Photo courtesy Park Hyatt Mexico City
Mexico City‘s hotel scene is about to gain a serious contender for the top spot in the luxury market. When Park Hyatt Mexico City opens its doors on Campos Elíseos in the summer of 2026, it will mark the brand’s first property in the Mexican capital, bringing 155 rooms, 23 private residences, and a rooftop pool to one of Polanco’s quietest and most desirable stretches of real estate.
The property is positioned along the southern edge of the neighborhood, directly overlooking Bosque de Chapultepec, the 1,700-acre (688-hectare) urban park that has served as a retreat for everyone from Aztec rulers to Mexican presidents.
That proximity to green space, combined with a location in a district better known for private apartments and diplomatic compounds than tourist hotels, gives the Park Hyatt an unusual advantage: a sense of calm that most Mexico City hotels can only dream of.
A Third-Generation Architectural Vision
The project is being developed by SOMA Group, with architecture by Sordo Madaleno Arquitectos, a Mexico City-based studio founded in 1937 that now operates from both the capital and London, England. The building comprises two towers rising to approximately 472 feet (144 meters), with a metallic facade whose window openings and recessed terraces respond to the building’s interior program.
Javier Sordo Madaleno, vice president of SOMA and a third-generation architect within the family firm, has described the design as drawing from Mexican architectural styles of the 1970s while remaining firmly contemporary. Vertical circulation cores are grouped along the south side of the building, freeing up uninterrupted sightlines toward Polanco and Chapultepec from the north-facing rooms.
The hotel will occupy floors six through 18, while the 23 branded residences will run from the 19th to the 30th floor. Individual residences range from roughly 5,295 to 5,715 square feet (492 to 531 square meters), with terraces of up to 970 square feet (90 square meters). A signature penthouse tops out at over 11,260 square feet (1,046 square meters) with its own private entrance, concierge service, and 24-hour security.
The development is also pursuing LEED Gold certification, aiming for efficient energy consumption and minimal emissions across the property.
Rooms with Park Views and Private Terraces
Each of the 155 guest rooms and suites will include a separate bathtub and rain shower, a lounge area with sofa, and views of either Chapultepec or the Polanco skyline. Guests booking Club Access rooms receive additional amenities, a formula that has worked well at other Park Hyatt properties around the world.
Private terraces will offer the kind of outdoor space rarely found in urban luxury hotels. According to travel network Virtuoso, which has listed the property as a Preview Property, guests can also expect access to tennis and pickleball courts, a feature that sets the Park Hyatt apart from the city’s existing five-star offerings.
The hotel will include at least two restaurants, an espresso bar, a show kitchen, and an outdoor veranda lounge. One dining concept will focus on sustainably sourced Japanese cuisine, while a second draws from South American culinary traditions. A rooftop bar rounds out the food and beverage program, with agave-focused cocktails and a curated wine and spirits list.
The wellness offering includes a hydrotherapy spa with personalized treatments, a fitness center with floor-to-ceiling windows and city views, and the rooftop pool that will likely become the property’s most photographed feature. Canine companions are also welcome, with food and water bowls, a plush dog bed, and treats provided at check-in.
Filling a Gap in the Market
Sure, Mexico City has no shortage of luxury hotels. The Four Seasons Hotel Mexico City, the St. Regis Mexico City on Paseo de la Reforma, and the Ritz-Carlton all serve the high end of the market. But none of these belong to a hotel loyalty program with the reach of World of Hyatt, and the Park Hyatt brand’s emphasis on smaller, more intimate properties sets it apart from the city’s larger towers.
The new hotel also arrives as part of a broader Park Hyatt push into Mexico. The brand’s Park Hyatt Los Cabos at the Cabo del Sol resort community on the Baja California Sur coast opened in 2025, while Park Hyatt Cancún is also slated for 2026.
The Park Hyatt Mexico City will sit directly alongside the existing Hyatt Regency Mexico City, a 755-room convention-oriented tower that has operated on Campos Elíseos since 1987. The two properties will share a street address but serve very different guests, with the Park Hyatt targeting leisure and luxury travelers and the Regency continuing to focus on its established business and group clientele.
