Safety Score: 3,6 of 5.0 based on data from 9 authorites. Meaning please reconsider your need to travel to Mexico.
Travel warnings are updated daily. Source: Travel Warning Mexico. Last Update: 2024-04-25 08:17:04
Delve into San Lucas
The district San Lucas of in Ciudad de México is a subburb in Mexico a little south-east of Mexico City, the country's capital town.
If you need a hotel, we compiled a list of available hotels close to the map centre further down the page.
While being here, you might want to pay a visit to some of the following locations: Mexico City, Nezahualcoyotl, Los Reyes Acaquilpan, Chicoloapan and Ixtapaluca. To further explore this place, just scroll down and browse the available info.
Local weather forecast
Todays Local Weather Conditions & Forecast: 26°C / 79 °F
Morning Temperature | 19°C / 66 °F |
Evening Temperature | 27°C / 81 °F |
Night Temperature | 21°C / 70 °F |
Chance of rainfall | 0% |
Air Humidity | 23% |
Air Pressure | 1015 hPa |
Wind Speed | Moderate breeze with 11 km/h (7 mph) from North-East |
Cloud Conditions | Few clouds, covering 16% of sky |
General Conditions | Light rain |
Friday, 26th of April 2024
27°C (81 °F)
24°C (76 °F)
Few clouds, gentle breeze.
Saturday, 27th of April 2024
27°C (81 °F)
23°C (74 °F)
Scattered clouds, gentle breeze.
Sunday, 28th of April 2024
27°C (81 °F)
25°C (78 °F)
Sky is clear, gentle breeze, clear sky.
Hotels and Places to Stay
Krystal Urban Aeropuerto
City Express Cd Mex Central Ab
Courtyard Mexico City Revolucion
Hotel de Cortes
FIESTA INN PLAZA CENTRAL AEROPUERTO
RAMADA VA VENETO MEXICO CITY S
City Express Cd Mex Aeropuerto
HOTEL EX HACIENDA VALENCIA
FIESTA INN CANCUN LAS AMERICAS
Hotel Grand Prix
Videos from this area
These are videos related to the place based on their proximity to this place.
Árbol de los Deseos en Iztapalapa - 2013
Les traigo este video de la liberación de los globos del "Árbol de los deseos". Este Árbol de globos fue el mas alto del mundo en el 2012. Este árbol tuvo cerca de 150000 globos metalizados...
Metro de la Ciudad de México: Entrando a la estación Iztapalapa
Habiendo terminado la representación de la crucifixión [ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9tuP0JpA-sg ], busqué urgentemente algún "cyber" http://maps.google.com.mx/?ie=UTF8&ll=19.35752 ...
Quiero Casa Matisse (Iztapalapa) – Departamentos en Ermita Iztapalapa
Departamentos de 2 y 3 recámaras, 1 y 2 baños completos, estacionamiento incluido, conoce más sobre este proyecto en http://quierocasa.com.mx/matisse.php o llámanos al 5545 2272.
Iztapalapa y sus raices - parte 6
La delegación más habitada de la Ciudad de México, y su situación actual.
Carnaval iztapalapa, San Pablo
Las fiestas de iztapalapa, previo a semana santa, El Carnaval es diferente, puro desmadre.
Videos provided by Youtube are under the copyright of their owners.
Attractions and noteworthy things
Distances are based on the centre of the city/town and sightseeing location. This list contains brief abstracts about monuments, holiday activities, national parcs, museums, organisations and more from the area as well as interesting facts about the region itself. Where available, you'll find the corresponding homepage. Otherwise the related wikipedia article.
Iztapalapa
Iztapalapa is one of the Federal District of Mexico City’s 16 boroughs, located on the east side of the entity. The borough is named after and centered on the formerly independent municipality of Iztapalapa, which is officially called Iztapalapa de Cuitláhuac for disambiguation purposes. The rest is made up of a number of other communities which are governed by the city of Iztapalapa.
Metro Escuadrón 201
Escuadrón 201 is a metro station in Mexico City, Mexico. It is located in the city's eastern Iztapalapa delegación, close to the intersection of Eje 3 Oriente (Axis 3 - East) and Eje 8 Sur (Axis 8 - South). The station was named in honor of Escuadrón 201, the Mexican military aviation unit that assisted the United States in the Philippines during World War II. The logo of the station is the insignia of Escuadrón 201. It was opened on 20 July 1994.
