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Tibidabo Amusement Park: A Century of Magic Above Barcelona

At 512 metres above sea level, Tibidabo is the highest point of the Collserola ridge that forms Barcelona’s natural backdrop. The mountain takes its name from the Latin phrase — tibi dabo, “I will give to you” — from the biblical temptation of Christ, who was offered the kingdoms of the world from a mountaintop. Looking out from Tibidabo on a clear day, the offer seems entirely plausible.

A Theme Park With Over 100 Years of History

The Parc d’Atraccions del Tibidabo opened in 1901, making it one of the oldest amusement parks in the world still in operation. What makes it unusual — and genuinely charming — is the preservation of vintage attractions alongside modern rides. The Avió aircraft ride (dating from 1928), the Automàtic mechanical theatre (1910), and the magnificent 1920s carousel are all still running, giving Tibidabo an atmosphere of nostalgic wonder that modern theme parks struggle to replicate.

The park sprawls across the mountaintop and offers rides for all ages, a Ferris wheel with extraordinary views, and access to the observation tower of the Torre de Collserola (designed by Norman Foster for the 1992 Olympics).

The Temple Expiatori del Sagrat Cor

Visible from much of the city, the neo-Gothic Temple Expiatori del Sagrat Cor rises from the very summit of Tibidabo. Construction began in 1902 and wasn’t completed until 1961. Take the elevator to the base of the Christ statue on top for the highest publicly accessible viewpoint in the city.

Getting to Tibidabo

Take the FGC S1/S2 line to Avinguda del Tibidabo, then the historic Tramvia Blau (Blue Tram) and the Funicular del Tibidabo up the mountain. Check the park’s website for opening days and times — Tibidabo is not open every day and hours vary by season.

Búnquers del Carmel: Barcelona’s Forgotten Bunkers with the City’s Best View

Ask a local where to find the best view in Barcelona and they’ll often say the same place: the Búnquers del Carmel. Perched on the Turó de la Rovira hill in the Carmel neighbourhood, these Civil War anti-aircraft batteries offer a breathtaking 360-degree panorama of the entire city — the sea, the mountains, the Sagrada Família, Montjuïc, the Tibidabo — all spread out below you without obstruction.

From Anti-Aircraft Batteries to Neighbourhood Icon

The bunkers were built in 1937, during the Spanish Civil War, when Barcelona was under frequent bombardment from Nationalist and Italian aircraft. After Franco’s victory, the batteries fell into disuse. In the postwar decades, shantytown settlements grew up around the ruins, housing thousands of migrants who came to Barcelona from across Spain. The shantytowns were cleared in the 1980s and 1990s, and in 2011 the site was formally opened as a public space and archaeological park.

A small MUHBA museum at the site explains the Civil War history and the social history of the postwar shantytown community through photographs, oral testimonies, and recovered objects.

The View and the Atmosphere

The real draw, for most visitors, is the view. The concrete platforms of the old gun emplacements serve as natural terraces for watching the sunset — a ritual that draws a mix of tourists and locals every evening from spring through autumn. Arrive at least an hour before sunset to secure a good spot.

Getting There

The Búnquers are in the Carmel neighbourhood, most easily reached by bus (line V17 from Passeig de Gràcia, or various lines to Carmel). The walk up from the nearest bus stop is about 10–15 minutes. Entry is free. Wear comfortable shoes as the terrain is uneven.

El Call Jueu: Exploring Barcelona’s Medieval Jewish Quarter

Beneath the surface of Barcelona’s Gothic Quarter lies a history that most visitors never encounter. El Call (from the Hebrew kahal, meaning community) was the Jewish quarter of medieval Barcelona — a densely populated neighbourhood that was home to one of the most important Jewish communities in the Iberian Peninsula until the pogrom of 1391 and the final expulsion of Jews from Spain in 1492.

