San Miguel de Allende is home to a bold young crowd of talent that’s thriving off the city’s brightly-hued heritage
Along the cobbled streets of San Miguel de Allende, vibrant colors seep from every corner; from homes painted in bright shades of blue and red, and doorways framed with marigolds, to La Parroquia de San Miguel Arcángel, a 17th-century church with a dusty pink neo-Gothic façade created in 1880 by self-taught architect Zeferino Gutiérrez. Bright hues can be found in less obvious places, too: a sunny yellow courtyard tucked behind old wooden doors or, hidden deep inside a former convent, a geometric mural by Mexican painter David Alfaro Siqueiros. Even the sky seems a richer shade of blue.
The Trip to San Miguel de Allende
![A mural by Mexican painter Pedro Martínez in the Ignacio Ramírez cultural centre](https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/YbociRLJpQ3VesFhQZqzrS-320-80.jpg)
‘It wasn’t always this colorful,’ says Daniel Valero, founder of local design studio Mestiz. ‘San Miguel has been through different phases, from being a prominent city, before independence, to a ghost town,’ he says of the historic settlement, located in the country’s central highlands, about a four-hour drive north of Mexico City.
Valero, who moved here from the capital five years ago, is one of the many creatives injecting new life here. ‘Recently, there has been a wave of young designers and artists refreshing things,’ says Laura Kirar, a US- and Mérida-based designer who opened hotel and design store Mesón Hidalgo in a 17th-century building in the town center. ‘There’s something magical about the city that draws creative people.’
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