Culiacán - Wikitravel (2024)

Culiacán

Contents

  • 1 Understand
  • 2 Get in
    • 2.1 By plane
    • 2.2 By car
    • 2.3 By bus
    • 2.4 By boat
  • 3 Get around
    • 3.1 By Car
  • 4 See
  • 5 Do
  • 6 Learn
  • 7 Work
  • 8 Buy
  • 9 Eat
    • 9.1 Budget
    • 9.2 Mid-range
    • 9.3 Splurge
  • 10 Drink
  • 11 Sleep
    • 11.1 Budget
    • 11.2 Mid-range
    • 11.3 Splurge
  • 12 Contact
  • 13 Stay safe
  • 14 Cope
  • 15 Get out

Culiacán (Culiacán Rosales) is a city in Sinaloa, Mexico. It is rarely visited by foreign tourists due to drug violence. Nearly all guide books on Mexico do not cover Culiacán and give very brief one-paragraph descriptions at most. However, Culiacán is very well-known by Mexicans for its distinct sinaloense culture.

Understand[edit]

Culiacán is a large city located almost in the geographic center of the state of Sinaloa, about 900 miles south of the U.S.-México border. Locals of Culiacán are known as culichis (Similarly, natives of Guadalajara are known as tapatíos.).

Culiacán is famous for producing some of the best-known norteño and banda musical groups in México, including Los Buitres de Culiacán, Los Bukanas de Culiacán, Larry Hernandez, Los Buchones de Culiacán.

Culiacán is dry for most of the year, except for the wet season which lasts from July to September.

Get in[edit]

By plane[edit]

Volaris offers three daily flights from Tijuana to Culiacán. A one-way ticket costs about $100 USD. There are also Volaris flights to Culiacán from Guadalajara and Mexico City.

By car[edit]

Mexican Federal Highway 15 (Carretera Federal 15) connects Culiacán to cities in Sonora state such as Nogales, Hermosillo, Guaymas, Ciudad Obregón, and Navojoa (from north to south), as well as Los Mochis, Guasave, Guamúchil, Mazatlán, Tepic, and Guadalajara. Toll booths and checkpoints are stationed throughout the highway.

By bus[edit]

The Culiacán bus station is a major hub offering connections to various small towns around the state of Sinaloa. There are regular buses to Culiacán from Los Mochis, Mazatlán, Hermosillo, and Guadalajara. There are also a bus services, such as Tufesa, that serves Culiacán from Phoenix and Tucson.

By boat[edit]

The port of Altata is a tourist beach town directly to the west of Culiacán. By car, it is about 50 km or 1 hour from Culiacán.

Get around[edit]

Taxis are plentiful in the Centro and other important landmarks. They can be relatively expensive, and may not have fixed rates.

You can get around Culiacán using bus transportation. An app called "Enrutate" can provide you with the routes available within the city.

By Car[edit]

  • AGA Rent a Car, Av. Camaron Sabalo #312-A, Zona Dorada, [1]. AGA Rent-A-Car has been renting vehicles to travelers and local renters since 1989. Its first location opened in Mazatlan, Sinaloa, Mexico and it has since expanded to serve Los Mochis and Culiacán, with locations both at the the airport and in town.

See[edit]

  • Plazuela Alvaro Obregón — The city's main square, the Plazuela has many acrobats, artists, and musicians entertaining passersbys.
  • Catedral de Nuestra Señora del Rosario — The city's main cathedral, directly to the south of the Plazuela Alvaro Obregón.
  • La Lomita — Also known the Temple of Our Lady of Guadalupe, this church is situated on the top of a hill directly to the south of the Zona Centro. It offers a breathtaking panoramic view of the city of Culiacán, and the sierras surrounding it. From the Plazuela Alvaro Obregón, take a bus that with a placard saying "Lomita" on its front window, and tell the bus driver to stop at La Lomita. It should take you south along Bulevar Alvaro Obregón.
  • Capilla de Jesús Malverde — This is the most well-known site in Culiacán. This chapel is dedicated to Jesús Malverde, a bandit who was executed in 1909 who has since become venerated as a folk saint by locals. Narcotraffickers and migrants alike visit this shrine to pay homage to Malverde, hoping for a successful journey up north. Malverde is often called "El Santo de los Narcotraficantes," although the chapel operators will say that he is far more than that. Plaques thanking Malverde adorn the chapel. The owner and operator of the shrine is Jesús ("Chuy") Manuel González, son of Eligio González (d. 2002), the shrine's founder.
Ironically, the Palacio Estatal (State Government of Sinaloa) lies almost directly in front of the chapel, on the other side of the street.
A biographical booklet on Malverde is available for 50 pesos.
  • Malecón — Playgrounds and picnic tables abound on this beautiful and carefully maintained greenbelt which runs along the banks of the Río Tamazula.
  • Museo de Arte de Sinaloa (MASIN) — This museum has many impressionist and modern abstract art pieces produced by artists from all over the state of Sinaloa. Admission is 5 pesos.
  • ISIC — Formerly (and mostly known as) DIFOCUR, is the cultural center of Culiacán. The complex includes various exhibits and small museums. Events take place often at DIFOCUR.
  • Ayuntamiento de Culiacán — Many beautiful murals featuring street scenes in Culiacán and motifs glorifying the sinaloense spirit.
  • Parque Revolución — This park has very beautiful fountains. Just to the north of it is a newly erected statue dedicated to the 75th anniversary of XEBL (710 AM, 91.9 FM), one of Sinaloa's olest radio stations, which has been running since 1936. Live music also plays from the statue.
  • Puente Negro — This bridge is an iconic symbol of Culiacán, and is located at the confluence of the Humaya and Tamazula Rivers, which join together to form the Río Culiacán. [2] This is comparable to the confluence of the Gombak and Klang Rivers in Kuala Lumpur, as well as the confluence of the Allegheny and Monongahela Rivers in Pittsburgh (forming the Ohio River).
  • Culiacán Zoo
  • Botanical Garden
  • Presa Sanalona

