Éléments | Visite à pied musicale de la Colonia Roma
Visite à pied musicale de la Colonia Roma
(7) Avis
Informations importantes
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Animaux d'assistance autorisés
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Des options de transport en commun sont disponibles à proximité
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Adapté à tous les niveaux de condition physique
Politique d'annulation
Pour un remboursement complet, annulez au moins 24 heures avant l'heure de départ prévue.
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Pour un remboursement complet, vous devez annuler au moins 24 heures avant l'heure de début de l'expérience.
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Les délais limites sont basés sur l'heure locale de l'expérience.
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Si vous annulez moins de 24 heures avant l'heure de début de l'expérience, le montant que vous avez payé ne sera pas remboursé.
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Cette expérience nécessite un nombre minimum de voyageurs. Si elle est annulée parce que le minimum n'est pas atteint, on vous proposera une autre date/expérience ou un remboursement intégral.
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Toute modification effectuée moins de 24 heures avant l'heure de début de l'expérience ne sera pas acceptée.
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This isn't a standard walking tour — it's a curated sensory experience through one of Mexico City's most storied neighborhoods.
Each stop along the route is paired with a carefully chosen soundtrack that brings the architecture, the street corners, and the stories around you to life in a way no narration alone could.
Your guide Gabriel, a visual artist with a master's degree in art theory, weaves together threads you wouldn't expect: the African roots of mariachi, the origins of the tortilla, the voices of social movements, and the urban ambitions that turned a 16th-century indigenous village into one of Latin America's most elegant neighborhoods.
The pace is relaxed and conversational. Y...
Points forts
2 heures et 15 minutes
Proposé en Anglais & Espagnol
Annulation gratuite
Billet mobile
2 heures et 15 minutes
Proposé en Anglais & Espagnol
Annulation gratuite
Billet mobile
Ce qui est inclus
Casque sans fil
Points de rendez-vous
Départ
Capilla de San Francisco Javier de la Romita
Meet you in front of the chapel's main entrance, I'll be wearing a green hat.
Retour
Plaza Río de Janeiro
This is the main plaza of the neighborhood, actually present in the first plan of 1902.
Visite à pied musicale de la Colonia Roma
(7) Avis
À propos
This isn't a standard walking tour — it's a curated sensory experience through one of Mexico City's most storied neighborhoods.
Each stop along the route is paired with a carefully chosen soundtrack that brings the architecture, the street corners, and the stories around you to life in a way no narration alone could.
Your guide Gabriel, a visual artist with a master's degree in art theory, weaves together threads you wouldn't expect: the African roots of mariachi, the origins of the tortilla, the voices of social movements, and the urban ambitions that turned a 16th-century indigenous village into one of Latin America's most elegant neighborhoods.
The pace is relaxed and conversational. Y...
Points forts
2 heures et 15 minutes
Proposé en Anglais & Espagnol
Annulation gratuite
Billet mobile
2 heures et 15 minutes
Proposé en Anglais & Espagnol
Annulation gratuite
Billet mobile
Ce qui est inclus
Casque sans fil
Points de rendez-vous
Départ
Capilla de San Francisco Javier de la Romita
Meet you in front of the chapel's main entrance, I'll be wearing a green hat.
Retour
Plaza Río de Janeiro
This is the main plaza of the neighborhood, actually present in the first plan of 1902.
Itinéraire
1
Colonie de Rome
The tour covers eleven locations within Colonia Roma — nowhere else. Some stops are well-known; others are not touristic at all. Each one is chosen for what it reveals about Mexican cultural and historical identity, either through its architecture or its place in the city's history. The headphones go on. The walk begins.
10 minutes
2
Capilla de San Francisco Javier de la Romita
Against all odds, this chapel has stood here since 1530. For centuries, the tiny village that grew around it retained its own idiosyncracy, well into the 20th century. Standing here, you can almost feel the layers of history overlapping each other. This historic spot provides the ideal setting to explore the story of the Virgin of Guadalupe, which originated roughly at the same time. After talking, we'll hear indigenous music pieces from different parts of Mexico.
10 minutes
3
Casa Lamm Centro de Cultura
The Lamm family never lived in this house. Built at a time when Mexico City faced a serious housing shortage, the structure is notably spacious and architecturally assured. That contradiction — private abundance alongside public scarcity — is the story this building tells.
0 minute
4
MODO - Museo del Objeto del Objeto
A quick glance as you walk by. Somewhere inside, everyday Mexican objects from the modern era are on display — not art, not artifacts, just things. The blenders and bottle caps and branded packaging of daily life. The museum's very existence asks a question worth carrying with you for the rest of the walk: what do ordinary objects tell us that monuments cannot?
5 minutes
5
Rome du Nord
While Viator requires a generic label for this spot, make no mistake: this exact corner is a portal to the past. It offers the perfect vantage point to examine the lush, eclectic architecture that defines Colonia Roma and discover how its grand estates were transformed during the Mexican Revolution. To bring this history to life, your headphones will contrast the two sonic worlds of the era: a raw, street-born corrido detailing the conflict, followed by the polished melodies that dominated early radio stations.
10 minutes
6
Avenida Álvaro Obregón
The most iconic street in Colonia Roma provides the perfect backdrop to explore the dark synergy between the corrido—the narrative musical genre that flourished during the Mexican Revolution—and the era's sensationalist crime journalism. Both mediums documented the exact same violence, but through entirely different lenses: one captured it through José Guadalupe Posada's iconic relief etchings of flying skeletons, while the other immortalized it in popular folk ballads of legendary heroes. To fully immerse you in this dramatic era, your headphones will play expressive Mexican radionovelas from the 1950s.
10 minutes
7
Place Luis Cabrera
In 1933, conservative and modernist architects argued publicly about the direction of Mexican architecture. The debate was not just aesthetic — it reflected competing ideas about national identity and aspiration, set against the practical reality of a city whose population was doubling every decade and desperately needed housing. This plaza sits in the middle of that argument.
10 minutes
8
El Parian
Step into El Parián, a hidden passageway transformed into a glamorous, 19th-century-style shopping arcade. Yet, the real magic lies just outside: directly opposite stands a vernacular tortillería. This stark contrast creates the perfect backdrop to explore a piece of history that most Mexicans curiously ignore: the ancient origin of the tortilla. As you watch the machinery at work, we will travel back twenty-five centuries to the first Zapotec state, where this culinary staple was invented around 500 BC, forever shaping the foundations of Mesoamerican life.
10 minutes
9
La Casa de Las Brujas
Built originally as a hotel, the Witches' House became an apartment building. As a piece of eclectic architecture it is notable in its own right, but it also stands as a physical record of the neighborhood's transition — from exclusively residential to a mixed-use area serving a broader part of the city.
5 minutes
10
Place de Rio de Janeiro
This plaza was part of Colonia Roma's original 1902 urban plan. The route has covered five centuries of history without leaving the neighborhood.