• San Miguelito

    Conjunto Sur
    Mauricio Marat / INAH-Dirección de Medios de Comunicación
  • San Miguelito

    Estructura piramidal
    Mauricio Marat / INAH-Dirección de Medios de Comunicación
  • San Miguelito

    Vista lateral del Palacio Chaak
    Mauricio Marat / INAH-Dirección de Medios de Comunicación
  • San Miguelito

    Conjunto de los Dragones
    Mauricio Marat / INAH-Dirección de Medios de Comunicación
  • San Miguelito

    Camino a la Zona Arqueológica
    INAH-Zona Arqueológica San Miguelito
  • San Miguelito

    Detalle del Palacio Chaak
    INAH-Zona Arqueológica San Miguelito
  • San Miguelito

    Conjunto Sur
    INAH-Zona Arqueológica San Miguelito

Visit us

San Miguelito

Opening hours
Tuesday to Sunday from 09:00 to 16:30 h - Last access 16:00 h
Fee
$100.00
Buy tickets
Adress

Kukulcan Boulevard Km 16 + 500, Hotel Zone, Cancun, Municipality of Benito Juarez, Quintana Roo.

Access

From downtown Cancun, take Boulevard Kukulkan towards the Hotel Zone until km 16. The site is on the left side.

Services
Cloakroom
Boosktore
Information module
Toilets
Guided tours
Important
  • Discount for Mexican students and teachers
  • Discount for senior Mexican citizens
  • Sundays free for mexican citizens
  • Admission includes museum fee
  • No smoking
  • No entry with food
  • Pets not allowed

San Miguelito

San Miguelito

San Miguelito

An ancient city, eight centuries old, where explorers found an impressive palace of the god Chaac, almost 50 burial sites and a great variety of artefacts, some local and others imported from afar (made of obsidian, quartz, ceramic, coral and conch shell), testifying to its commercial importance.


The site is accessed by a pathway which starts from the lower hallway of the Cancun Archeological Museum. San Miguelito consists of at least four groups made up principally of structures which supported timber and palm houses long ago. It is thought that large families lived there during the final years before the arrival of the Spanish conquistadors.

The site’s most important complexes are presided over by palaces with large interior spaces and vestibules with columns supporting flat roofs, which were a novel architectural feature of buildings on the east coast of Quintana Roo during the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. As they had open precincts, these buildings served a public purpose. They were equipped with benches and they faced an altar at which public ceremonies and celebrations were held.

The most important structure in San Miguelito is a base which was remodeled at least three times during its pre-Hispanic occupation. Upon this are preserved the remains of a temple which was once decorated with a cornice and painted mainly in red and blue. The base has a stairway with balustrades typical of the Postclassic period, and judging by the direction the pyramid is facing, it would appear to be related to the nearby site of El Rey.

The complex has managed to combine the original vegetation of San Miguelito with the gardens of the Cancun Archeological Museum, and so visitors can walk from one to the other, which is very pleasing.


 


 

Conjunto de los Dragones

Conjunto de los Dragones

Four palace buildings, four shrines with an altar and two houses are preserved in this complex. One of these buildings, which possibly was part of a ceremonial complex, has remains of a mural painting that evokes the sea, so important for the Mayas of San Miguelito.

Palacio Chaak

It is a large building with large interior spaces and a vestibule with columns that supported a flat roof, an important architectural novelty of the sites on the eastern coast of Quintana Roo during the Late Postclassic.

Conjunto Sur

Conjunto Sur

It is a residential group that preserves six houses with two small altars and a palace with two halls, which had the characteristic vestibule with columns and flat roof that was very popular in the buildings of the time.

Estructura piramidal

It is the most monumental structure of San Miguelito. It is a base that was remodeled at least three times during its pre-Hispanic occupation, and on which are preserved the remains of a temple that was once decorated with a cornice and painted predominantly red and blue.

  • Dirección del Centro INAH
    Margarito Molina Rendón
    margarito_molina@inah.gob.mx
    +52 (983) 837 2411
    Administración del Centro INAH
    Carlos Alberto Esperón Vilchis
    carlos_esperon@inah.gob.mx
    +52 (998) 885 3542

  • Camino a la Zona Arqueológica
    INAH-Zona Arqueológica San Miguelito
  • Detalle del Palacio Chaak
    INAH-Zona Arqueológica San Miguelito
  • Conjunto de los Dragones
    INAH-Dirección de Medios de Comunicación Mauricio Marat
  • Vista lateral del Palacio Chaak
    INAH-Dirección de Medios de Comunicación Mauricio Marat
  • Conjunto Sur
    INAH-Dirección de Medios de Comunicación Mauricio Marat
  • Estructura piramidal
    INAH-Dirección de Medios de Comunicación Mauricio Marat
  • Conjunto Sur
    INAH-Zona Arqueológica San Miguelito

    Contacto

    museomayacancun@inah.gob.mx
    +52 (983) 837 2411
    +52 (983) 837 0796
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