{
  "url": "https://classa.info/cities/mexico-city/security-and-redundancy",
  "title": "Mexico City office security and redundancy",
  "description": "Physical security, power resilience, and connectivity redundancy standards in Mexico City's Class A office market.",
  "oneSentenceAnswer": "Class A buildings in Mexico City typically deliver 24/7 security, N+1 power redundancy, dual-feed connectivity, and tenant-controlled access systems as a baseline.",
  "tldr": [
    "24/7 manned lobby and access control is the baseline for institutional Class A.",
    "N+1 power redundancy is standard; mission-critical operations should specify N+2.",
    "Dual-feed fibre from independent carriers is the connectivity baseline.",
    "Tenant-controlled access (mobile credentials, visitor management) is now expected."
  ],
  "keyFacts": {
    "city": "Mexico City",
    "country": "Mexico",
    "region": "Americas",
    "classARentLocal": "MX$580/sqm/mo · ≈ $33.6 PSF/yr USD",
    "classARentUsd": "$34/sqft/yr",
    "vacancy": "22.6%",
    "typicalLeaseYears": 5,
    "typicalRentFreeMonths": 6,
    "submarkets": 5,
    "primeYieldPct": "7.4%"
  },
  "faqs": [
    {
      "question": "Is N+1 power standard in Mexico City Class A buildings?",
      "answer": "Yes — N+1 is the institutional baseline. N+2 is achievable on specific buildings or via tenant-installed UPS."
    }
  ],
  "pageType": "city-topic",
  "lastUpdated": "2026-04-15T00:00:00.000Z",
  "license": "CC BY 4.0 with attribution to Class A Atlas (https://classa.info).",
  "citation": "Source: Class A Atlas (https://classa.info/cities/mexico-city/security-and-redundancy), updated 2026-04-15T00:00:00.000Z."
}