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Cuauhtémoc metro station (Mexico City)

1969 establishments in MexicoAccessible Mexico City Metro stationsMexico City Metro Line 1 stationsMexico City Metro stations in Cuauhtémoc, Mexico CityRailway stations opened in 1969
Metro Cuauhtémoc platforms August 2018
Metro Cuauhtémoc platforms August 2018

Cuauhtémoc is a metro station on the Mexico City Metro Line 1. It is located at the northern extreme of Avenida Cuauhtémoc, in the Cuauhtémoc borough, in the center of Mexico City.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Cuauhtémoc metro station (Mexico City) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Cuauhtémoc metro station (Mexico City)
Ciclovía Chapultepec, Mexico City

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Wikipedia: Cuauhtémoc metro station (Mexico City)Continue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 19.425862 ° E -99.154701 °
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Address

Metro Cuauhtémoc

Ciclovía Chapultepec
06600 Mexico City
Mexico
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Metro Cuauhtémoc platforms August 2018
Metro Cuauhtémoc platforms August 2018
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ORT University Mexico

ORT University Mexico is a non-profit Institution founded in 2015 in Mexico City. Founded by board members Mauricio Merikanskas, Dan Ostrosky and Rogerio Casas Alatriste, and president Moises Salinas Fleitman, it was created in collaboration with the Private Assistance Board of Mexico City, in response to the growing need for professionalization in the social sector in Mexico. It is part of the global educational network of World ORT, an organization founded in Russia in 1880 and currently operating in over 60 countries, with more than 250,000 students. Its affiliated higher education institutions include Universidad ORT Uruguay, Los Angeles ORT College in the United States, and ORT Braude College of Engineering in Israel. ORT University Mexico is the only higher education institution in Latin America whose academic programs are fully focused on strengthening the social sector, also known as the third sector, with focus areas such as education, addiction prevention, environmental issues, human rights, and disability. The university collaborates with public institutions and NGOs, and maintains formal agreements with the Mexico City Private Assistance Board, the Instituto para la Atención y Prevención de las Adicciones (IAPA), and SEMARNAT (Mexico's Ministry of the Environment). In 2017, ORT University Mexico received a major USAID grant to train human rights organizations in the US-Mexico Border, . In December 2019, it received the **Alliances for Impact Award** from Fondo Unido México–United Way for its collaborative projects, and in May 2020, the university was recognized by *GANAR-GANAR* magazine as the best institution in Mexico to study social responsibility programs.

Colonia Juárez, Mexico City
Colonia Juárez, Mexico City

Colonia Juárez is one of the better-known neighborhoods or colonias in the Cuauhtémoc borough of Mexico City. The neighborhood is shaped like a long triangle with the boundaries: Paseo de la Reforma on the north, Avenida Chapultepec on the south, and Eje 1 Poniente (Avenida Bucareli) on the east. It is located between the historic center of Mexico City and the Chapultepec Park area, just south of the Paseo de la Reforma, which is one of Mexico's main commercial districts and its financial center. Since it was established in the late 19th century and early 20th as a haven for the wealthy leaving the city center, the colonia has been in near constant change. Most of the mansions built in the early part of its history have either been abandoned, converted into businesses or been taken over by squatters. However, it has had a cosmopolitan and intellectual reputation since its founding, which was reinforced with the influx of artists and intellectuals in the 1960s. The area has suffered deterioration since the 1980s, due to the 1985 Mexico City earthquake and other factors, but there have been efforts to restore the area's former prestige, including tourism promotion, historic conservation efforts and the urbanization of areas close to Paseo de la Reforma. The best known area of the colonia is Zona Rosa (Pink Zone) which is a tourist attraction for its artistic and intellectual reputation and is home to Mexico City's gay community. It is also home to "Little Seoul", center of the city's Korean immigrant population.