Eaglecrest Resorts investment in Limited Partnership Units for the El Comitan project at La Paz is SOLD OUT. Purchase Reservation Agreements for various type dwellings will commence to Limited Partners in the near future followed by similar Reservations for the general public. To receive additional information, or to attend future seminars on Mexico, please register through our web site.

About the City of La Paz and El Comitan

La Paz (lah-PAHS) which means "peace" in Spanish is the state capital of Baja California, Sur and the second largest city south of Tijuana on the Baja Peninsula with a population of around 250,000. As the region's commercial, cultural and political center, La Paz is still a tranquil and very Mexican port. As it is one of the oldest cities in Mexico, It has preserved a sort of nostalgic "old Baja" atmosphere.

El Comitan Punta Arena has a community water system, electric service and fiber optics cable for telephone and other communications. Shopping is within a 20-minute walk on the beach to El Centenario (or a 5 minute drive). Nearby La Paz offers many amenities such as five hospitals with English speaking staff, movie theatres, and shopping. The bay of La Paz is also home to great white sand beaches, calm water for swimming, snorkeling and diving spots and the best sports fishing in the world!

Surrounded by the Sonoran desert, La Paz is set amid ancient laurel trees and coconut and date palms. The city is laid out in the classic grid pattern with streets radiating from the city's northwest facing the waterfront (Paseo Alvaro Obregon). Running parallel to Paseo Obregon is the city's lovely waterfront promenade, or malecon. El Mogote, a flat deserted sandbar, sits just offshore. A few blocks inland in the main plaza, Plaza Constitucion, with its pink quartz gazebo, tiled walkways and 19th century cathedral.

La Paz is arguably the ecotourism capital of Mexico. Within easy reach from La Paz are deserted beaches, calm bays, and ecologically pristine offshore islands including Isla Espiritu, Isla Partida and Isla Cerralvo. Further inland lie deserts, oases, and the Sierra de la Laguna mountains (declared a Biosphere Reserve in 1994). The region's complex wildlife, plant life, and geology is truly astonishing.