The Plaza Galerías Diana, a shopping mall in Mexico's resort town Acapulco, appeared significantly damaged after Hurricane Otis made landfall along Mexico's Pacific Coast early Wednesday morning, according to photos shared online by national media outlets.
E-Consulta, a digital media company based in Mexico City, shared before and after photos of the mall that showed portions of the roof and one side of the mall destroyed.
Circula en redes foto del antes y después de plaza Diana tras el huracán #Otis que tocó tierra en #Acapulco pic.twitter.com/PK2FPw3jzH
— Periódico e-consulta (@e_consulta) October 25, 2023
TV Azteca outlets also shared photos of what the mall looked like before and after the storm, writing in translated comments on X, formerly Twitter, that the mall was left "unrecognizable."
🌀 #Otis tocó tierra en #Guerrero como categoría 5, la más peligrosa de todas.
— Fuerza Informativa Azteca (@AztecaNoticias) October 25, 2023
Lugares como #Acapulco quedaron prácticamente incomunicados. La Plaza Diana quedó irreconocible.
¿Cómo se formó?
Uriel Bello, @_otomartinez, @Radiohen y @vaitiaremateos nos cuentan en @HechosAM. pic.twitter.com/side7LI40d
Other photos and videos of the storm's impacts on Acapulco circulated on social media for hours after the hurricane hit. It was difficult to see the storm's impacts in some of the early videos filmed overnight, but subsequent footage shared online showed high winds whipping trees and hospital patients covered in blankets as the wind was blowing through the inside hallways.
One video shared by a Puebla-based news organization showed the extent of the destruction at an Acapulco hotel, which social media users and local media outlets identified as Hotel Princess.
Hotel Princess con 80% de dañó estructural tras paso de Huracán Otis #noticias #informados #huracan #otis #acapulco #dissaster #cambioclimatico #4T #amlo pic.twitter.com/7uCMh8UVdi
— Puebla (@PueblaenLinea) October 25, 2023
Hurricane Otis crept up on the southern Pacific Coast of Mexico on Tuesday, making a rapid shift from a tropical storm to a Category 5 Hurricane. It made landfall near Acapulco at about 1:25 a.m. local time on Wednesday with maximum sustained wind speeds of about 165 miles per hour, according to the National Hurricane Center (NHC). Otis may be the strongest hurricane to have ever hit this area, The Associated Press reported.
Some of the hurricane's biggest impacts were felt between Acapulco and Tecpan in Guerrero, according to Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador. Communication in the area was "completely lost" Wednesday morning, Obrador said. Guerrero Governor Evelyn Salgado Pineda said in a Wednesday morning post on X that officials were working on restoring communication channels to the area.
Communication issues in the area were making it difficult to determine whether any casualties were being reported in connection with the storm, with Obrador adding there was "no data on loss of human life" as of Wednesday morning.
Otis had been downgraded to a Category 2 storm at the time Obrador spoke with reporters about the local and federal government response. The storm has since been downgraded further, with the NHC announcing it returned to its earlier tropical storm status by Wednesday afternoon.
Heavy rain was forecast to continue falling in southwestern and south-central Mexico into Thursday, bringing with it flash flooding and urban flooding risks, the NHC said in a Wednesday afternoon storm advisory.
Newsweek reached out to the Acapulco mayor's office by email on Wednesday for comment.

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Meghan Roos is a Newsweek reporter based in Southern California. Her focus is reporting on breaking news for Newsweek's Live Blogs team. Meghan joined Newsweek in 2020 from KSWB-TV and previously worked at Women's Running magazine. She is a graduate of UC San Diego and earned a master's degree at New York University. You can get in touch with Meghan by emailing m.roos@newsweek.com. Languages: English
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