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We present the first of many tours that we will do walking, this time we also did it by bicycle.
We walk through the Plaza de la Constitución, the Madero walker, the Juarez avenue and the Republic avenue to reach the square of the same name where the monument to the Revolution is located, I hope you enjoy it, do not forget to help us continue making these videos by subscribing to our channel!
The Palace of Fine Arts is a cultural venue located in the Historic Center of Mexico City, considered the most important in the manifestation of the arts in Mexico and one of the most renowned opera houses in the world. This has been the scene and witness of shocking events both artistic, social and political; Its construction dates from the end of Porfirio Díaz's mandate, commissioned by the Mexican president on the occasion of the centenary of the beginning of the Independence of Mexico, but was inaugurated until September 29, 1934 after the outbreak of the Mexican Revolution. As an institution, it depends on the National Institute of Fine Arts (INBA), part of the Ministry of Culture of the federal government. In 1987 a UNESCO World Heritage monument was declared by UNESCO.
Inside it houses various stages and rooms for the practice and exhibition of works. The Palace of Fine Arts Museum and the National Museum of Architecture are housed inside, the first permanently exhibiting 17 mural works by seven national artists executed from 1928 to 1963, including Diego Rivera, David Alfaro Siqueiros and José Clemente Orozco, being the oldest in the country dedicated to the national plastic production. It also hosts the National Symphony Orchestra, the National Opera Company (Opera of Fine Arts), the National Dance Company and the Mexican Folkloric Ballet of Amalia Hernández.
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Francisco I. Madero Street is one of the main access roads to the Historic Center of Mexico City. The street starts from the Lázaro Cárdenas Central Axis, as a continuation of Avenida Juárez and runs in the direction of Poniente to Oriente, leading to the Plaza de la Constitución or Zócalo capitalino.
It owes its name in honor of Francisco I. Madero, anti-election politician and later President of the Republic, one of the most important characters of the Mexican Revolution.
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The Monument to the Revolution is an architectural work and a mausoleum dedicated to the commemoration of the Mexican Revolution. It is the work of the architect Carlos Obregón Santacilia, who took the structure of the Hall of Lost Steps of the ill-fated Federal Legislative Palace of the French architect Émile Bénard to build the monument, concluded in 1938. He is currently one of the most recognizable in Mexico City , and is part of a group consisting of the monument itself, the Republic Square and the National Museum of the Revolution. It is located in the Tabacalera neighborhood of the Cuauhtémoc mayor's office, near the Historic Center of Mexico City.
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