
CANCUN in 4K 360° View Asta Bandera Monumental Hotel Zone
- over 6 years ago
- 115 VŪZ
10 - 5
- Report
Autel EVO Drone Footage From Cancun Hotel Zone 360 degree View of Cancun Mexico in Manual Orbit The banderas monumentales (Spanish for "monumental flags") are a collection of tall flagpoles containing large flags of Mexico located throughout Mexico. They are part of a program started in 1999 under President Ernesto Zedillo that is currently administered by the Secretariat of National Defense (Secretaría de la Defensa Nacional). The main feature of these monuments (though not the biggest, see below) is a giant Mexican flag flying off a 50-meter-high flagpole. The size of the flag was 14.3 by 25 meters and it was flown on a pole that measured 50 meters high. In the time after the decree was issued, many more banderas monumentales have been installed throughout the country in various sizes. Many of the locations were chosen due to significant events in Mexican history that occurred there. The flag program The deployment of banderas monumentales was outlined by Zedillo in a two-point program. The first point consisted of selecting the location for the monumental flags, of which the first were: Those in the military base Campo Marte, in downtown, and in the San Jerónimo roundabout in Mexico City Tijuana, Baja California Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua Veracuz, Veracruz Iguala, Guerrero The first two deployments were in México City, Mexico's capital. The next two were in Tijuana and Ciudad Juárez, along the northern border with the United States. Veracruz is Mexico's main seaport in the Gulf of Mexico. Finally, Iguala was where the flag of the Three Guarantees (Bandera de las Tres Garantías) recognized as Mexico's first flag, was created. The second point in the program accounted for the creation of a standard size for the flags and the poles they would be raised on. Zedillo's official decree stated that the flag sizes will be 14.3 meters in height by 25 meters in width. The flag size is close to the 4:7 ratio as stated in Article 3 of the Law on the National Coat of Arms, Flag and Anthem (Ley sobre el Escudo, la Bandera y el Himno Nacionales). The flagpoles were to have a height of 50 meters. There have been smaller flags called banderas semi-monumentales installed for schools, smaller communities and other locations where logistics complicate the flying a giant flag. The flags are greatly smaller than its those outlined in the 1999 decree, but have the advantages that are cheaper and easier to take down than the monumental flags. Monumental flags are costly to construct and require a group of nearly twenty people to raise and lower them. Biggest flags The biggest monumental flag in Mexico is the one located in Monterrey (northeast) with a pole height of 100.6 meters and a flag measuring 50 by 28.6 meters, built to quadruple the size of the other monumental flags. It is located at the top of the Cerro del Obispado (Bishopric Hill) at an altitude of 775 meters above sea level and it weighs 230 kilograms. It was inaugurated on the Día de la Bandera (Flag Day), February 24, 2005. Another flag with similar proportions is located in the city of Dolores Hidalgo, Guanajuato, the Cradle of Mexican Independence. This one was inaugurated on September 15, 2000 and it is at an altitude of 2000 meters above the sea level, on a very small military base. Current locations Since the construction of the first monumental flags other cities throughout the country have also deployed their own. They are mostly located in state capitals, historical towns and cities with important economic activity. Monterrey, Nuevo León 25°40′34.33″N 100°20′45.98″W Dolores Hidalgo, Cuna de la Independencia Nacional, Guanajuato 21°9′33.01″N 100°54′35.56″W Querétaro, Querétaro México City, Federal District (three locations): Zócalo, in the city center. 19°25′57.66″N 99°7′59.96″W Campo Militar Marte (1 km northwest of Los Pinos) 19°25′27.14″N 99°11′47.84″W San Jerónimo 19°19′52.11″N 99°12′39.56″W Iguala, Guerrero 18°19′44.67″N 99°31′58.15″W Tonalá, Jalisco Piedras Negras, Coahuila 28°42′00″N 100°31′23″W Tijuana, Baja California 32°31′14.87″N 117°2′11.20″W Chihuahua, Chihuahua Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua 31°45′18.44″N 106°27′12.89″W Veracruz, Veracruz Morelia, Michoacán Tehuacán, Puebla San Luis Potosí, San Luis Potosí El Calvario, Toluca Cuautla and Cuernavaca, Morelos Culiacán and Mazatlán, Sinaloa Mérida, Yucatán Cancún, Quintana Roo Naucalpan, Estado de México Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas 27°29′51.37″N 99°30′16.45″W Ciudad Victoria, Tamaulipas Tampico, Tamaulipas Celaya, Guanajuato Irapuato, Guanajuato Ensenada, Baja California 31°51′33.51″N 116°37′27.34″W Acapulco, Guerrero 16°51′31.89″N 99°53′12.35″W San Miguel de Allende, Guanajuato Cozumel, Quintana Roo The Tijuana, Ciudad Juárez and Nuevo Laredo flags overlook the United States border and can be clearly seen from the U. S. side.
Up Next
One Mile Dronie from Cancún

- Travel Droner
- 1.1k VŪZ
17 - 24
- almost 6 years ago
Nizuc Resort & SPA Cancun

- Travel Droner
- 1.5k VŪZ
8 - 13
- over 5 years ago
Pirates at Night

- Travel Droner
- 738 VŪZ
8 - 10
- over 6 years ago
Coral Reef Cancun

- Travel Droner
- 1.0k VŪZ
14 - 12
- about 6 years ago
Cayo Levantado Island Samana Dominican Republic 4K

- Travel Droner
- 1.8k VŪZ
15 - 24
- almost 6 years ago
Cozumel Cruise Port City 4K

- Travel Droner
- 1.7k VŪZ
15 - 19
- almost 6 years ago
Cancun beach in Mexico, Girls and Nightlife. Drone 4K video!
- OOO Photography
- 1.1k VŪZ
16 - 12
- almost 5 years ago
Grand Sirenis Matlali Hills Resort and Spa

- thedronexperience
- 519 VŪZ
21 - 10
- over 7 years ago
Cancun, Mexico Footage by Dji Mavic 2 Pro
- UncleForty
- 1.0k VŪZ
16 - 21
- over 4 years ago
El Garrafon Isla Mujeres Natural Reef Park

- Travel Droner
- 573 VŪZ
8 - 9
- about 6 years ago