Azul Histórico

Centro Histórico


Chef Ricardo Muñoz reinvents traditional Mexican recipes such as pescado tikin xic (a grouper dish from the Yucatán with plantain and tortilla strips). This branch is in a beautiful complex of converted buildings and diners eat in an inner-courtyard among trees and romantic lighting, enclosed by stone archways. Rare for the centro, the Azul attracts upmarket visitors.


Lonely Planet's must-see attractions

Nearby Centro Histórico attractions

1. Museo del Estanquillo

0.03 MILES

Housed in a gorgeous neoclassical building two blocks from the Zócalo, this museum contains the vast pop-culture collection amassed over the decades by…

2. Avenida Madero

0.08 MILES

This stately pedestrianized shopping avenue west of the Zócalo, linking Bellas Artes and the Zócalo, boasts a veritable catalog of architectural styles…

3. Museo del Calzado El Borceguí

0.16 MILES

At this shoe museum – and the oldest shoemaker in Mexico, operating since 1865 – there are over 2000 pieces of footwear on show, many from famous feet…

4. Zócalo

0.18 MILES

The heart of Mexico City is the Plaza de la Constitución. Residents began calling it the Zócalo, meaning ‘base,’ in the 19th century, when plans for a…

5. Palacio de Iturbide

0.2 MILES

Built for colonial nobility, in 1821 this became the residence of General Agustín Iturbide, a Mexican independence hero who was proclaimed emperor here in…

6. Catedral Metropolitana

0.22 MILES

One of Mexico City’s most iconic structures, this cathedral is a monumental edifice: 109m long, 59m wide and 65m high. Started in 1573, it remained a work…

7. Museo Interactivo de Economía

0.23 MILES

The former hospital of the Bethlehemites religious order has been the home of this economics museum since 2006. A slew of hands-on exhibits is aimed at…

8. Sagrario Metropolitano

0.24 MILES

Adjoining the east side of the Catedral Metropolitana is the 18th-century Sagrario Metropolitano. Originally built to house the archives and vestments of…