The Streets of the Medieval Call

The Call occupied the area roughly bounded by La Rambla to the west, Carrer de la Boqueria to the north, Carrer del Call to the east, and Carrer de la Fruita to the south. Walking these narrow streets today, it’s still possible to feel the compressed density of the medieval neighbourhood — the passages are barely wide enough for two people to pass, the buildings tower above, and occasional fragments of Hebrew inscription survive in the stonework.

The Ancient Synagogue

At Carrer de Marlet 5, the Sinagoga Major — the main synagogue of medieval Barcelona — was identified and partially excavated in the 1990s. The building dates back to the 3rd or 4th century CE, making it one of the oldest synagogues in Europe. Today it operates as a small museum and active synagogue. Guided visits explain the building’s history and the life of the medieval Jewish community.

Visiting El Call

The best way to explore El Call is on foot, starting from Plaça de Sant Jaume and walking west into the tangle of streets around Carrer del Call and Carrer de Sant Domènec del Call. The MUHBA-run El Call interpretive centre offers guided tours and additional context. The nearest metro station is Liceu (L3) or Jaume I (L4).

Plaça de Sant Felip Neri: Barcelona’s Most Hauntingly Beautiful Square

Off a narrow alley in the heart of the Gothic Quarter, Plaça de Sant Felip Neri is the kind of place that stops you mid-step. Small, shaded by an orange tree, surrounded by pale stone buildings with wooden shutters, and often almost completely quiet — it’s one of the most atmospheric corners of Barcelona, and one that most visitors never find.

The Scars on the Wall

Look closely at the walls of the church of Sant Felip Neri and you’ll see deep pockmarks in the stone — the scars of shrapnel. On 30 January 1938, during the Spanish Civil War, a Nationalist bomb fell on this square during a school lunch break. Forty-two people died, many of them children from the adjacent school who had taken shelter in the church basement. The holes in the wall have never been filled in.

The square’s haunted quality — its beauty and its tragedy coexisting so quietly — makes it one of the most genuinely moving places in Barcelona for anyone who pauses to understand what they’re looking at.

The Church and Shoe Museum

The Baroque church of Sant Felip Neri dates from the 18th century and is modest but peaceful inside. The building adjacent to the square’s fountain houses the Museu del Calçat — the Barcelona Shoemakers’ Museum — a small collection of historic footwear that includes a giant shoe made for the Columbus Monument.

Finding the Square

Plaça de Sant Felip Neri is in the Gothic Quarter, between Carrer de Sant Sever and Carrer de Sant Felip Neri. It’s a short walk from the Cathedral and from the Jaume I metro station (L4). Visit in the morning for the best light and the quietest atmosphere.

Santa Maria del Mar: Barcelona’s Perfect Gothic Church by the Sea

If Barcelona’s Gothic Cathedral impresses with its scale and grandeur, Santa Maria del Mar moves with something rarer: purity of design. Built between 1329 and 1383 in the ribera neighbourhood near the port, it stands as one of the finest examples of Catalan Gothic architecture in existence — and among the most beautiful churches in all of Europe.

Built by the People of the Ribera

Santa Maria del Mar holds a special place in Barcelona’s collective memory. According to historical tradition, it was built not by royal patronage or clerical wealth alone, but through the collective effort of the neighbourhood’s workers — the bastaixos (porters) who carried stone from the royal quarry at Montjuïc on their backs. Their figures are carved on the main doorway, a permanent tribute to the labour that built the church.

The construction took just 55 years — extraordinarily fast for a Gothic building of this ambition — resulting in a rare architectural unity. Unlike cathedrals built over centuries with shifting styles, Santa Maria del Mar was conceived and executed as a coherent whole, which is a large part of what makes it so satisfying.

The Interior: Space, Light, and Silence

Step inside and you’ll understand immediately why locals consider this more beautiful than the Cathedral. The three equal-height naves, supported by elegant octagonal columns spaced unusually widely apart, create a sense of soaring, uncluttered space. The stained glass — mostly 15th and 16th century, with some sections restored after the fire of 1936 — bathes the stone in amber and blue light.

