Job Recruitment Website - Immigration policy - The National Palace (the seat of Mexico's administrative organs) is a complete collection of detailed information.

The National Palace (the seat of Mexico's administrative organs) is a complete collection of detailed information.

The National Palace (Spanish: Palacio Nacional) is the seat of the Mexican federal government.

Chinese Name: National Palace mbth: Palacio Nacional Belongs to: Mexico City Nature: Federalism * * * Role: Location of Mexican Federal Administration: Mexico City Center East of Constitution Square The National Palace of Mexico is the location of Mexican Federal Administration, which is located in the whole east of Constitution Square in Mexico City Center. The National Palace is more than 200 meters long and has a red facade. Since the Aztec Empire, the site has been the palace of Mexican rulers, and most of the building materials are taken from the original palace in Monctesuma II. There are three doors in the National Palace. Above the main entrance is a Dolores clock, and above the clock is a balcony. Every year on Mexico's Independence Day, the Mexican President will take the lead in shouting "Long live Mexico". The interior of the National Palace is a Spanish courtyard, and the corridor is also Spanish. The walls of the corridor are covered with murals, showing the indigenous life in Mexico before the Spanish occupation. The most noteworthy is the Quetzalcoatl created by diego rivera, one of the three outstanding Mexican painters, between 1929- 1935. The bronze fountain in the center of the courtyard of the National Palace, above which stands a bronze horse with wings. There is also a very elegant and quiet "back garden" in the National Palace. The plants in the garden are pleasing to the eye and a good place to rest.