Plaza de la Entrada
Plaza de la Entrada, Muyil
The square is made up of ten pyramidal-shaped bases. On top of these, buildings called temples were built. The structures, tall and narrow in silhouette, represent the earliest civic-religious architecture of the Muyil settlement.
In this square, the Mayan rulers gathered the population when there was any important civil event, or when they had to celebrate a ceremony related to the cult.
On the northeast side, it is delimited by three bases, a short distance from them are the western end of Sacbe 2.
Towards the south side of this square, there are several low-rise platforms, on which the people of Muyil built their homes; These, similar to those that are currently observed in the traditional villages of the region, were made with perishable materials such as wood, roofed with the leaves of a palm that is locally called guano.