Historic Monuments Zone of Tlacotalpan (Mexico)

Historic Monuments Zone of Tlacotalpan (Mexico)

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Tlacotalpan, a Spanish colonial river port on Mexico's Gulf Coast, was founded in the mid-16th century. Now a UNESCO World Heritage Site, it has preserved its original urban fabric to a remarkable degree, with wide streets, colonnaded houses in a profusion of styles and colors, and public spaces and gardens.

Historic Monuments Zone of Tlacotalpan

Tlacotalpan, a Spanish colonial river port on Mexico's Gulf Coast, was founded mid-16th century. Now a UNESCO World Heritage Site, it has preserved its original urban fabric to a remarkable degree, with wide streets, colonnaded houses in a profusion of styles and colors, and public spaces and gardens.

Tlacotalpan is distinct from most urban settlements in Latin America because it is a river port set back from the ocean. The Historic Monuments Zone of Tlacotalpan represents the townscape of the Spanish colonial river port in the Mexican state of Veracruz.

The town was established in 1550 on an island in the Papaloapan River. From the colonial era to the 20th century, it was an important port, one of Latin America's few interior river ports. However, with the construction of the railroad, Tlacotalpan's importance faded.

Tlacotalpan is an exceptionally well-preserved Spanish colonial river port close to the coast of the Gulf of Mexico. The original urban plan, a checkerboard or grid pattern laid out by the Spanish in the mid-16th century, has been preserved to a remarkable degree.

Its wide streets are lined with colonnaded houses that reflect a vernacular Caribbean tradition with exuberant decoration and color. Many mature trees can be found in public parks, open spaces, and private gardens. Initially settled by the Spanish around 1550, the settlement reached its major brilliance in the 19th century.

The surviving grid pattern consists of 153 blocks covering 75 ha (185 acres) and divided into two distinct sectors, the more significant "Spanish" quarter in the west and the smaller "native" quarter in the east:

  • Seven wide streets create the larger quarter, or calles, laid out east-west parallel to the Papaloapan River and connected by narrow lanes or callejones.

  • The "public" sector, an irregularly shaped area found at the intersection of the two quarters, has commercial and official buildings and public open spaces.

Arcades of arched porticos line the streets. These arcades are supported by pillars varying in form and style from simple beams to fluted columns with elaborately ornamented bases, capitals and molded cornices. Tlacotalpan has retained an unusual density of high-quality historic buildings that provide architectural harmony and homogeneity.

While the basic vernacular style is found elsewhere on the Mexican Gulf Coast, Tlacotalpan's single-story houses exhibit distinctive manifestations that include a profusion of brightly colored exteriors and original features such as the roof coverings of curved terracotta tiles and the layouts with interior courtyards.