Campeche reads like an open-air museum of architecture, only inhabited. Walk its streets and within a few blocks you will see a 17th-century wall, lime-and-color facades, doors hiding courtyards, and cement-tile floors already a century old. It is not a stage set: it is a living city where the architecture still does its job.

That integrity earned it, in 1999, inscription on UNESCO's World Heritage List. For the traveler who moves through architecture —not just the postcard— Campeche is one of the best-preserved colonial ensembles in the Americas, and one of the few cities where you can not only see it but sleep inside it.

We write this guide by restoring and inhabiting those houses. What follows is what we have learned about how to read —and live— Campechean architecture.

Living room with stone walls and a wooden-beam ceiling in a restored historic home in Campeche — Casa Zotz by Casonas MX

Stone walls and a beamed ceiling: Campechean domestic architecture — Casonas MX, Campeche

Campeche for architecture lovers, in brief

For the full historical context, read Mexican colonial architecture.

A fortified city: walls, bastions and grid

Campeche is, above all, a walled city. In the 17th century, pirate raids forced the center to be ringed by a hexagon of walls and bastions that still defines it. That defensive layer —the Land Gate, the Sea Gate, the San Carlos and Santiago bastions— is not a tourist add-on: it is the urban skeleton on which everything else grew. We tell the story behind those walls in Campeche, a pirate-proof city.

Puerta de Tierra, the 17th-century walled gateway in Campeche's historic center — Casonas MX

The Land Gate: the threshold of the fortified city — Casonas MX, Campeche

The courtyard house: the heart of domestic architecture

Behind the facades, one brilliantly simple scheme repeats: the courtyard house. Thick masonry walls that hold the cool, a discreet face to the street and a generous interior organized around a courtyard that gives light, air and social life. That relationship —sober outside, expansive inside— is the signature of Campechean architecture.

Interior with a colonial stone arch and restored walls in a historic home in Campeche — Casa Zotz by Casonas MX

The colonial arch: structure and threshold between the home's spaces — Casonas MX, Campeche

The detail that reveals the craft: tilework, beams, lime and color

Campeche's architecture is recognized in its materials. The cement-tile (mosaico de pasta) floors —hand-pressed pigmented cement— bring a different pattern to each room; the beamed ceilings give height and cool air; lime protects and breathes; and the color of the facades composes, street after street, one of the best-preserved colonial palettes on the continent. Learning to read those details changes the way you walk the city.

Corridor with a checkerboard tile floor, a palm and arches in a restored colonial home in Campeche — Casa Japa by Casonas MX

Patterned floors and filtered light: the detail that reveals the craft — Casonas MX, Campeche

Restoration is not erasure

To conserve is not to freeze. Good restoration respects the original walls, floors and proportions as part of the identity of the place, and adds contemporary comfort without imposing it. The challenge —and the craft— is for the house to keep telling its story while you live in it today.

What to see if you care about architecture

View of the 17th-century wall and the rooftops of Campeche's historic center from a restored home — Casa Muralla by Casonas MX

The 17th-century wall and the rooftops of the center, from the inside — Casonas MX, Campeche

Where to stay: inhabiting the architecture

The best way to understand this architecture is to sleep inside it. Homes such as Casa Zotz, Casa Ex Templo, Casa Japa or Casa Muralla let you wake among original walls and courtyards. We develop this in where to stay in Campeche and in what it feels like to stay inside the walls.

Explore the restored heritage homes in the collection.

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Why Campeche draws design travelers

Interest in Campeche is no longer only historical: architects, designers and digital nomads arrive drawn by its scale, its light and its authenticity. For that contemporary traveler, the design lofts Lira, Numen and Solario speak to the heritage in a current language. More in digital nomads.

Book direct

To design a trip around Campeche's architecture —which house, which routes, what to see— write to us by WhatsApp or email. We know each house and each street, and booking directly with Casonas MX usually means a better rate and a stay made to measure.