New Chapter for Four Seasons Hotel Mexico City

Four Seasons Hotel Mexico City

MEXICO | A new era has begun at Four Seasons Hotel Mexico City, with the launch of its newly refurbished rooms and suites.

With the first days of spring, as the capital awakens in soft light and warm colour, Four Seasons Hotel Mexico City unveils the beginning of a transformative chapter. This moment celebrates both the hotel’s 32nd anniversary and the debut of its fully reimagined rooms and suites: a renovation conceived through the lens of art, cultural heritage, and the creative spirit of Mexico.

Guided by the vision of renowned Mexican designer Bibiana Huber, the redesign reflects the elegant evolution of a hospitality icon beloved for decades for its colonial hacienda architecture and its lush interior courtyard along Paseo de la Reforma. The project proposes a contemporary reinterpretation of this legacy—where cosmopolitan sophistication coexists with a deep local identity, expressed through materiality, texture, and a refined sense of belonging.

Each room has been designed as a calming sanctuary, integrating contemporary sophistication with the tangible beauty of Mexican artisanal tradition.

More than a renovation, this project stands as a collective work: a convergence of Mexico’s finest artisanal talent. Workshops and artisans from Mexico City, Guadalajara, Michoacán, Cancún, Durango, and other regions contributed exclusively designed pieces—giving life to spaces where luxury is defined by the handmade.

Locally sourced materials such as stone, marble, wood, woven textiles, ceramics, forged metals, and blown glass appear throughout the rooms in elements ranging from carved wood credenzas and sculptural lighting fixtures to copper pieces and bespoke decorative objects.

Artists and workshops represented include José Noé Suro, as well as specialists who crafted hand-painted basins, leatherwork details, metal hardware, hammered copper plates, blown-glass pieces, ULA Light luminaires, and Michoacán-inspired decorative pineapples reinterpreted by Marva Studio.

Art and textiles play a fundamental role. Works by Fernanda Mereles and Pedro Arturo, along with pieces designed by Arozarena de la Fuente, reinterpret traditional textile techniques in contemporary compositions that integrate seamlessly into the spaces, adding depth, identity, and a rich sensorial dimension.

The atmosphere draws from a soft, natural colour palette: neutral tones, sands, and beiges accented by notes of green and burgundy that evoke the hotel’s historic identity. Sculptural lighting and richly tactile materials create an immersive experience that flows between urban vitality and interior calm.

Bathrooms have also been completely transformed across all 240 rooms, featuring natural stones and marbles, including red marble from Durango, as well as artisanal elements such as hand‑carved stone mats and double vanities painted by hand. The combination of wood, glass, and forged metals elevates everyday routines into a sophisticated wellness ritual.

Beyond the visible, the renovation includes a comprehensive modernisation of the hotel’s infrastructure, upgrading electrical, hydraulic, and climate systems to align the guest’s experience with the highest contemporary standards of comfort and efficiency.

The design process began approximately two and a half years before construction. The first phase is open to guests now, while the complete reveal of the 240 accommodations, 200 rooms and 40 suites, including three speciality suites, will be presented by mid‑2026.

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