
First light through the laurels. Temozón Norte wakes up to the cool of dawn — the residents on the boulevard before the heat, the corner café firing up the espresso machine, the small specialty shop opening its doors before the malls.
Temozón Norte is the residential pole of modern Mérida — the corridor thirteen kilometers north of downtown that has absorbed the city's expansion over the past two decades and turned the henequén-era estates into the high-appreciation residential band of 2026. The neighborhood pairs proximity to the Mérida-Progreso highway and the bypass road with a fully built residential infrastructure: Marista University and Anáhuac Mayab sit inside the corridor, La Isla Mérida and The Harbor Mérida are five minutes away, the Yucatán Country Club and the Country Club fairways are ten minutes by car. Downtown Mérida and Paseo de Montejo are fifteen to twenty minutes south, the gulf coast at Progreso is twenty-five minutes north. Temozón Norte reads as the part of Mérida the residents who came for the modern residential side of the Yucateco capital settled into.
Inside Armoran, the project reads as a residential condominium scaled for the corridor — drawn around the Yucateco light. Each residence spans 603 to 1,033 square feet — one or two bedrooms, balcony space drawn for actual outdoor living, full-height openings that pull the natural light deep into the interior, kitchens drawn for someone who actually cooks rather than reheats. The materials are honest — wood, limestone, glass — and the building's density supports the kind of amenity floor that residents actually use.
Delivery in 2027. Entry pricing at $3,400,000 MXN. Armoran sits in Temozón Norte at the scale of a real residential condominium on the corridor — a project sized for the kind of community that supports a real amenity floor. For the buyer who came to Yucatán for the modern residential side of the capital at the one- or two-bedroom scale, this is one of the most considered new addresses in the neighborhood.
Temozón Norte is Mérida's largest residential growth corridor — a band of gated communities, mid-rise condo developments, and tree-lined avenues spreading north from the Anillo Periférico. The area built up rapidly over the past decade as Mérida's wealth migrated away from the Centro Histórico's colonial density, drawn by newer infrastructure, the proximity of La Isla and Altabrisa malls, top private schools, and the Star Médica hospital. Drive times reflect the trade-off: 15-20 minutes to Paseo de Montejo, 25 minutes to the airport, 35 minutes to Progreso's beach. Inventory here skews toward 1-2 bedroom condos in the $130K-$300K USD range — entry-level prices for the region — making it the default first-purchase neighborhood for both Mexican families relocating from CDMX and foreign buyers easing into Yucatán. Best for buyers who want practical Mérida living without committing to a colonial restoration project.
At Mexico Luxury Properties, we provide personalized guidance through every step of your purchase. Contact us for a private consultation, virtual tour, or to request the full development brochure.