas, reúne expresiones artísticas y culturales como visitas guiadas a los cementerios, un ciclo de cortometrajes, conferencias en el teatro Ángela Peralta, talleres para niños en el jardín principal y una exposición de pan de muerto de reconocidos chefs.
La tercera edición de este festival se celebrará del 30 de octubre al 2 de noviembre. El fotógrafo Spencer Tunick es uno de los invitados especiales junto con la bailarina y música Andrea Brook, que en años pasados ha sorprendido interpretando al arpa más grande del mundo, en esta edición impartirá una clase de yoga para quien asista a la plaza cívica vestido de muerto o catrina. Todos los eventos son gratuitos.
Recomendamos: Legado mexicano al mundo

 http://www.ngenespanol.com/traveler/viajero-ilustrado/781651/festival-calaca-san-miguel-allende/
Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Dia de los Muertos Lively Mexican holiday honors the dead

Dia de los Muertos

Dos Muertos

Catrinas

Not Halloween

Figurines

Mariachis Muertos

Calaveras de Azucar

Candy Coffins

Cemetery

Mariachis

Twilight

PLAY ALL PLAY
  • Dia de los Muertos—the Day of the Dead—is a holiday celebrated on November 1. Although marked throughout Latin America, Dia de los Muertos is most strongly associated with Mexico, where the tradition originated.

    Dia de los Muertos honors the dead with festivals and lively celebrations, a typically Latin American custom that combines indigenous Aztec ritual with Catholicism, brought to the region by Spanish conquistadores. (Dia de los Muertos is celebrated on All Saints Day and All Souls Day, minor holidays in the Catholic calendar.)

    Assured that the dead would be insulted by mourning or sadness, Dia de los Muertos celebrates the lives of the deceased with food, drink, parties, and activities the dead enjoyed in life. Dia de los Muertos recognizes death as a natural part of the human experience, a continuum with birth, childhood, and growing up to become a contributing member of the community. On Dia de los Muertos, the dead are also a part of the community, awakened from their eternal sleep to share celebrations with their loved ones.

    The most familiar symbol of Dia de los Muertos may be the calacas and calaveras (skeletons and skulls), which appear everywhere during the holiday: in candied sweets, as parade masks, as dolls. Calacas and calaveras are almost always portrayed as enjoying life, often in fancy clothes and entertaining situations.

    Use the questions in the following tab (Questions) to inspire discussion about Dia de los Muertos, Latin America, colonialism, and culture.

     http://education.nationalgeographic.com/education/media/dia-de-los-muertos/?ar_a=1&utm_content=buffer3b450&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook.com&utm_campaign=buffer

Puerto Vallarta has 6 of the Top 10 Fine Dining Restaurants in Mexico

puerto vallarta restaurants
Published October 23, 2014

Café Des Artistes, Vista Grill, Ocean Grill, Bistro Teresa, Le Kliff and Trío are the winning restaurants of the category “Best Fine Dining Restaurants in Mexico”, according to the well-established website TripAdvisor.

Café Des Artistes, Vista Grill, Ocean Grill, Bistro Teresa, Le Kliff and Trío are the winning restaurants of the category “Best Fine Dining Restaurants in Mexico”, according to the well-established website TripAdvisor.
Puerto Vallarta marks itself off from other destinations not only because of it’s incredible places, but also for offering a gastronomy with international prestige. For this reason, the popular social network for travel critics around the world, TripAdvisor, has published the results of its famous “Traveler’s Choice 2014”. In the category “Best Fine Dining Restaurants in Mexico”, 6 restaurants in Puerto Vallarta were considered to be among the best throughout Mexico.
This distinction is not only made because of the good quality and service of the mentioned establishments, but also thanks to a suitable approach of brand management and effective marketing strategies that increase their prestige.
The strategic reputation management of a company in the tourism sector is of great importance because of the high investment that is made and received back. This actions lead to practice, creating results that not only affect the ambience of the restaurant positively, but also the reputation of the whole destination, just like in this case the gastronomy sector in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico.
In the following, I will list the 10 best restaurants, distinguished by TripAdvisor in the category of Mexico
http://www.tripadvisor.com/TravelersChoice-Restaurants-cFineDining-g150768#8
1. Oh Lala – Playa del Carmen
2. Café Des Artistes – Puerto Vallarta
3. Vista grill – Puerto Vallarta
4. Ocean Grill – Puerto Vallarta
5. Bistro Teresa – Puerto Vallarta
6. El Farallón, Capella Pedregal – Cabo San Lucas
7. Pujol – Ciudad de México
8. Le Kliff – Puerto Vallarta
9. Trío – Puerto Vallarta
10. Imprevist – Playa del Carmen
Learn more at visitpuertovallarta.com

 http://www.vallartadaily.com/puerto-vallarta-6-top-10-fine-dining-restaurants-mexico/

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Have you wanted to own a vacation or second home in Mexico but thought it was out of your reach? For the past several years, foreigners have been able to purchase properties in Mexico using a traditional mortgage! Cross Border Investment provides premium financial services in Mexico – including mortgage brokering and closing coordination. At CBI, we work with you to select the top loan for your needs and we shop for the best deals amongst our lenders. CBI offers 99% of the loans available – we are your link to the lowest interest rates and fees, as well as the smoothest closing. Contact us today, and let CBI make your dreams a reality! -------------------------- Hipotecaria CBI está orgulloso de ofrecer 99% de las opciones de hipotecas disponibles. Trabajamos con Ud. para seleccionar el crédito hipotecario más económico de acuerdo a sus necesidades y escogemos entre las mejores ofertas entre los prestamistas. Póngase en contacto con Hipotecaria CBI para informarse sobre cuál es el mejor crédito para usted.
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