3 Best Sights in Benito Juárez, Mexico City

Background Illustration for Sights

We've compiled the best of the best in Benito Juárez - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Parque Hundido

Benito Juárez Fodor's Choice
Known as the “sunken park” in Spanish, this 22-acre green space is exceedingly quiet, especially considering that it lies on busy Insurgentes Avenue. With jogging and walking paths that curve through the lush greenery, fountains, and statues, the park is a good place to escape the city and its stresses. When you descend into the park via the ramp or steps, the temperature always seems to drop about 10 degrees: an excellent antidote for a hot day.
Av. Insurgentes between Av. Porifirio Díaz and Calle Millet, Mexico City, Mexico

Something incorrect in this review?

Parque de los Venados

Benito Juárez
This 25-acre park represents one of the best of Mexico City’s outdoor spaces. With more than 10,000 trees, a fountain, kids’ carnival rides and games, a dog park, and food trucks, it can make for a whole day of fun and people-watching. Weekdays see the park filled with dog-walkers, people exercising, and kids on carnival rides after school. Weekends turn into a full-on spectacle, packed with people lining its Talavera-tiled benches and snacking at the many different food stands. Though popular, it maintains its neighborhood friendly vibe and provides a lot of shade and oxygen to an otherwise not heavily treed zone.
Miguel Laurent between Av. Division del Norte and Dr. José María Vertiz, Mexico City, Mexico

Something incorrect in this review?

Zona Arqueológica de Mixcoac

Benito Juárez

Located relatively close to the city center in the San Pedro de los Pinos colonia, near San Ángel and Del Valle, this important archaeological site is on what centuries ago was the southwestern shore of Lake Texcoco, an area fed by streams from the western mountains. Its name, which in the Nahuatl language of the Mexica who resided here means "viper of the cloud," is believed to refer to the swirl of stars above that we call the Milky Way. The physical structure preserved at this site is relatively young, having been inhabited from around AD 900 to 1521. One of Mexico's smallest archaeological sites (it's just under 2 acres), Mixcoac only opened to the public for visits in summer 2019, under the aegis of Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia (INAH). Visitors can tour the remaining structures, which include a central courtyard surrounded by east and west platforms, with a ceremonial plaza, residential rooms, and other spaces.

Calle Pirámide 7, Mexico City, 03800, Mexico
Sight Details
Free

Something incorrect in this review?

Recommended Fodor's Video