In San Pedro Garza García the air has that invisible texture of money: it does not smell, but it weighs. It feels in the form of cars before the pedestrian passage — not by courtesy, but by programmed custom—, in the impeccable geometry of gardens that seem designed by an obsessive sect of bonsai, and in dogs. Especially in dogs. Because here, more than pets, they are emotional accessories with pedigree and hairstyle.In San Pedro, looking at fro…
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In San Pedro Garza García the air has that invisible texture of money: it does not smell, but it weighs. It feels in the form of cars before the pedestrian passage — not by courtesy, but by programmed custom—, in the impeccable geometry of gardens that seem designed by an obsessive sect of bonsai, and in dogs. Especially in dogs. Because here, more than pets, they are emotional accessories with pedigree and hairstyle.In San Pedro, looking at fro…