5 Best Sights in San Angel, Mexico City

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

Plaza San Jacinto

San Angel Fodor's Choice

This picturesque plaza lined with palatial 18th- and 19th-century homes as well as a number of galleries, boutiques, and restaurants constitutes the heart of San Ángel. On the north side of the plaza, the superb arts-and-crafts market Bazaar Sábado is held all day Saturday, and just west up Calle Benito Juarez there's an additional covered market on weekends where you can find less expensive knickknacks and goods. Continue a block down the hill along shop-lined Calle Madero to reach Plaza del Carmen, a smaller park with pathways and benches where still more artists sell their works on Saturday. A memorial plaque on Plaza San Jacinto's west side lists the names of about 50 Irish soldiers from St. Patrick's Battalion who helped Mexico during the "unjust North American invasion" of 1847. These men had been enticed to desert the ranks of U.S. General Zachary Taylor by appeals to the historic and religious ties between Spain and Ireland, siding with the Mexicans in the Mexican-American War. Following their capture by U.S. forces, all were hanged (16 of them on Plaza San Jacinto). If the crowds around the Plaza become a little overwhelming (as often happens on Saturday), walk down quiet, cobblestone Calle de la Amargura, behind Bazaar Sábado, toward Avenida Revolución. It's a lovely lane that's absent of vendors and leads past several beautiful homes.

Museo Soumaya Plaza Loreto

San Angel

The Plaza Loreto branch of the famed art museum in Polanco contains several huge exhibition rooms set inside the upper level of a colonial-era warehouse building that now houses shops and restaurants. It's a bit south of the heart of San Ángel, and not necessarily worth a trip all on its own, but admission is free and the exhibits are quite interesting and include an extensive look at the life and work of renowned Mexican architect Pedro Ramírez Vázquez (of Estadio Azteca and Museo Nacional de Antropologia fame). There are also wonderful collections of Venetian paintings, Flemish tapestries, and early Mexican photography.

Rio de la Magdalena at Av. Revolución, Mexico City, 01090, Mexico
55-1103–9866
Sight Details
Free

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Parque de la Bombilla

San Angel

At the eastern edge of the neighborhood, not far from the border with Coyoacán, this handsome park is anchored by a striking art deco obelisk monument to Álvaro Obregón, the much-lauded general of the Mexican Revolution and 39th president of Mexico. In 1928, shortly after his reelection to the presidency, Obregón was assassinated while dining in La Bombilla restaurant, which stood exactly where the monument and park are today—they opened seven years after his death, in 1935. A long, shallow reflecting pool frames the monument, which is illuminated dramatically at night, and is surrounded by beautifully tended gardens and rows of trees. Rife with benches, the park is a perfect place to enjoy a picnic or relax with a book; it also makes a nice break if you're strolling to or from Coyoacán via Avendia Francisco Sosa. Along Avendia de la Paz, which forms the park's northern border, you'll find a series of well-stocked, bargain-filled used-book stalls. The streets immediately south of the park, a neighborhood known as Chimalistac, are lined with lovely old homes and gardens.

Av. de los Insurgentes Sur at Av. de la Paz, Mexico City, 01000, Mexico
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Free

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Parroquia de San Jacinto

San Angel
With its ancient dome and roof line rising above the shops that flank the west edge of Plaza San Jacinto, this church built by Dominican friars during the 16th and 17th centuries is best viewed from its gracious courtyard. From the beautiful gardens, you can take in the view of the church's distinctive facade of volcanic stone and chipped and faded salmon-pink stucco. It's a peaceful spot to relax and catch your breath after shopping around San Ángel, and the interior—with its ornate Spanish Rococo–style retablo behind the altar—is stunning.

Plaza de Los Arcángeles

San Angel
From Plaza San Jacinto, it's a leisurely 10-minute stroll through an elegant neighborhood of cobblestone streets to reach this tiny, tranquil park that few people, except for the residents of its surrounding homes, ever see. The verdant sliver of dense shrubbery, specimen trees, bougainvillas, and flower beds is laced with flagstone pathways and contains several statues as well as three ornate stone benches named for the three arcángeles for whom the little park is dedicated: San Miguel, San Gabriel, and San Rafael. Virtually free of car traffic, it's an idyllic place to sneak away from the crowds of weekend shoppers and briefly imagine life as a resident of this historic neighborhood.
2a Frontera 37, Mexico City, 01000, Mexico
Sight Details
Free

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