Cuauhtémoc Mayor's Office Completes Niza Street Repaving in Juárez Neighborhood
Translated from Spanish, summarized and contextualized by DistantNews.
At a glance
- The Cuauhtémoc mayor's office completed repaving Niza Street in the Juárez neighborhood, replacing nearly 7,500 square meters of asphalt.
- The project included installing safety features like traffic cones and lane delimiters to improve mobility and security.
- This repaving is part of a broader infrastructure recovery effort in the Cuauhtémoc borough, with other streets also having undergone similar work.
Alessandra Rojo de la Vega, the mayor of Cuauhtémoc, has inaugurated the repaving of Niza Street in the Juárez neighborhood. This initiative aims to enhance urban infrastructure and improve mobility within the borough. A total of 7,498 square meters of asphalt surface were replaced along the stretch from Paseo de la Reforma to Avenida Chapultepec.
To bolster safety for pedestrians and drivers, the project incorporated 82 traffic cones, 20 delineators, and 160 lane delimiter buttons. Additionally, a dedicated bike lane was integrated before the intersection with Marsella Street, connecting to the three existing traffic lanes and linking to Orizaba Street in the Roma Norte neighborhood.
Rojo de la Vega stated, "Cuauhtémoc is reborn. We recovered a bike lane, delivered a completely repaved street, and we will continue with this obsession: that this borough has the best public spaces in the entire city, because that also improves the quality of life for our neighbors." She also highlighted previous repaving projects, including 25,000 square meters on Cedro Street, 12,000 on Tehuantepec, 8,000 on Miguel E. Schultz, and 1,500 square meters of hydraulic concrete on Ozuluama. Work has also been carried out on streets such as Bajío, Ámsterdam, Virginia Fábregas, Alfonso Herrera, Tomás Alva Edison, Clavel, and Doctor Enrique González Martínez.
Originally published by El Universal in Spanish. Translated, summarized, and contextualized by our editorial team with added local perspective. Read our editorial standards.