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Mexico City installed a chandelier in its metro for the World Cup. Then came the crush of memes

MEXICO CITY (AP) 鈥 The sound of construction roared over the most memed metro station in as workers hammered at marble floors under a chandelier and rows of lamps reminiscent of a scene from 鈥淗arry Potter鈥 or 鈥淭itanic,鈥 racing to finish ahead of the opening ceremony Thursday.

Mexicans milling through the busy Hidalgo metro station pointed and laughed, occasionally snapping pictures of the face-lift that has become the subject of a cascade of internet memes.

The cosmetic makeover that authorities have attempted to give the capital as visitors arrive from around the globe also has become a symbol of that the government is prioritizing its superficial appearance for World Cup fans over fixing critical structural issues that have long plagued the city.

鈥淧eople make fun of it because it’s a failed aesthetic, it doesn’t make a lot of sense,鈥 said Silvia Escamilla, 28, who was hustling to work among a crowd of Mexican commuters. 鈥淎ll these renovations are like putting makeup on the city, because the infrastructure they could actually invest in just isn鈥檛 there.鈥

Decorations cover the problems

For weeks, Mexico City workers have plastered walls and metro cars with cartoon axolotls, the mole salamander that has become a city mascot. They also have painted bridges purple and planted Mexican marigold flowers typical of Day of the Dead celebrations in November.

The 22 million residents of the sprawling capital, known as Chilangos, have jokingly referred to the renovations as the city’s 鈥渁xolotlization.鈥 They have posted videos of flooded underpasses next to freshly painted murals of axolotls and crumbling stairs and potholes painted bright purple.

Hidalgo station, in the heart of the downtown, has perhaps become the subject of more memes than anywhere else in the city.

When city workers installed the chandelier near the metro entrance and rows of Victorian wall lamps in May, social media users were quick to joke that authorities were trying to make the gritty metro system look like it was in a European city.

Social media creators mock the changes

Residents began to show up at the station in elegant dresses in videos layered over Mozart music. One social media influencer descended the marble stairs dressed as the Beast from the classic Disney cartoon 鈥淏eauty and the Beast.鈥 Another arrived as Napoleon Bonaparte in a white wig and French military uniform.

鈥淢ay you have an elegant metro connection,鈥 one social media influencer said as he strolled through throngs of commuters dressed in a tuxedo and top hat. Another filmed herself selling pink dresses aboard one of the metro trains, yelling to passengers that the items matched the 鈥渆tiquette鈥 of Metro Hidalgo.

Many more posed next to marble floors and walls torn up by construction ahead of the soccer tournament being hosted by Mexico, the United States and Canada.

The humor highlights larger issues

The crush of jokes amused Mexicans for weeks, but also cut to the core of a deeper problem in the city, said Aldo Solano Rojas, an art historian in Mexico City who has criticized the remodel.

Failures to prioritize issues like the metro’s crumbling infrastructure and holes in the major municipal roadways show the government 鈥渄oesn’t understand the real needs of the city,鈥 he said.

鈥淪tate presence, at its best, is reflected in well-maintained sidewalks and adequate transportation infrastructure that doesn’t collapse every day,鈥 Solano Rojas said. 鈥淚t’s not reflected in frivolous, superficial axolotl murals while the streets are flooding.鈥

The criticisms come in the midst of as the country’s teachers union, families of and a range of other social movements use the proximity to the event to pressure authorities.

The government also has faced accusations of in an effort to clean up the streets. Despite the tensions, city workers on Wednesday were still racing to complete construction ahead of the and first match.

Mirna Baranco looked fondly on the renovations, but the 46-year-old laughed at the chandelier over Hidalgo construction workers. She nudged her boyfriend and pointed.

鈥淚’ve already seen it all over the place on Facebook, but not in real life,鈥 she said.

Baranco understood the criticisms, but said she didn’t think it was necessarily a bad thing that authorities were making changes to be more attractive to international visitors. The World Cup has helped push local governments to make needed renovations, even if some look a little out of place, she said.

The changes show that 鈥淢exico isn’t just how others stereotype us, as a country with narcos,鈥 Baranco said. 鈥淢exico has a lot to give the world.鈥

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