
Late morning at the city plaza. The general Mérida residential band is the part of the capital where the residents who came for the established identity of the city walk to the small corner restaurant — the second coffee at the corner café, the small specialty shops in full swing.
The established residential colonias of Mérida — Itzimná, Montecristo, Miguel Alemán, El Campestre, Montealban, the bands along the Periférico — are the neighborhoods that have anchored the city's modern residential identity since the henequén-era families moved out from the saturated downtown. Itzimná, for instance, traces its name back to the Mayan ceremonial center venerating Itzamná on the northern edge of T'Hó (the pre-conquest city beneath today's Mérida) and evolved from a 19th-century summer retreat into a residential colonia of elegant neoclassical mansions, parks, and a small central church. The corridor pairs walking-distance proximity to Paseo de Montejo, the historic downtown, and the modern commercial spine with the residential calm of established colonias that the residents have known for generations. The neighborhoods read as the part of Mérida the residents who chose the established residential identity of the city stay in.
Inside MB Resort, the project reads as a residential condominium scaled for the city — boutique density drawn around the Yucateco light. Each residence spans 538 square feet with a full-height opening to a balcony, a kitchen drawn for someone who actually cooks rather than reheats, and a bathroom organized around the natural light. The materials are honest — wood, limestone, glass — and the building's density was kept residential rather than commercial. The architecture supports the residential rhythm Mérida is built for.
Delivery in 2027. Entry pricing at $2,999,000 MXN. MB Resort sits in Mérida at the scale of a boutique residential condominium on the established corridor — a project for the buyer who came to Yucatán for the residential identity of the capital at the studio scale. For the buyer ready to settle in the city, this is one of the most considered new addresses in the neighborhood.
Mérida Centro covers the historic core south of Paseo de Montejo — the colonial grid of churches, plazas, restored haciendas, and the Plaza Grande. It's Mérida's cultural anchor: walking distance to the Cathedral, the Mercado Lucas de Gálvez, the Casa de Montejo, and the city's densest concentration of museums and restaurants. Real estate here is dominated by colonial restorations and adapted homes; new construction is rare and tightly regulated. Best for buyers who want true colonial character and walkable city living.
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.