
Octavia Casa
When you book Octavia Casa in Mexico City, Mexico through our Tablet Plus partnership, your stay includes daily breakfast and room upgrades.
Exclusive Booking Perks
- Upgrade to next room category, based upon availability at check-in
- Complimentary welcome drink per guest, per stay (wine, beer or soft drink)
- Welcome treat in room on arrival
- Complimentary daily continental breakfast (max 2 guests)
Location
Octavia Casa sits in Hipódromo Condesa, the westward sibling of Colonia Roma and one half of Mexico City's Condesa–Roma district, a creative enclave where jacaranda-lined avenues meet Art Deco facades and sidewalk cafés spill onto tree-shaded streets. This is the kind of neighbourhood where pet lovers parade poodles at dusk and young architects debate over mezcal in century-old cantinas. The area unfolds around Parque México and Parque España, two lush ovals that anchor the rhythm of daily life: morning joggers, afternoon chess games, evening taco stands perfuming the air with cilantro and lime.
The city itself sprawls across the Valley of Mexico at 2,240 metres, a high plateau where the light feels crystalline and thin. Built atop the ruins of Aztec Tenochtitlan after 1521, the capital now pulses with nine million residents and a creative energy that draws designers, chefs, and writers from across Latin America. The Historic Centre lies five kilometres east, its Zócalo and colonial palaces tracing the Spanish conquest. The Luis Barragán House and Studio, two kilometres north, exemplifies the mid-century modernist vision that reshaped the city's suburbs after the Second World War.
Benito Juárez International Airport sits eleven kilometres east; a taxi or rideshare takes thirty minutes outside rush hour. The neighbourhood itself rewards walking: independent bookshops, vintage clothing boutiques, and corner pulquerías cluster within blocks of the property.
Start with Esquina Común, a one-starred creative Mexican kitchen just 400 metres away where reservations open only via Instagram direct message and tables fill weeks ahead. The address is no longer secret, but the thrill of securing one remains. Further afield, Quintonil (2.8 kilometres north) holds two stars for Chef Jorge Vallejo's contemporary Mexican menu named for an Oaxacan herb, while Pujol (3.1 kilometres) showcases Enrique Olvera's modern technique in a dining room that has become synonymous with the city's culinary ascent. Both merit the taxi ride for tasting menus that reinterpret mole, masa, and coastal seafood with precision.
The Condesa–Roma district itself is designated a Barrio Mágico Turístico for good reason. Valkirias Bazar, 600 metres away, gathers vintage finds and local craftwork under one roof. Chapultepec Castle, the hilltop palace where Maximilian and Carlota once held court, stands four kilometres west and now houses the National Museum of History. The Aztec sun stone, carved in 1510, is displayed at the National Museum of Anthropology nearby. Book a morning at the Luis Barragán House and Studio to see the architect's interplay of light and volcanic stone firsthand; guided tours run daily.
Winter (November through February) brings crisp mornings and brilliant afternoons, temperatures hovering between 7°C and 22°C. The sky sharpens to cobalt; cafés fill with sunlight-seekers nursing café de olla. Rain is nearly absent, making this the prime window for outdoor markets and long walks through Chapultepec.
Spring (March to May) warms gradually, peaking near 26°C in April before the rains begin in earnest. Jacarandas bloom in violet clouds along Avenida Amsterdam. By late May, afternoon thunderstorms roll in, brief but dramatic, clearing the air and leaving puddles that reflect the city's neon glow.
Summer and early autumn (June through September) bring the heaviest rainfall, though showers typically arrive in late afternoon and rarely disrupt morning plans. Temperatures stay mild, rarely exceeding 23°C. October dries out and cools, the light softening into golden hour as Día de Muertos preparations fill the markets with marigolds and sugar skulls.
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