Metro Xola
Metro Xola is a station on Line 2 of the Mexico City Metro system. It is located in the Colonia Moderna and Colonia Alamos districts of the Benito Juárez borough of Mexico City, directly south of the city centre on Calzada de Tlalpan. It is a surface station. The station logo shows a coconut palm tree. The name comes from the 19th century "Xola" hacienda that existed in the current site of the station.
Metro Viaducto
Viaducto is a station on Line 2 of the Mexico City Metro system. It is located in the border of Benito Juárez and Iztacalco boroughs of Mexico City, south of the city centre on Calzada de Tlalpan. It is a surface station. It is represented by the stylised logo of a cloverleaf interchange, which represents crossing of Calzada de Tlalpan (a former Aztec road) and Viaducto Miguel Alemán, a crosscutting freeway that runs across the middle of the Federal District which opened in September 1950.
Metro Iztacalco
Metro Iztacalco is a station along Line 8 of the Mexico City Metro. Metro Iztacalco is in the Iztacalco borough of the Mexican Federal District. Its logo represents the monastery of San Matías, the first church on Calzada de la Viga. The Nahuatl toponym Iztacalco means "in the house of salt". The station was opened on 20 July 1994. Like the other stations on this stretch of Line 8, Metro Iztacalco stands on Avenida Francisco del Paso y Troncoso (eje 3-Ote).
Metro Coyuya
Metro Coyuya is a station on the Mexico City Metro. Metro Coyuya is on Line 8, between Metro Santa Anita and Metro Iztacalco. It is located in the Iztacalco borough, in the eastern portion of the Mexican Federal District, and serves the Colonia Tlazintla district and neighbourhoods surrounding Avenida Coyuya, Avenida Francisco del Paso y Troncoso (eje 3-Ote), and Avenida Plutarco Elías Calles (eje 4-Sur). A surface station, it was first opened to public passenger traffic on 20 July 1994.
Metro Villa de Cortés
Metro Villa de Cortés is a station on Line 2 of the Mexico City Metro system. It is located in the Benito Juárez borough of Mexico City, directly south of the city centre on Calzada de Tlalpan. It is a surface station. The station logo depicts a helmet of the type used by the Spanish conquerors who, led by Hernán Cortés, invaded the Aztec empire in the 16th century. The name of this station comes from the area in which it is now located, which was known as the Villa de Cortés in colonial times.
Cerro de la Estrella (archeological site)
Cerro de la Estrella is a mesoamerican archaeological site located in southeastern Central Mexico's Valley of Mexico, in the Iztapalapa delegación of the Mexican Federal District at an elevation of 2460 meters (8070ft) above sea level, hence its Summit is 224 m over the Valley of Mexico level. At the southeast edge of what was the Great Texcoco Lake. Historical sources establish that ancient inhabitants of the Mexican Plateau knew this place as Huizachtecatl.
Metro Apatlaco
Metro Apatlaco is a station along Line 8 of the metro of Mexico City. The station's logo is a house with hot water and steam inside of it. Apatlaco is a Nahuatl word that means "place of medicinal baths". The station was opened on 20 July 1994. Ridership at the station dipped during a swine flu panic in the spring of 2009.
Metro Aculco
Metro Aculco is a station along Line 8 of the metro of Mexico City. It is located under the bridge where the Trabajadoras Sociales (Eje 6 Sur) passes over the Eje 3 Ote in the Colonia Pueblo Aculco neighborhood if the Iztapalapa borough of Mexico City. The station's logo is a water wave in a canal. In Nahuatl it means "where the water twists". The name is also the name of the Aculco municipio in the State of Mexico. The station was opened on 20 July 1994.
Metro Atlalilco
Metro Atlalilco is a station along Line 8 and Line 12 of the metro of Mexico City. Atlalilco is a transfer station between the Line 12 and Line 8. It is located on the Calzada Ermita Iztapalapa in the Colonia Santa Isabel Industrial neighbourhood. The station's logo is a well of water. Atlalilco in Nahuatl means: "where water is kept". It opened for service along Line 8 on 20 July 1994.
Metro Iztapalapa
Metro Iztapalapa is a station along Line 8 of the metro of Mexico City. It is located on the Calzada Ermita Iztapalapa (also known as Eje 8 Sur) in the Colonia El Santuario neighborhood of Iztapalapa borough on the southeast side of the city. The station's logo is a sun, representing the ceremony that is celebrated in Iztapalapa every year of the birth of the new sun. The station was opened 20 July 1994.
