The Mercury News

Presidenti­al mansion turned into a museum

- By Kevin Sieff

MEXICO CITY » Until Friday, the sprawling, forested complex of Los Pinos was the site of Mexico’s presidenti­al palace, the country’s most prestigiou­s address — a symbol of power and, to many Mexicans, a monument to excess.

And then, on Saturday morning, with the inaugurati­on of Andrés Manuel López Obrador, its doors were suddenly thrown open to the public, perhaps the first promise fulfilled by Mexico’s leftist leader, intent on proving his humility by living in a small home in the capital.

Hundreds of people poured through the gates, gawking at the chandelier­s, the private libraries, the vast kitchens of Mexico’s previous presidents, dating back to 1935. It was a surreal scene. López Obrador’s predecesso­r, Enrique Peña Nieto, had only moved out three days earlier, and the rooms were mostly empty. In vacant rooms, signs were posted reading: “Presidenti­al Bedroom” and “Presidenti­al office.”

A tour guide pointed to a large room and told several visiting journalist­s assertivel­y: “This was the closet of Enrique Peña Nieto.” The former president’s bathroom was also on display, captured in untold hundreds of selfies. If López Obrador was trying to prove his point that his predecesso­rs had been living in luxury, he succeeded.

“It’s nice to see this because of its historical importance, but it’s also sad,” said Pilar Sierra Colin, 50, who visited from a nearby neighborho­od in Mexico City. “The men who used to live here are the ones who ruined the country.”

A flutist and a pianist played in the lobby. Officials suggested that it could be a frequent venue for concerts or plays. For now, though, the guides and guards seemed slightly overwhelme­d, like unwitting real estate agents setting up the world’s strangest open house.

“Little by little we’ll figure out how to integrate it into the city,” said Antonio Martinez, one of the coordinato­rs of the complex.

There were a few books left in the library, a biography of artist Frida Kahlo, the poems of Octavio Paz, the photos of Juan Rulfo. A new statue of Peña Nieto had been placed in the garden, next to a row of other previous leaders.

Los Pinos, or The Pines, has been home to Mexico’s presidents since Lazaro Cardenas moved here in 1934.

Ironically, he had been trying to prove the same point as López Obrador, arguing that the previous presidenti­al residence in the nearby Castle of Chapultepe­c was too ostentatio­us. But Los Pinos was hardly a humble abode: it is 14 times larger than the White House, according to Architectu­ral Digest.

“Looks at this wood. This is imported. Everything here is the most expensive, the most luxurious. Why couldn’t they spend this money on the people of Mexico?” said Braulio Melquiades, 69.

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