Altura Roma
Twenty-eight rooms around a tropical courtyard.

Altura Roma occupies a 1920s art-deco mansion at the heart of Mexico City's most talked-about neighborhood. Twenty-eight rooms arranged around a tropical courtyard, a ground-floor restaurant that sources from Mercado Medellín, and a mezcal bar that's become a neighborhood fixture. Walkable to Parque México, Condesa, and the museum circuit on Paseo de la Reforma.
Aguachile verde con callo de hacha, Baja scallops cured in lime, chile serrano, and chilaca, served counter-side at the Altura Table charcoal-grill bar with house-milled blue-corn tostadas.
A specimen ficus tree preserved in the central courtyard, planted in 1923 when the building was a private residence; its canopy shades three of the courtyard-facing suites.
- Restored 1920s art-deco mansion
- Tropical courtyard with specimen ficus and dappled shade
- Ground-floor restaurant sourced from Mercado Medellín
- Mezcal bar with 120 references from five Mexican states
Three blocks to Parque México, eight minutes to Mercado Medellín, twelve minutes to Licoreria Limantour, twenty minutes on foot to Paseo de la Reforma's museum corridor.
Our mezcal-bar lead runs a Tuesday-evening tasting where guests can sample agaves from the same five producers our chef cooks with. No cost for house guests; capped at eight people, reserved at check-in.
- · Full-service restaurant and mezcal bar
- · Rooftop plunge pool and solarium
- · Concierge with arts district expertise
- · Custom cycling and walking itineraries
What guests took home.
“Six nights at Altura Roma and we ate at the hotel restaurant three times, which we never do. The daily menu off Mercado Medellín is genuinely different every visit. The Tuesday mezcal tasting introduced us to agave producers we had never heard of; we left with three bottles shipped home.”
“I travel for work 140 nights a year. Business hotels do not make these calls; Altura did. The GM understood what I was interested in and opened a door I did not know existed. I have been back twice since, same room, same Tuesday mezcal.”