Yucatán and Campeche States

We’ve compiled the best of the best in Yucatán and Campeche States - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

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  • 1. Casa de los Venados

    Centro

    A vintage mansion just south of Valladolid's central square contains Mexico's largest private collection of folk art. Rooms around the gracious courtyard contain some 3,000 pieces, with Día de los Muertos (Day of the Dead) figures being a specialty. The assemblage is impressive; even without it, though, the house would be worth touring. This hacienda-style building dates from the early 17th century, and restoration was engineered by the same architect who designed Mérida's ultramodern Gran Museo del Mundo Maya (don't worry—the results here preserved its colonial elegance). Casa de los Venados opens to the public each morning for a 90-minute bilingual tour. Just show up, no reservations needed. Admission is a bargain, and all proceeds help fund local health-care projects.

    Calle 40 No. 204, Valladolid, Yucatán, 97780, Mexico
    985-856–2289

    Sight Details

    Rate Includes: MX$70
  • 2. Casa de los Venados

    A vintage mansion just south of Valladolid's central square contains Mexico's largest private collection of folk art. Rooms around the gracious courtyard contain some 3,000 pieces, with Día de los Muertos (Day of the Dead) figures being a specialty. The assemblage is impressive; even without it, though, the house would be worth touring. This hacienda-style building dates from the early 17th century, and restoration was engineered by the same architect who designed Mérida's ultramodern Gran Museo del Mundo Maya (don't worry—the results here preserved its colonial elegance). Casa de los Venados opens to the public each morning for a 90-minute bilingual tour. Just show up, no reservations needed. Admission is a bargain, and all proceeds help fund local health-care projects.

    Calle 40 No. 204, Valladolid, Yucatán, 97780, Mexico
    985-856–2289

    Sight Details

    Rate Includes: MX$70
  • 3. Casa Seis

    One of the city's earliest colonial homes now serves as a cultural center. Fully restored, its rooms are furnished with period antiques and a few well-chosen reproductions; original frescoes at the tops of the walls remain, and you can see patches of the painted "wallpaper" that once covered the walls, serving to simulate European trends in an environment where real wallpaper wouldn't adhere due to the humidity. There is a small coffee shop on-site, plus a gift shop selling products from Campeche. The Moorish courtyard is occasionally used as a space for exhibits and lectures. Activities occur here several evenings a week. Vivo Recuerdo, a musical/theater interpretation of Campeche's history, is presented Thursday through Sunday; Con Sabor a Chocolate, a chocolate-making demonstration, takes place on Friday and Saturday.

    Calle 57, 24000, Mexico
    981-816–1782

    Sight Details

    Rate Includes: House MX$30; Vivo Recurrdo MX$120; Con Sabor a Chocolate MX$90
  • 4. Mansión Carvajal

    Built in the early 20th century by one of the Yucatán's wealthiest plantation owners, Fernando Carvajal Estrada, this eclectic mansion is a reminder of the city's heyday, when Campeche was the peninsula's only port. Local legend insists that the art nouveau staircase with Carrara marble steps and iron balustrade, built and delivered in one piece from Italy, was too big and had to be shipped back and redone. These days the mansion is filled with government offices—you'll have to stretch your imagination a bit to picture how it once was.

    Calle 10 No. 584, 24000, Mexico
    981-816–7419

    Sight Details

    Rate Includes: Free, Closed weekends
  • 5. Yaxcopoil

    Yaxcopoil (yash-co-po-il), a restored 17th-century hacienda, makes a nice change of pace from visiting Maya sites. The main building, with its distinctive Moorish double arch at the entrance, has been used as a film set and is one of the best-known henequen plantation in the region. The great house's rooms—including library, kitchen, dining room, drawing room, and salons—are fitted with late-19th-century European furnishings. You can tour these, along with the chapel, the storerooms, and the machine room used in processing henequen. In the museum, you'll see pottery and other artifacts recovered from the still-unexplored, classic-era Maya site for which the hacienda is named. Yaxcopoil has restored a one-room guesthouse for overnighters and will serve a continental breakfast and simple dinner of traditional tamales and horchata (rice-flavored drink) by prior arrangement. Reserve by visiting the website.

    Carretera 261, Km 186, Yucatán, 97101, Mexico
    999-900–1193

    Sight Details

    Rate Includes: MX$125
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