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Cancun
Cancún
is a coastal city in Mexico's easternmost state, Quintana
Roo. It is the municipal seat of Benito Juárez municipality
and a world renowned tourist resort.
Geography
The
average temperature in Cancun is 27° C (80° F) with more
than 240 days of sunshine, and rain is rare. The beaches are
almost 100 percent limestone; the porous quality of the
limestone makes for cool sand even under the intense
tropical sun. Cancún is divided into two parts: The narrow
23-kilometer-long (14-mile) island section (Cancún Island)
is lined with modern beachfront hotels surrounded by the
Bahía de Mujeres (Bay of Women), the Caribbean Sea, and the
Nichupte and Bojorquez lagoons. The mainland downtown
commercial section (Cancún City), connected to the island
by two bridges, has broad avenues lined with whitewashed
shops, restaurants, and hotels.
History
In
the early 1950s Cancún was an almost unpopulated and
undeveloped island just off the Caribbean Sea coast of the
Yucatan peninsula, home to three caretakers of a coconut
plantation and small Pre-Columbian ruins of the Maya
civilization. The government of Mexico decided to develop a
tourist resort on Cancún, which was originally financed by
a USD $27 million loan from the International Development
Bank. A causeway was built to link Cancún to the mainland,
and an international airport was built, along with what was
at first a model city for workers, complete with housing,
schools and medical facilities. On the opposite side of the
island from the Caribbean Sea is Nichupte Lagoon, which is
used for boat and snorkeling tours of the area.
Development
of Cancún started in 1970 and grew rapidly in the 1980s.
Unfortunately, the original very sensible master plan was
repeatedly modified and, on the mainland, often ignored.
According to long-time resident Jules Siegel (author of the
"Cancun User's Guide" and translator of Fernando
Martí's "Cancun, Fantasy of Bankers"), municipal
authorities have struggled to provide public services for
the constant influx of people, as well as to control
squatters and irregular developments, which now occupy an
estimated ten to fifteen percent of the mainland area on the
fringes of the city, he says.
Despite
initial skepticism that forced the Mexican government to
finance the first eight hotels, Cancun soon attracted
investors from all over the world, but Mexicans, many of
them local residents, own approximately 70% of the Hotel
Zone properties. The figure is close to 100% for the
mainland. Even outlets of restaurant chains such as
McDonald's and Domino's Pizza are Mexican-owned.
The
city has grown rapidly over the past thirty years to become
a city of approximately half a million residents, covering
the former island and the nearby mainland. There are
actually very few true 'cancunenses' (people originally from
Cancún) because of the rate at which the resort and its
service areas grew. Most people living here are from
mainland Mexico and a growing number are from the rest of
America and Europe.
Environmental
concerns
Although
some environmentalists claim that Cancún is an
environmental disaster, Siegel says that is not true. There
has obviously been environmental damage and the situation
could deteriorate rapidly, he reports, but at present
(February 2005) Cancun’s main problem is a breakdown of
garbage collection and disposal as a result of political
conflicts that will hopefully be solved by a new
administration elected February 6, 2005. Sewage treatment is
another danger point, he says. Although approximately 75% of
the city has public sewer lines, many homes rely on septic
tanks. The underground water table is beginning to show
symptoms of contamination, but by the standards of most
populated areas in the United States the water is still
relatively clean.
Tourism
in Cancún
In
Cancún there are about 140 hotels with 24,000 rooms and 380
restaurants. Three million visitors arrive each year in an
average of 190 flights daily. The hotel zone is one of the
most exclusive internationally, with upscale restaurants,
bars, and the like which have catered for quite a number of
the rich and famous. The hotel zone tends to be rather
expensive as it is aimed at visitors and relies on the
all-inclusive hotels to keep them all in this area allowing
prices to soar. Downtown is home to less expensive places to
shop like Walmart, Comercial Mexicana and Soriana, not to
mention several flea markets like the one in the hotel
zone.
Downtown
Cancún gives us a different aspect. There are also many
clubs for all types of people, including gay clubs like
Karamba or Glow, but the hotels are more accessible to all
types of travelers, including some with lower rates.
International brands in Downtown area are Radisson Hacienda
Cancun, Best Western Plaza Caribe, Oasis America.
The
temperature of the city is warm, moderated by the marine
breeze that circulates through its avenues. The temperatures
are typically between 26°C and 36°C (78.8°F and
96.8°F).
Cancun’s
hotel zone also has an interactive aquarium where visitors
can see the marine diversity of the area, swim with dolphins
and feed sharks. Here and there in the hotel zone are some
ancient ruins.
The
main language in Cancún is Spanish, although English is
widely spoken throughout the tourist areas. Mayan dialects
are also spoken between some workers and people born in the
Yucatan peninsula.
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