Visiting Santa Maria del Mar

The church is on Plaça de Santa Maria in the El Born district, a short walk from the Jaume I metro station (L4). Entry is free for prayer during religious services; a small fee applies for tourist visits at other times. The rooftop tour, offered at certain times, gives access to the gargoyles and panoramic views over the Born.

CosmoCaixa Barcelona: Science Museum for Curious Minds of All Ages

Tucked away in the Sarrià-Sant Gervasi district at the foot of the Tibidabo hills, CosmoCaixa is regularly rated one of the best science museums in Europe — and significantly undervisited by international tourists who tend to focus on the city’s art and architecture. That’s their loss.

The Flooded Amazonian Forest

The museum’s centrepiece is something genuinely extraordinary: a living, flooded Amazonian rainforest contained within the building. Around 100 species of plants, fish, reptiles, birds, and mammals live here in a carefully maintained ecosystem. The temperature, humidity, and light levels are kept at Amazonian conditions year-round. Walking through the boardwalk path, you’ll hear howler monkeys, see caimans basking, and feel the heat and density of the equatorial forest — without leaving Barcelona.

Geological Wall and Interactive Exhibits

The Geological Wall presents a cross-section of Earth’s geological history in physical rock samples — a floor-to-ceiling display that covers billions of years of planetary evolution. Elsewhere, interactive exhibits explore physics, chemistry, biology, and cosmology in ways that are engaging for adults and children alike. The Planetarium shows are an additional attraction worth booking in advance.

How to Get There

CosmoCaixa is at Carrer d’Isaac Newton, 26, in the Sarrià area. The easiest route is the FGC train to Av. Tibidabo station, then a short walk or the free museum shuttle. It’s open Tuesday through Sunday from 10am; closed Mondays. The garden outside is pleasant for a rest before or after your visit.

CaixaForum Barcelona: World-Class Exhibitions in a Modernista Factory

At the foot of Montjuïc, a former textile factory has been transformed into one of Barcelona’s most visited cultural spaces. CaixaForum Barcelona occupies the Fàbrica Casaramona, a 1911 building by Josep Puig i Cadafalch that stands as one of the finest examples of industrial modernisme in existence. The conversion — completed by Japanese architect Arata Isozaki in 2002 — added a distinctive floating steel entrance pavilion that became its own talking point.

The Building

The original factory is a brick masterpiece: crenellated roofline, slender iron columns, large windows, and an elaborate water tower. Walking through the restored interiors, it’s easy to imagine the machines and workers that once filled these spaces. Puig i Cadafalch brought the same care to industrial architecture that his contemporaries applied to private mansions — a testament to the breadth of the modernista movement.

Exhibitions and Programme

CaixaForum runs a high-quality programme of temporary exhibitions on art, science, and social issues — often bringing international blockbuster shows to Barcelona that you might otherwise have to travel to London, Paris, or New York to see. Entry prices are modest compared to major international museums, and the Fundació La Caixa offers free or discounted access to certain groups.

Getting There and Nearby

CaixaForum is at Avinguda de Francesc Ferrer i Guàrdia, 6-8, a short walk from Plaça Espanya (metro L1/L3). It’s open daily from 10am. Combine with a visit to the Barcelona Pavilion or MNAC, both just minutes away on foot. The centre also has a good café and bookshop.

MUHBA: Exploring Two Millennia of Barcelona History Underground

Beneath the Gothic Quarter’s medieval streets lies one of Europe’s most remarkable archaeological sites. The Museu d’Història de Barcelona — MUHBA — gives visitors access to an extraordinary underground Roman city: streets, workshops, a winery, fish-salting facilities, and water systems from the Roman colony of Barcino, dating from the 1st century BCE to the 7th century CE.

Walking Through Ancient Barcino

The underground circuit runs for over 4,000 square metres beneath the Plaça del Rei. You walk on glass walkways above the Roman remains, peering down into the rooms and streets of a city that was buried and built over across 2,000 years of continuous occupation. The fish-salting workshop, the garum production facility, the dyeing works — these mundane industrial remains bring the Roman city to life in a way that no collection of artifacts ever could.

