Franz Mayer Museum Courtyard
These museum grounds are a Dalai Lama-declared peace oasis.
The collector and philanthropist Franz Mayer was born in Germany in 1882 and moved to Mexico in 1905. An insatiable collector, he amassed a large number of paintings, tapestries, cutlery, and many other decorative arts during his lifetime. Following his death in 1975, the extensive collection was opened to the public as the Franz Mayer Museum, housed in a renovated 16th-century hospital building in Mexico City.
While the collection itself is notable for the impressive number of objects on display, it’s the museum’s inner courtyard and gardens that really set it apart. With massive trees covered in vines, a small central fountain with uneven tiles, and hardly a noise other than the chirping of birds and the almost-whispered conversations happening in its café, sitting here hardly seems like chaotic Mexico City. In fact the space is so well known as an oasis from the urban hustle and bustle that the museum offers a separate ticket to access it.
In 2004, Tenzin Gyatso, the 14th Dalai Lama, declared the museum’s courtyard and gardens a “Zone of Peace.” It is the only place in Mexico City to receive this recognition and is joined by El Charco del Ingenio in San Miguel de Allende.
Know Before You Go
Entry to the museum is MXN $60 and includes access to the courtyard. The ticket for the courtyard alone is MXN $10. Opening times for both are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday to Friday and 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on weekends. The museum is well known as the Mexico City home of the yearly World Press Photo winners' exhibition, usually in July to August. If you visit the museum, the Don Rogerio Casas Alatriste H. Library is a highlight for its thousands of ancient volumes housed in an ornate wood-paneled room.
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