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Estadio GNP Seguros (formerly Foro Sol)
stadium

Estadio GNP Seguros (formerly Foro Sol)

Mexico City, CDMX · Capacity: 65,000

Opened:1993
Capacity:65,000
Location:Mexico City, CDMX
Home:Tigres de San Luis

About Estadio GNP Seguros (formerly Foro Sol)

Mexico City's largest dedicated concert stadium, inside the Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez complex that also hosts the Mexican Grand Prix. Rebranded from Foro Sol in 2024.

  • Opened: 1993
  • Capacity: 65,000
  • Address: Av. Viaducto Río Piedad y Río Churubusco s/n, Iztacalco, Mexico City
  • Operator: Grupo CIE
  • Home team: Tigres de San Luis
  • Owner: Government of Mexico City, Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez
  • Official site: www.estadiognpseguros.com

Where Fans Stay, Eat & Drink near Estadio GNP Seguros (formerly Foro Sol)

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Hotels, bars, restaurants and things to do near Estadio GNP Seguros (formerly Foro Sol) in Mexico City — every pick web-researched and source-cited, closest to the stadium first.

Where to Stay

Camino Real Polanco México — Fan Stay
Fan Stay

Camino Real Polanco México

The Camino Real Polanco is a Ricardo Legorreta-designed masterpiece and the traditional hotel of choice for international football federations, FIFA delegations, and visiting national teams competing at Estadio Azteca. Its striking purple and white modernist interior is as memorable as the matches themselves, and the hotel's proximity to Polanco's finest restaurants makes post-game dinners effortlessly good. Staying here is part of Mexico City's football heritage.

Bars & Pubs

Cantina La Ópera — Fan Bar
Fan Bar

Cantina La Ópera

Cantina La Ópera in the Centro Histórico has been serving Mexico City's football fans, politicians, intellectuals, and artists since the 1870s beneath spectacular Belle Époque chandeliers and mahogany-panelled walls still marked by a bullet hole attributed to Pancho Villa. The cantina's tradition of free botanas, excellent tequila, and impassioned football conversation — Club América and Cruz Azul fans somehow coexisting — makes it one of the great sporting social institutions in any city on earth. Visiting on a Liga MX weekend and listening to the table debates is an encounter with Mexico City at its most theatrical.

Restaurants

Mercado de Medellín — Fan Eats
Fan Eats

Mercado de Medellín

Mercado de Medellín in the Roma Norte neighbourhood is one of Mexico City's most beloved traditional markets, where the weekend taquería stalls, fresh fruit vendors, and Caribbean food section fill with football fans, families, and colonia residents creating a cross-section of Mexico City's diverse food culture that reflects the city's status as one of the world's great dining destinations. The carnitas, enfrijoladas, and agua de jamaica consumed here before an Azteca match fuel the passion that the stadium then amplifies. Roma Norte's café culture extends the market experience into a full afternoon before evening kickoffs.

Things to Do

Estadio Olímpico Universitario — UNAM Pumas — Attraction
Attraction

Estadio Olímpico Universitario — UNAM Pumas

The Estadio Olímpico Universitario on the UNAM campus is one of the Western Hemisphere's most visually striking sports venues, its exterior covered by Diego Rivera's massive mosaic mural celebrating Mexican university life, and the home of Pumas UNAM — the proud student club whose amateur ethos and local academy make it one of Liga MX's most culturally distinct teams. The stadium hosted athletics and football at the 1968 Mexico City Olympics and its integration into the extraordinary UNAM campus — a UNESCO World Heritage Site — makes visiting it a dual architectural and sporting experience. The student atmosphere during a Pumas home match captures Mexico City's intellectual football culture at its most authentic.

Museo Soumaya — Attraction
Attraction

Museo Soumaya

Museo Soumaya in Polanco is one of Latin America's most architecturally dramatic buildings — a free-form aluminum-clad tower housing Carlos Slim's extraordinary art collection — and a mandatory cultural stop for sports travelers spending multiple days in Mexico City between Liga MX fixtures at the Azteca or Estadio Olímpico. The collection includes the world's largest Rodin sculpture collection outside Paris and works spanning five centuries of Western art, all available free of charge. Pairing a Soumaya morning with an Azteca evening is the Mexico City sports-travel luxury day.

Plan Your Trip to Estadio GNP Seguros (formerly Foro Sol)

Estadio GNP Seguros (formerly Foro Sol) in Mexico City is tracked across 0 events and seats 65,000 fans. Here's how fans build a trip around it:

  • Anchor Event: Use the event cards below to select your next anchor date.
  • Post-Event Path: Continue into Mexico City and Mexico City hotspots for food, bars, and stay options.

Sources & References

Structured facts on this page (capacity, opening year, architect, ownership) are compiled from public reference databases and verified against venue coordinates.

Frequently Asked Questions About Estadio GNP Seguros (formerly Foro Sol)

Check back for celebrity sighting reports from Estadio GNP Seguros (formerly Foro Sol).

Estadio GNP Seguros (formerly Foro Sol) has a capacity of 65,000 people.

Estadio GNP Seguros (formerly Foro Sol) opened in 1993.

Tigres de San Luis plays home games at Estadio GNP Seguros (formerly Foro Sol) in Mexico City.

Check our events page for upcoming events at Estadio GNP Seguros (formerly Foro Sol).