Above ground, the visit continues through the medieval Palau Reial Major — the royal palace of the Counts of Barcelona and Kings of Aragon — including the stunning 14th-century Saló del Tinell, where Ferdinand and Isabella are said to have received Columbus after his return from the Americas.

The Plaça del Rei

The square itself is one of the most evocative spaces in the city — enclosed, largely traffic-free, and surrounded by medieval buildings. Arrive in the early morning or evening to see it at its quietest and most atmospheric.

How to Visit

MUHBA is at Plaça del Rei in the Gothic Quarter, a short walk from the Jaume I metro station (L4). It’s open Tuesday through Sunday; closed Mondays. The ticket also gives access to several other MUHBA sites around the city. Book online during peak season to avoid queues.

CCCB: Barcelona’s Centre for Culture, Debate, and Experimentation

Next door to MACBA in the Raval, the Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona — CCCB — occupies a beautifully converted 19th-century former poorhouse (the Casa de la Caritat). Where MACBA focuses on the visual arts, CCCB casts a wider net: exhibitions, film festivals, music, lectures, debates, and interdisciplinary projects that explore the intersections between culture, technology, and urban life.

The Architecture: Old and New in Dialogue

The building itself is a landmark. The architects Helio Piñón and Albert Viaplana inserted a stunning glass curtain wall into the historic facade — a gesture that has aged remarkably well and creates one of the most distinctive courtyards in the city. In summer the courtyard hosts outdoor concerts and events that attract a broad and enthusiastic local audience.

What Happens Here

CCCB’s programme changes constantly. In any given season you might find a major retrospective exhibition on an influential filmmaker, a festival devoted to electronic music, a series of talks on urban inequality, or a programme of short films. The centre has hosted events connected to the Sónar Festival, the LOOP video art fair, and the Kosmopolis literature festival — positioning it as a hub for Barcelona’s creative and intellectual life.

Entry prices are very reasonable compared to other Barcelona museums, and some events are free. The bookshop stocks a thoughtful selection of titles on architecture, art, and urban culture.

Visiting Tips

CCCB is at Carrer de Montalegre, 5 in the Raval, immediately beside MACBA. Check the CCCB website before visiting to see the current programme — what’s on will significantly shape your experience. Open Tuesday through Sunday from 11am; closed Mondays.

MACBA: Contemporary Art in the Heart of the Raval

Richard Meier’s gleaming white building landed in the Raval in 1995 and immediately transformed the neighbourhood. The Museu d’Art Contemporani de Barcelona — MACBA — was controversial from the start: a monument to international high culture dropped into one of Barcelona’s most densely populated and historically marginalised districts. Three decades on, the debate continues — but so does the museum, and its relationship with the city around it has become one of the most interesting aspects of visiting.

The Collection and Exhibitions

MACBA’s permanent collection covers art from the 1940s to the present, with particular strength in Spanish and Catalan avant-garde movements from the postwar period and international contemporary practice from the 1980s onward. The temporary exhibition programme is ambitious and frequently brings work that hasn’t been seen before in Spain.

The building itself — with its curving glass facade, dramatic atrium ramps, and carefully controlled natural light — is worth experiencing even if contemporary art isn’t your primary interest. Meier’s design creates a sense of movement and discovery that makes the act of visiting feel purposeful.

The Plaza and Skate Culture

One of Barcelona’s most distinctive urban scenes plays out in the plaza in front of MACBA every day: a community of skaters has claimed the smooth marble surfaces as one of the best spots in the city. The combination of high culture inside and street culture outside has become part of MACBA’s identity — and makes for great people-watching.

Getting There

MACBA is on Plaça dels Àngels in the Raval, a short walk from the Universitat metro station (L1/L2) or Catalunya station. It’s open daily except Tuesdays; check the official website for current hours and exhibition information. CCCB, an equally interesting cultural centre, is immediately adjacent.