MexicoCity.cdmx.gob.mx

Casa de la Acequia

_

The Casa de la Acequia is a colonial building on the pedestrian-only calle San Jerónimo at the intersection with Isabel la Católica. The acequias constituted a complex network of canals that distributed agricultural produce throughout the ancient island city. These began seriously drying up only in the 18th century. They were later covered over entirely.

A traffic control tower regulated canoes and barge traffic in the vicinity of the canal, called the Acequia de Rodán during the colonial period. Today it’s the calle Regina. The tower later was developed into this house which surrounds a patio following the contours of that original canal.  The same patio may have had loading docks for receiving produce sent from as far south as Xochimilco. The architecture surrounding the patio is of great interest to architects and historians for just this reason. Some remains of the canal also survive beneath the dining room.

The present house was greatly enlarged in the 18th century. At the time, it was the property of the Count of Guadalupe del Peñasco. The building is said to have later been used as a beguinage, that is, as a home for late Alumbrado nuns, possibly of a late gnostic order. They may have been, more simply, not affiliated with one of the dominant orders of the time.

The Casa de la Acequia came to later house the Ateneo Español, that is, the Spanish Athenaeum. It was founded by Spanish refugees arriving in the wake of the Spanish Civil War and the rise of the Franco regime. Still very well preserved, today the building is used for conferences, exhibitions, and book presentations and today sometimes works as a cultural center. The building is presently home to the Madero Librería, an antique bookseller, who may allow you to glimpse at least some of the interior.

 

Sources cited on this page:
Centro Histórico, 200 lugares imprescindibles

Héctor de Mauleón; Casa de la Acequia

La Jornada, Ángeles González Gamio;
La Casa de la Acequia

  • San Jerónimo 36, Centro Histórico, Cuauhtémoc, 06080 CDMX

Claustro de Sor Juana / San Jerónimo Convent

The convent that sheltered the brilliant Sor Juana for 27 years of her life is today a University and Museum.

Casas de los Camilos o las Calderas

A breathtaking stretch of late-18th-century housing leaves almost nothing to the imagination.

Hospital Concepción Béistegui Museum

More than a sunny backdrop to a coffee shop, it's a museum and retirement home too.

Regina Coeli Church & Convent

One of the City's most serene church interiors is on one of the most raucous of City Center streets.

Casa de la Memoria Indómita

Quiet on one of the City's most boisterous streets, the Casa carries on the struggle.