Barcelona City Trip Guide - Barcelona City,
Spain tours 2016 - Attractions in Barcelona City, Spain
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Barcelona is an enchanting seaside city with boundless culture, fabled architecture, and a world-class drinking and dining scene.
A Moveable Feast
Barcelona's great artistic traditions don't end at the canvas. The masters of molecular gastronomy –
Albert Adrià, Carles Abellan et al – are part of the long and celebrated tradition of
Catalan cooking.
Simple, flavourful ingredients – seafood, jamón (cured ham), market-fresh produce – are transformed into remarkable delicacies and then served up in captivating settings. You can feast on hearty, rich paella at an outdoor table overlooking the sea or step back to the
1920s at an elegant art nouveau–filled dining room. Barcelona's wide-ranging palate adds further complexity: Basque-style tapas bars,
Galician seafood taverns, avant-garde
Japanese restaurants and sinful chocolate shops are all essential parts of the culinary landscape.
Twenty-four
Hour Party People
The night holds limitless possibilities in Barcelona.
Start with sunset drinks from a panoramic terrace or dig your heels in the sand at a rustic beachside chiringuito. As darkness falls, live music transforms the city: the rapid-fire rhythms of flamenco, brassy jazz spilling out of basements, and hands-in-the-air indie-rock at vintage concert halls. Towards
midnight the bars fill. Take your pick from old-school taverns adorned with
19th-century murals, plush lounges in lamp-lit medieval chambers or boisterous cava bars. If you're still standing at 3am, hit the clubs and explore Barcelona's unabashed wild side.
Why
I Love Barcelona
I love the sea, and taking an early-morning jog along the
Mediterranean is my favourite way to start the day. I'm also a bit of a history nerd, and relish strolling the cobblestone lanes of the
Gothic quarter, thinking about all the people in past centuries who walked these same streets.
And then there's the food and drink – the first-rate tapas bars, the abundant and inexpensive wine, the superb and reasonably priced multicourse lunches. Add to all this Catalan creativity (Modernisme,
Miró,
Dalí), bohemian bars and stunning nearby getaways and you have, quite simply, one of the world's most captivating cities.
Under the Iberian
Sun
The deep blue Mediterranean beckons. Sun-drenched beaches make a fine backdrop to a jog, bike ride or long leisurely stroll along the seaside – followed by a refreshing dip, of course. You can also enjoy the view from out on the water while kayaking, stand-up paddleboarding or taking it easy on a sunset cruise. Looming behind the city, the rolling forest-covered Collserola
Hills provide a scenic setting for hiking, mountain biking or just admiring the view.
Closer to the city centre, hilltop
Montjuïc offers endless exploring amid botanic and sculpture gardens, an old castle and first-rate museums with panoramic views at every turn.
Architecture of the
Ages
Barcelona's architectural treasures span 2000-plus years. Towering temple columns, ancient city walls and subterranean stone corridors provide a window into
Roman-era Barcino.
Fast forward a thousand years to the
Middle Ages by taking a stroll through the shadowy lanes of the Gothic quarter, past tranquil plazas and soaring
14th-century cathedrals. In other parts of town bloom the sculptural masterpieces of Modernisme, a mix of ingenious and whimsical creations by
Gaudí and his Catalan architectural contemporaries, for which this city is so well known. Barcelona has also long inspired artists, including the likes of
Salvador Dalí,
Pablo Picasso and
Joan Miró, whose works are in bold display in the city's myriad museums.
- published: 11 Jan 2016
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