The neighbourhoods of Polanco, Las Lomas, Bosques and Santa Fe in the West; Condesa and La Roma in central Mexico City; Pedregal, San Angel and Coyoacan in the South.
In the western part of the city where it crosses into the Estado de Mexico, there is also Interlomas, La Herradura and Tecamachalco.
On the outskirts of the city:
The really poor usually live on small cardboard shacks, in irregular settlements known as ciudades perdidas (lost cities). For low to middle class housing, you could find large prefab housing projects and single-family dwellings made of filler block.
The really poor usually live on small cardboard shacks, in irregular settlements known as ciudades perdidas (lost cities). For low to middle class housing, you could find humble palm shacks along the coast, adobe houses on desert climates or wood cabins in more temperate climates; large prefab housing projects and single-family dwellings made of filler block are also common in major cities.
On ciudades perdidas (lost cities or shantytowns) scattered throughout the city, older neighborhoods close to the eastern part of downtown Mexico City and some areas close to industrial zones on the northern portion of the city.
Some examples are provided on the related links section.
No that bad, considering there are other regions in Mexico with less economic development.
In the related links section yo can see some examples of such living conditions.
South side of city
There are wealthy people that live all over Mexico. The majority of very rich people live in Mexico City, Mexico.
A large number of whites live in Mexico. Up to 9-17% of the Mexican population is white. Over than 20million. In Mexico City it is mostly rich white Mexicans, or rich of any other ethnicity.
the rich people
The same way they do now. The poor cursed the rich and the rich cursed the poor.
Lots of people rich people live in Africa
there were rich people in every county - Dublin had more than most because it was the capital city and had a bigger population
YES, the rich ones
Of special importance are Mexico City, Queretaro and Toluca in central Mexico; in northern Mexico the richest cities include Monterrey and Chihuahua.
Many of Mexico's people live in the valley's that are located between volcanoes because the soil that surrounds the volcanoes is rich and fertile, many farmers live in the valley despite the danger from volcanoes. The ash from volcanoes adds nutrients to the soil.
Mexico is a country of great contrasts. Only in Mexico City you can find such disparity, often mere steps away. Rich people in Mexico City enjoy the education, income and health of Western Europe (e.g. Norway) as oposed to people in the poorer neighbors or ciudades perdidas where you will find a quality of life equivalent to that of say, India or Syria.For example, the municipality of Ecatzingo in greater Mexico City, has a GDP per capita of around USD 3,608 (2005) equivalent to that of Indonesia. It is a humble, semi-rural area, but not as poor-sticken as other parts of the city.On the other hand, the Benito Juarez borough in the middle of Mexico City has a GDP per capita of around USD 27,824 (again, 2005) which is very close to that of Singapore or Gibraltar in Europe.See the related links section for additional images of rich vs. poor in Mexico City.
Everything is cheaper, better climate, food tastes to something, friendly people, rich culture, beautiful scenery.