Pasaje Jacaranda

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Plaza Jacaranda)

Pasaje Jacaranda, officially Plaza Comercial Plaza Jacaranda, designed by architects Ramón Torres Martínez and Héctor Velázquez Moreno, was an open-air shopping center opened in 1959 in the Zona Rosa, Mexico City, at the time considered the hippest and most cosmopolitan district of the city.

Etymology[edit]

Jacaranda mimosifolia is a common flowering tree in Mexico City.

History[edit]

Artists such as Carlos Monsivais, José Luis Cuevas and Alejandro Jodorowsky frequented the plaza. Its shops and art galleries had full-width, full-height glass windows facing an interior courtyard. It was located on the east side of Genova Street between Londres and Liverpool streets. Then-famous restaurants such as Le Bistrot and Alfredo's, as well as La Trucha Vagabunda, Toulouse-Lautrec,[1] and La Cabaña were located in Pasaje Jacaranda, as was the jewelry shop of jeweler and sculptor Ernesto Paulsen. As the neighborhood deteriorated in the 1980s and particularly as a result of the 1985 Mexico City earthquake, different buildings of the complex were torn down.[2][3] Kentucky Fried Chicken, music and computer stores, and other shops and restaurants are located on the site today.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Brosnahan, Tom (1983). Frommer's Mexico on $20 a Day. p. 258. ISBN 9780671452971. Retrieved 16 May 2022.
  2. ^ "Antes de que hubiera centros comerciales", El Universal
  3. ^ Louise Noelle, "Ramón Torres Martínez (1924-2008)", January 2008, Anales del Instituto de Investigaciones Estéticas vol. 30(93)