Gallery
El Pueblo is designed and situated to ensure a fabulous stay, no matter how ambitious or relaxed your plans may be. Scroll through the photos below for a virtual tour – then come see for yourself.
Gallery
El Pueblo is designed and situated to ensure a fabulous stay, no matter how ambitious or relaxed your plans may be. Scroll through the photos below for a virtual tour – then come see for yourself.
El Pueblo
At El Pueblo the rooms are so spacious, the common areas so varied, and the garden so large and lush, that you will have a full experience even if you don’t even leave the grounds. Roll out of your king size bed for a big breakfast, then park yourself in a hammock, recliner, chaise longue. Take a swim in the 25-meter freshwater pool if you are feeling ambitious.
Friends gathered on Casa Sur veranda
Gourmet breakfast in main dining room
Pitahaya agua fresca
Casa Norte atrium
Friends gathered on Casa Sur veranda
Gourmet breakfast in main dining room
Pitahaya agua fresca
Casa Norte atrium
The Neighborhood
The Centro Histórico represents the extent of city of Mérida as you would have found it a century ago. The length and breadth of Centro is eminently walkable; stroll of just a few blocks in any direction from El Pueblo to reach any number of pedestrian-friendly destinations.
To the South, you will find the huge Mercado Lucás de Gálvez, concert halls, and the Plaza Grande — the original centre of town even in Pre-Hispanic times.
A walk two blocks west brings you to Calle 60, lined on both sides with hundreds of restaurants and galleries, including Parque Santa Lucía and Paseo 60.
To the immediate North you have Méridá signature boulevard, Paseo de Montejo, lined with grand old homes, wide sidewalks and bike lanes, and closed to vehicular traffic every Sunday for La Bici Ruta.
Walk three blocks to the West to arrive at the grand new Parque La Plancha.
Sunset on Calle 49
Christmas on the Remate
Street vendor by the Remate
La Bici Ruta
Sunset on Calle 49
Christmas on the Remate
Street vendor by the Remate
La Bici Ruta
Mérida
Cancún did not exist prior to 1971. Mérida, by contrast, was founded almost 500 years ago — in a spot that had been occupied by the Maya people for millennia prior to the arrival of the Spaniards. While Mérida boasts a thriving tourism and service economy, it is a real place with a long, fascinating history, offering a range of experiences that Resort México cannot.
Teatro Peón Contreras
Pre-Hispanic plant-based cooking class
Cathedral San Ildefonso
El Monumento a la Patria
Teatro Peón Contreras
Pre-Hispanic plant-based cooking class
Cathedral San Ildefonso
El Monumento a la Patria
Yucatán Peninsula
Mérida is not only the capital of the State of Yucatán, but effectively the capital of the entire peninsula. Amazing destinations — the dazzling Maya site of Uxmal, the charming beach town of Sisal, hundreds of cenotes, elegant converted haciendas — are close enough to the city that they can be visited in an easy day trip. El Pueblo is just a few blocks away from the tram connecting the city to the Tren Maya, which makes the entire peninsula accessible by rail, including the Riviera Maya and many other archaeological sites, including Chichén Itzá.
The Riviera Maya
Flamingos in Celestún
Pyramid of the Magician at Uxmal
Birding near Chichen Itzá
The Riviera Maya
Flamingos in Celestún
Pyramid of the Magician at Uxmal
Birding near Chichen Itzá