Plaza Carso
Appearance
Plaza Carso | |
---|---|
General information | |
Address | Corner of Lago Zurich and Cervantes Saavedra streets, Nuevo Polanco (officially, colonia Granada). Miguel Hidalgo borough |
Town or city | Mexico City |
Country | Mexico |
Coordinates | 19°26′29″N 99°12′15″W / 19.441406°N 99.204083°W |
Design and construction | |
Architect(s) | Fernando Romero (master plan)[1] |
Architecture firm | FR-EE (master plan) |
Other information | |
Public transit access | Polanco and San Joaquín metro stations (both at distance) |
Plaza Carso is a large mixed-use development in the Nuevo Polanco area of Miguel Hidalgo, Mexico City,[2] backed by billionaire Carlos Slim. The total cost of the complex is quoted between US$800 million[3] and 1.4 billion.[4] The complex claims to be the largest mixed-use development in Latin America.[5] It was built on the site of a former Vitro glass factory.[6]
The complex includes the following components:
- Museo Soumaya, owned by the Carlos Slim Foundation. The museum contains the Slim's extensive art, religious relic, historical document, and coin collection.[7] The museum holds works by many of the best known European artists from the 15th to the 20th century including a large collection of casts of sculptures by Auguste Rodin. The building is a shiny silver cloud-like structure reminiscent of a Rodin sculpture.[7]
- Museo Júmex, opened November 2013, to house part of the Colección Jumex, the contemporary art collection of the Jumex juice company.
- The Plaza Carso shopping center, which from 2010 through 2020 was home to an 82,500 sq ft (7,665 m2) Saks Fifth Avenue store, the second to have opened in Mexico.[8] Together with the atrium this section measures 48,090 square metres (517,600 sq ft).[9]
- Teatro Telcel theatre
- Residential towers: Torre Dalí, Torre Monet and Torre Rodin[5]
- Office towers,[10] two of 23 floors each, and one of 20 floors. The three buildings are joined on the lower 3 levels by an atrium and the shopping center.[9]
- Torre Telcel - the headquarters of América Móvil are here[11]
- Torre Falcon
- Torre Zurich
- A 6-level underground parking garage[9]
External links[edit]
References[edit]
- ^ ""Plaza Carso Masterplan", FR-EE website". Archived from the original on 2013-04-28. Retrieved 2013-04-13.
- ^ "Mapa de Ubicación." Plaza Carso. Retrieved on April 12, 2016. "Plaza Carso, Lago Zurich Esq. Cervantes Saavedra, Polanco, Miguel Hidalgo, D.F., México" (click on blue pointer to see the address)
- ^ "Emperor's New Museum", Wall Street Journal, March 3, 2011
- ^ "ICSC website". Archived from the original on 2013-10-23. Retrieved 2013-04-13.
- ^ a b "Quiénes somos", Plaza Carso website, retrieved April 13, 2013
- ^ ""Factories left a mark on Miguel Hidalgo borough", Obrasweb". Archived from the original on 2016-04-23. Retrieved 2014-07-30.
- ^ a b "Carlos Slim: At home with the world's richest man". The Telegraph. 21 February 2011.
- ^ saks-expands-presence-mexico-city VMSD
- ^ a b c "Glass on Web news site". Archived from the original on 2013-10-23. Retrieved 2013-04-15.
- ^ "Corporativo", Plaza Carso website
- ^ ""Contact Information", América Móvil website". Archived from the original on 2016-07-05. Retrieved 2013-04-15.
Mexico City
- Antara Polanco
- Arcos Bosques
- Artz Pedregal
- Centro Coyoacán
- Centro Santa Fe
- Ciudad Jardín Bicentenario
- Cosmopol
- Encuentro Oceanía
- Forum Buenavista
- Galerías Insurgentes
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- Metrópoli Patriotismo
- Mexipuerto Cementos Fortaleza Cuatro Caminos
- Mítikah
- Miyana
- Multiplaza Aragón
- Parque Delta
- Parques Polanco
- Pasaje Jacaranda
- Pasaje Polanco
- Paseo Acoxpa
- Paseo Interlomas
- Patio Santa Fe
- Perisur
- Plaza Carso
- Plaza de las Estrellas
- Plaza Insurgentes
- Plaza Satélite
- Plaza Universidad
- Portal San Ángel
- Reforma 222
- Samara Shops
- Toreo Parque Central
- Cinco y Diez (multiple malls)
- Península
- Plaza Carrousel
- Plaza Río Tijuana
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- Antea LifeStyle Center (Querétaro)
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- Forum Culiacán (Sinaloa)
- Galerías (multiple)
- Paseo Mochis (Sinaloa)
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- Plaza Galerias Pachuca
- Plaza Sendero (multiple)