La guía de Miriam

Miriam
La guía de Miriam

Lugares emblemáticos

440 Recomendado por los habitantes de la zona
Font Màgica de Montjuïc
1 Pl. de Carles Buïgas
440 Recomendado por los habitantes de la zona
329 Recomendado por los habitantes de la zona
Poble Espanyol
13 Av. Francesc Ferrer i Guàrdia
329 Recomendado por los habitantes de la zona
1300 Recomendado por los habitantes de la zona
Montjuïc
1300 Recomendado por los habitantes de la zona
1313 Recomendado por los habitantes de la zona
Mercado de la Boqueria
91 La Rambla
1313 Recomendado por los habitantes de la zona
6 Recomendado por los habitantes de la zona
Estadi Olímpic Lluís Companys
17 Passeig Olímpic
6 Recomendado por los habitantes de la zona
9 Recomendado por los habitantes de la zona
Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona
5 Carrer de Montalegre
9 Recomendado por los habitantes de la zona
9 Recomendado por los habitantes de la zona
Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona
5 Carrer de Montalegre
9 Recomendado por los habitantes de la zona

Barrios

Sant Antoni is a rarity we've all got to look after. It's the fragile balance between old and new, where you'll find a Barcelona that's unfortunately disappearing – one past generations cultivated, where so much of life was lived in the city's streets and squares and all the neighbours knew each other – and where you'll also find the very latest trends in fashion and gastronomy. On one side you've got the Raval neighbourhood. On the other, Poble-sec and Barcelona's symbolic Montjüic. And in the middle, this gem that's full of life (in all its many glorious forms) and which was revitalised in spring 2018 with the reopening of the Mercat de Sant Antoni, the nerve centre of neighbourhood activity and also one of the great examples of Barcelona's wrought-iron architecture.
82 Recomendado por los habitantes de la zona
Sant Antoni
82 Recomendado por los habitantes de la zona
Sant Antoni is a rarity we've all got to look after. It's the fragile balance between old and new, where you'll find a Barcelona that's unfortunately disappearing – one past generations cultivated, where so much of life was lived in the city's streets and squares and all the neighbours knew each other – and where you'll also find the very latest trends in fashion and gastronomy. On one side you've got the Raval neighbourhood. On the other, Poble-sec and Barcelona's symbolic Montjüic. And in the middle, this gem that's full of life (in all its many glorious forms) and which was revitalised in spring 2018 with the reopening of the Mercat de Sant Antoni, the nerve centre of neighbourhood activity and also one of the great examples of Barcelona's wrought-iron architecture.