On top of Casa Hoyos Hotel in San Miguel de Allende sits Tonana Bar—a 270-square-metre rooftop space where prehispanic mythology and contemporary design collide. Mexico City designer Andrés Gutiérrez of A-G estudio has created something that honours the feminine divine through materials, shapes, and cultural depth.The name Tonana comes from Tonantzin—Nahuatl for “Our Sacred Mother”—the prehispanic Mother Goddess who gives life, devours it, and renews it all at once. That duality shows up everywhere here, in what’s chosen and how it’s shaped.Tezontle volcanic stone, often called “the volcanic blood of the earth”, covers the floors and walls. It’s rough and porous, grounding everything in Mexico’s geological past. Against this, brass fixtures and marble surfaces shine. The contrast works: raw meets refined.The furniture tells old stories. Custom seating draws from Cipactli, the primordial crocodile-earth creature from Aztec creation myths. These sculptural pieces, covered in dusty pink and deep burgundy, curve across the terrace. Water features nod to Chalchiuhtlicue, goddess of water and rivers—the nurturing side of the divine feminine.Half-Old and Half-New: Ignacia Guest House in Mexico City by Andrés Gutiérrez and Factor Eficiencia.Ignacia Guest House shares its name with its once-upon-a-time housekeeper (who looked after it for over 40 years), but its spirit is decidedly its own. Yellowtrace A G Studio Tonana Rooftop Bar San Miguel De Allende Mexico 11 Opt80 Yellowtrace A G Studio Tonana Rooftop Bar San Miguel De Allende Mexico 15 Opt80 Yellowtrace A G Studio Tonana Rooftop Bar San Miguel De Allende Mexico 04 Opt80 Yellowtrace A G Studio Tonana Rooftop Bar San Miguel De Allende Mexico 18 Opt80 Yellowtrace A G Studio Tonana Rooftop Bar San Miguel De Allende Mexico 03 Opt80 Yellowtrace A G Studio Tonana Rooftop Bar San Miguel De Allende Mexico 01 Opt80 Yellowtrace A G Studio Tonana Rooftop Bar San Miguel De Allende Mexico 02 Opt80 Yellowtrace A G Studio Tonana Rooftop Bar San Miguel De Allende Mexico 24 Opt80 Yellowtrace A G Studio Tonana Rooftop Bar San Miguel De Allende Mexico 22 Opt80 Yellowtrace A G Studio Tonana Rooftop Bar San Miguel De Allende Mexico 05 Opt80 Yellowtrace A G Studio Tonana Rooftop Bar San Miguel De Allende Mexico 21 Opt80 Yellowtrace A G Studio Tonana Rooftop Bar San Miguel De Allende Mexico 09 Opt80 Yellowtrace A G Studio Tonana Rooftop Bar San Miguel De Allende Mexico 17 Opt80 Yellowtrace A G Studio Tonana Rooftop Bar San Miguel De Allende Mexico 10 Opt80 Yellowtrace A G Studio Tonana Rooftop Bar San Miguel De Allende Mexico 06 Opt80 Yellowtrace A G Studio Tonana Rooftop Bar San Miguel De Allende Mexico 14 Opt80 Yellowtrace A G Studio Tonana Rooftop Bar San Miguel De Allende Mexico 26 Opt80 Yellowtrace A G Studio Tonana Rooftop Bar San Miguel De Allende Mexico 12 Opt80 Yellowtrace A G Studio Tonana Rooftop Bar San Miguel De Allende Mexico 20 Opt80 Yellowtrace A G Studio Tonana Rooftop Bar San Miguel De Allende Mexico 08 Opt80 Yellowtrace A G Studio Tonana Rooftop Bar San Miguel De Allende Mexico 23 Opt80 Yellowtrace A G Studio Tonana Rooftop Bar San Miguel De Allende Mexico 13 Opt80 Yellowtrace A G Studio Tonana Rooftop Bar San Miguel De Allende Mexico 16 Opt80 Behind the bar, a custom shelving unit displays pre-Columbian vessels and artifacts alongside bottles of spirits. The bar front glows with illuminated panels set against a burgundy and terracotta backdrop. Brass lighting warms the whole space, especially striking against the wine-coloured mosaic tiles on the interior walls.The cocktails extend the idea further. They honour ancestral healer-women through infusions based on medicinal plants and botanicals. Each drink reinterprets traditional healing practices for today.Gutiérrez collaborated with Sebastián de Los Angeles and Federico Mascarell on the design, with Claudia Escalante overseeing the project. What they’ve made is a rooftop bar that’s also a cultural statement—ancient wisdom translated into volcanic stone, brass, and marble.Originario Design Store in Mexico City by Andrés Gutiérrez.Located in five ever-changing rooms in Colonia Roma, the trail blazing space is a hot bed for experimentation, exhibiting new ideas and works from young national talent. [Images courtesy of Andrés Gutiérrez / A-G estudio. Photography by Leandro Bulzzano.] Share the love: Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest Leave a Reply Cancel ReplyYour email address will not be published.CommentName* Email* Website Δ