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Parque Hundido

Coordinates: 19°22′41″N 99°10′44″W / 19.37806°N 99.17889°W / 19.37806; -99.17889
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The floral clock and flag.

Parque Hundido (official name is Parque Luis G. Urbina) is an urban park located in Benito Juárez, Mexico City. Its sunken landscape makes it an ideal noise-isolated spot for relaxation.

Its site was occupied by the brick-making company Ladrillera Nochebuena[1] from the mid 19th century until the beginning of Porfiriato, when the brick company moved away and the site became and empty depression. By 1910, several species of trees were planted creating the forest Nochebuena (Bosque de la Nochebuena). The area had been populated since late 18th century. However, the area was a collection of small towns and was -by then- far away from Mexico City itself. In the late 1930s, having paved and widened Avenida de los Insurgentes, the city government decided to use the beautiful setting of the forest, to create a new park. Its layout comprised gardens, walkways, a dual jai-alai/fronton court, and fountains for visitors to enjoy. In the late 1940s, when modern urbanization began around the park, it became known as the "Chinese Park", since landscaping evoked Chinese gardens, but this changed in 1972, when several reproductions of archaeological pieces distributed in various parts of the park were placed, though the layout was barely modified. Six routes were traced: the highlands, the Zapotec, Mayan, Olmec, Totonac, and Huastec, with artistic reproductions of precolombian stone work; each route was marked with a distinctively colored line on the floor. Today, this routes are followed by runners and joggers.

The main attraction is a floral clock, created by a prestigious watchmaker Relojes Centenario. It is located at the center of the park, near a flag mast (the highest point in the park) and at the end of a wide staircase that leads to Avenida de los Insurgentes via a small plaza named Plaza Dolores del Río, a tribute to one of the great divas of Hollywood and the Golden Age of Mexican cinema.

There is also an audiorama for up to 141 people, surrounded by lush vegetation, suitable for listening to classical music and poetry. It sometimes hosts events such as conferences, bingo games, some small-scale plays, workshops or jazz festivals. A special area is reserved for off-leash dogs. Also, a chess area and some concrete seating sturctures are also found in the park. In recent years, the children´s playground was upgraded, EcoBici stations were added, a bike track was added and a restrooms were added. The park is home to a large number of birds, squirrels and lizards. There is also a large number of cats which are fed and kept inside the park.

The corner of Insurgentes Avenue and Porfirio Díaz is also part of the park, has been a busy rush-hour crossing since the Mexico City Metrobus opened in 2006, and includes a fountain and a statue of Vicente Guerrero on a horse; in this corner, since the 1970s, every Sunday of the year a group of cyclists come together for bike rides. AC Bicycletero Movement, originated under the statue of the hero of Independence of Mexico, and under the name of Biciperros still perform Sunday walks free to all.

Notes

19°22′41″N 99°10′44″W / 19.37806°N 99.17889°W / 19.37806; -99.17889

References

  1. ^ Note: Nochebuena translates to Christmas Eve.