Do[edit]

There are casinos, malls, discos, theaters, Applebee's restaurant and much more.

  • Musicians, consisting of norteño, banda, and mariachi bands, can be found on Bulevar Francisco I. Madero (the Mazatlán-Culiacán highway, or the 15) between General Aquilines Serdán and Venustiano Carranza. There are Pemex gas stations at both intersections. Many musicians have rented out buildings, and some of the bandas have their own trailers. The norteño bands tend to congregate around the Madero & Carranza intersection, which is easily recognizable because of the 135-degree bend that Venustiano Carranza makes at the intersection. Norteño bands can also be found at the Mercado Garmendia playing for tips.

Learn[edit]

Work[edit]

Buy[edit]

In the centre are many little stores where you can buy anything.

  • Mercado Garmendia

Eat[edit]

Budget[edit]

  • Restaurant Huy Fong 匯豐餐館 (Rosales #5, Col. Centro; Tel. 715-78-17; 8:30 a.m. - 8:00 p.m.) is a newly opened Chinese restaurant offering very affordable meals for around 50 pesos or less. It is located just north of the catedral at the intersection of Alvaro Obregon (the main street that runs north-south) and General Antonio Rosales; to the left of Subway. Located in the Centro. The restaurant owners and employees are from the town of Enping in Guangdong province, China.

Mid-range[edit]

  • Restaurant China-loa (Comida China & Sushi) offers an all-you-can-eat buffet for 90 pesos. Located in the Centro. Telephone numbers: 712-20-12, 712-12-21.

Splurge[edit]

Drink[edit]

Sleep[edit]

  • Microtel Inn & Suites is a 113-room hotel located in a new developed zone of the city adjacent to the Modern Hospital Angels of Culiacan. [3]

Budget[edit]

  • Hotel Sevilla offers rooms for 300 pesos per night. It is located on Morelos Street (which runs north-south) between Escobedo and Colón, in the Zona Centro. It is in the 170's block, located on the east side of the sidewalk. The lobby room has a guest computer with Internet, free of charge. Filtered water is also free.

Mid-range[edit]

  • Hotel La Quinta Posada Real offers rooms for 500 pesos per night. It is located near the intersection of Francisco I. Madero & Venustiano Carranza Boulevards.

Splurge[edit]

Contact[edit]

Stay safe[edit]

Downtown Culiacán is safe to walk around during the daytime and evenings (before midnight), though this is not always the case. Traveling around the outskirts ("colonias") of Culiacán at night is not recommended.

Traffic in Culiacán can be extremely aggressive, much more so than in many other parts of Mexico, and they often go as far as to nearly hit pedestrians without any regard for safety. Locals will attribute this to the "sinaloense" attitude, which is stereotypically aggressive, proud, and boisterous.

Culiacán (along with the town of Badiraguato) is notorious for being the birthplaces and residences of many drug lords and narcotraffickers. Mexicans from other states will often point out that Culiacán is very dangerous to visit. Most deaths occur only among drug cartels and federal armed forces. Even so, one of the notorious cartels, known as the Sinaloa Cartel, are quite dangerous and they're not hesitant to shoot anyone on sight, local residents and tourists included, especially those who try and fight back from being robbed or kidnapped.

However, in October 2019, after the government captured El Chapo's son Ovidio Guzman, drug cartels started causing mayhem all over the city, starting fires and freeing inmates. It's safe to say that you should go for better alternatives that are far safer than most of Mexico, including Culiacán.

Cope[edit]

Get out[edit]

Routes through Culiacán

Los MochisPericosNSLa CruzMazatlán

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