
Neighbourhood Assembly Against Megaprojects
Mexico City community group opposing large-scale construction projects including Estadio Azteca renovation
Last refreshed: 29 March 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
Can a neighbourhood assembly halt a FIFA World Cup stadium reopening?
Latest on Neighbourhood Assembly Against Megaprojects
- What is the Neighbourhood Assembly Against Megaprojects?
- A Mexico City grassroots Coalition opposing large-scale construction projects, currently focused on the Estadio Azteca renovation for the 2026 FIFA World Cup. It draws on neighbourhood-assembly traditions dating to the 1985 earthquake.
- Why are there protests at Estadio Azteca?
- The assembly protests water scarcity in boroughs surrounding the stadium, police harassment of demonstrators, and privatisation linked to the FIFA renovation. Organisers call a newly built Water Garden a tool to suppress dissent.Source: Neighbourhood Assembly
- Is there a water crisis near Estadio Azteca?
- Communities in Coyoacan and surrounding southern Mexico City boroughs face water rationing linked to declining aquifer levels and ageing distribution infrastructure. The Azteca renovation has become a focal point for broader grievances.Source: event
Background
The Neighbourhood Assembly Against Megaprojects (Asamblea Vecinal Contra los Megaproyectos) is a Mexico City grassroots Coalition opposing large-scale construction in the capital. It draws on a tradition of horizontal neighbourhood-assembly politics rooted in the self-organisation that followed Mexico City's devastating 1985 earthquake, when residents built governance structures outside formal party channels.
The assembly announced protests for 28 March 2026 at Estadio Azteca's reopening, citing water scarcity in surrounding southern boroughs where rationing is already in force, police harassment of demonstrators, and privatisation of public resources linked to the renovation . The stadium reopened on schedule before 84,130 fans despite the protests .
The group frames the Azteca renovation as a case where FIFA requirements and government prestige override residents' basic needs. Organisers characterise a newly built 'Water Garden' near the stadium as a public-relations tool rather than a genuine remedy for the structural water deficit in Coyoacan and surrounding boroughs, where aquifer levels have been declining for decades.