Mexico City buried its rivers to prevent disease and unwittingly created a dry, polluted city where COVID-19 now thrives
By Elena Delavega
Mexico City is a dust bowl, a where breathing is hard and newly washed clothes hung out to dry turn stiff by evening. Even before the COVID-19 pandemic began clobbering this capital city, residents regularly wore face masks during the there.
Now Mexico City’s bad air pollution – which contributes to high rates of – is making the metropolitan area’s 21 million people more vulnerable to the coronavirus.
Mexico City wasn’t always an ecological and health disaster. As the center of the Aztec empire, it was verdant and diverse. As late as the early 20th century, 45 rivers ran through the Mexican capital.
The decision to bury and pave over its rivers, creating today’s arid metropolis, was a 20th-century plan meant to protect residents from disease – specifically, cholera, .
Origins of Mexico City
I’m a with a focus on urban areas, and Mexico City is my gray, concrete hometown. The relationship between its geography, history and health outcomes are relevant today, as the city struggles with its latest disease outbreak.
by the people now called Aztecs – but who called themselves Tenochcas – in 1325. The Aztecs built their city on a rock in Lake Texcoco, mostly because the more prime locations along the shore were already taken.
By 1427 the powerful Aztecs had defeated their lakeshore neighbors and built a shining capital that spanned the lake. The city, called Tenochtitlan, was built amid water by the development of “” – small plots of lake filled in with debris, pottery and soil to create solid land, with channels flowing around them.
The foremost chronicler of Spain’s colonization of Mexico, , described Tenochtitlan as crisscrossed by engineering marvels like causeways and removable bridges, and full of “splendid” palaces. Diaz del Castillo reports that the city market was larger and better regulated than those of . As in the Roman empire, aqueducts supplied the city with .
Tenochtitlan looked like Venice – gorgeous – and had the same health problems, including contaminated water, mosquitoes and unpleasant smells. But the Aztecs . Their dikes and waterways permitted a , and the chinampa agricultural system – in which land was replenished with soil dredged from the lake bottom – was the world has ever known.
Spanish incompetence
That good urban management . Tenochtitlan was destroyed, its .
The Spaniards did not understand the watery ecology of the area, nor Aztec engineering. To rebuild their capital, they drained the lake.
This strategy led to both drought and an inadequate water supply for most of the year. Rainy season, however, brought . In 1629, the worst flood in Mexico City’s recorded history is said to have lasted five years and killed more than 30,000 people due to drowning and disease. Churches reportedly .
Rainy season turned parts of the city turned into cesspools, spawning waterborne diseases like , as well as meningitis. Gastrointestinal illnesses festered, too, because residents used Mexico City’s rivers for dumping garbage and sewage. and bodies floated in the stagnant waters, emitting a terrible stench.
Mexico goes deep
Mexico gained independence from Spain in 1810. To deal once and for all with its flooding problems, city leaders decided in the 1890s to channel rain, flood waters and sewage away from the city via a .
Around this time, the . Mexico City had 350,000 residents in 1900 and 3 million in 1950. By the , its novel sanitation system was already insufficient. Plus, residents were still using Mexico City’s many rivers for .
In 1938, the architect Carlos Contreras proposed three polluted rivers – the Piedad, the Consulado and the Verónica – and turning them into one giant viaduct to . Political conditions did not allow this idea to move forward at the time, but the idea of and burying them stuck.
Over the following decades, rivers began to be put underground. Between 1947 and 1952 most of Mexico City’s 45 rivers were . Today, these rivers are visible only in the names : Rio Mixcoac Avenue, Rio Churubusco Avenue and others.
Smog bowl
This system gave mid-century Mexico City enough sewer capacity, roads and buildings to serve its population. The foul smell and unsanitary conditions also diminished, because people couldn’t dump garbage into covered waterways.
But without its rivers, Mexico City dried up and grew dusty. And because of its geography – on a plateau, surrounded by mountains – the dust was unable to escape. Mexico City is in a bowl that traps whatever floats in the air.
Starting in the 1980s, the number of cars , trapping pollution too. Today, Mexico City is and for the terrible pollution brings, including asthma and heart disease.
The coronavirus outbreak wasn’t caused by polluted air. But the city’s bad air quality – together with – creates the conditions for COVID-19 to severely sicken and kill more people.
In trying to eliminate waterborne illness, the Mexican capital ended up helping an airborne virus find more hosts. It’s an irony of history the Aztecs would surely mourn.