Metro Cerro de la Estrella
Metro Cerro de la Estrella (English: Hill of the Stars) is an underground station along Line 8 of the metro of Mexico City. The station is located along the Calzada Ermita-Iztapalapa and serves the Colonia Hidalgo y Mina neighborhood within the Iztapalapa borough on the east side of the city. The station is named for the Cerro de la Estrella – a mesoamerican archaeological site located nearby. It was opened on 20 July 1994.
Metro UAM-I
Metro UAM-I is a station along Line 8 of the Mexico City Metro. The station's logo is the logo of the Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana campus Iztapalapa, which is close to the station. The station was opened on 20 July 1994. Until September 1996 this station was known as La Purísima, the name of the street where it is located. The previous logo was the silhouette of the Virgin of Guadalupe.
Metro Constitución de 1917
Constitución de 1917 is a terminal station at the southeastern end of line 8 of the Mexico City Metro in Mexico City, Mexico. The logo of the station depicts a quill above a document dated 1917 and is intended to represent the Constitution of Mexico, which was adopted 5 February 1917. The station was opened on 20 July 1994.
Metro Canal de San Juan
Canal de San Juan is a station along Line A of the Mexico City Metro. The logo for the station depicts the bow of an Aztec canoe travelling through a canal. The station was opened on 12 August 1991.
Secretariat of the Navy (Mexico)
The Mexican Secretariat of the Navy (Spanish: Secretaría de la Marina, SEMAR) is a member of the federal executive cabinet with responsibility for managing the country's navy and marine forces. The secretary is appointed by the President of the Republic and heads the Secretariat of the Navy (Secretaría de Marina or SEMAR). Organizes, administers and prepares the Navy. Exercising sovereignty in territorial seas, its air space and Mexico's coasts.
Zoológico Los Coyotes
The Zoológico Los Coyotes is the third zoo in Mexico City, Mexico. It was opened on 2 February 1999 to complement the other zoos of the City of Mexico. It is built on a site that was previously a centre for seized animals, which it fell into disrepair. It mainly exhibits endemic and native fauna of Mexico including two coyotes, the species that the zoo is named after.
XHUPC-FM
XHUPC-FM also known as El Politécnico en Radio, is a radio station located in Mexico City, operated by the Superior School of Mechanical and Electrical Engineering (ESIME) Culhuacán, one of the schools of the National Polytechnic Institute.
Central de Abasto, Mexico City
The Central de Abasto (Groceries Center) is Mexico City’s main wholesale market for produce and other foodstuffs run similarly to traditional public markets. It was constructed to be the meeting point for producers, wholesalers, retailers and consumers for the entire country. Located in the eastern borough of Iztapalapa, it is the most important commercial establishment in Mexico and the largest of its kind in the world.
La Nueva Viga Market
La Nueva Viga Market is the largest seafood market in Mexico and the second largest in the world after the Tsukiji fish market in Japan. It is located in Mexico City far inland from the coast, because of historical patterns of commerce in the country. The market handles 1,500 tons of seafood daily, representing about 60% of the total market. Most of the seafood is distributed to the Mexico City metropolitan area and the states surrounding it, but there is distribution to other states and abroad.
Pueblo Culhuacán
Pueblo Culhuacán is an officially designated neighborhood of the Iztapalapa borough of Mexico City, which used to be a major pre Hispanic city. Ancient Culhuacán was founded around 600 CE and the site has continuously occupied since. The city was conquered by the Aztecs in the 15th century, but the Aztecs considered the city to have status with early rulers marrying into Culhua nobility to legitimize themselves.
Cerro de la Estrella National Park
Cerro de la Estrella National Park is centered on the Cerro de la Estrella mountain which is located entirely within Mexico City, in the borough of Iztapalapa. It was originally designated in 1938 with 1,100 hectares, but the growth of the city has encroached on it and left it with less than 200 hectares.
Carnivals of Iztapalapa
The Carnivals of Iztapalapa are various celebrations of Carnival which occur in the Mexico City borough of Iztapalapa. They are what remain of Carnival celebrations brought to Mexico City by the Spanish but subsequently suppressed by Inquisition authorities. There are individual celebrations in various communities, but for the close of Carnival, these communities come together for an event that can draw up to 200,000 people.
Passion Play of Iztapalapa
Passion Play of Iztapalapa is an annual event during Holy Week in the Iztapalapa borough of Mexico City. It one of the oldest and most elaborate passion plays in Mexico as well as the best known, covered media both in Mexico and abroad. Unlike others in Latin America, its origins are not in the colonial period but rather a cholera epidemic in the 19th century, which gave rise to a procession to petition relief.