All about the Passion
Alcazaba of Málaga

Crowning a hill above the old town of Malaga with views over the city and the Mediterranean, the Alcazaba is one of the best-preserved Moorish fortress-palaces in Spain, built principally in the eleventh century during the era of the taifa kingdoms and later extended under successive Muslim rulers. The fortress served both as a military stronghold defending the port city and as a palace for its governors, and its design reflects this dual purpose, combining formidable defensive walls, towers and.....

Automobile and Fashion Museum

Pairing two unexpected themes under one roof, the Museo Automovilistico y de la Moda in Malaga combines a collection of classic and historic automobiles with displays of haute couture fashion, set within a restored early twentieth-century former tobacco factory. The museum opened in 2010 and presents the parallel evolution of car design and fashion through the decades of the twentieth century, drawing connections between the changing aesthetics, technology and social attitudes reflected in both.....

Centre Pompidou Málaga

Marked at street level by a striking multicoloured glass cube, the Centre Pompidou Malaga is the first outpost of the renowned Parisian modern art institution to open outside France, established in 2015 on the waterfront of the redeveloped Muelle Uno port district. The museum occupies a largely subterranean exhibition space beneath the harbourside promenade, crowned by the cube designed by the artist Daniel Buren, whose vivid panels have become a landmark of the seafront and a symbol of the cit.....

Colección del Museo Ruso Málaga

Sharing a restored tobacco factory with the city's automobile museum, the Coleccion del Museo Ruso in Malaga was a branch of the State Russian Museum of Saint Petersburg, opened in 2015 to display masterpieces of Russian art in southern Spain, the first such institution outside Russia. The museum was established under a collaboration agreement that brought rotating selections from the immense holdings of the Saint Petersburg institution to Malaga, allowing Spanish and international audiences to.....

Day Trips from Málaga

As the gateway to the Costa del Sol and the wider region of Andalusia, Malaga makes an excellent base for day trips to some of the most celebrated towns, cities and natural landscapes of southern Spain. Among the most sought-after excursions is the dramatic town of Ronda, perched on either side of a deep gorge spanned by a spectacular eighteenth-century bridge, one of the most photographed sights in the country. The great Andalusian cities of Granada, with its incomparable Alhambra palace, Sevil.....

Hammam Al Ándalus Málaga

Reviving the bathing traditions of Al-Andalus in a city with deep Moorish roots, the Hammam Al Andalus in Malaga is an Arab bath house that offers visitors a sensory experience of relaxation rooted in the culture of medieval Islamic Spain, set in the historic heart of the city near the cathedral. Part of a small chain of Arab baths operating in cities with a strong Andalusi heritage, the Malaga hammam transports guests into a candlelit world of vaulted chambers, horseshoe arches, intricate tilew.....

La Malagueta Bullring

A sixteen-sided ring of brick and iron beside the sea, the Plaza de Toros de la Malagueta is the bullring of Malaga, set in the seafront district that shares its name. Its unusual polygonal shape and arcaded galleries make it a distinctive landmark on the city's eastern side. It was designed by the architect Joaquin Rucoba, who also built Malaga's central market, and constructed in the 1870s. After a pause in the work, it was inaugurated on 11 June 1876 with a traditional bullfight featuring le.....

La Rosaleda Stadium

Home to Malaga CF since 1941, the Estadio La Rosaleda stands on the Paseo de Martiricos, beside the bed of the Guadalmedina river near the centre of the city. Its name, meaning the rose garden, comes from the grounds on which it was built. Plans for the stadium were drawn up in the 1930s, and the foundation stone was laid in June 1936, but the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War halted construction for several years. Work resumed at the start of the 1940s to a modified design by the architects En.....

Málaga Cathedral

Known locally as La Manquita, the one-armed lady, Malaga's Renaissance cathedral is famous for the tower it never had. Only the north tower was completed; the southern one was left as a stump, giving the building its lopsided silhouette and its affectionate nickname. The cathedral was begun in 1528 on the site of the city's former main mosque, after Malaga came under Christian rule, and construction continued for more than two centuries. Work was eventually halted in 1782 with the south tower s.....

Museo Carmen Thyssen Málaga

Housed in a restored 16th-century palace in the centre of Malaga, the Carmen Thyssen Museum holds one of the finest collections of 19th-century Spanish painting on public display. Its focus is firmly on Andalusian art, set in the city where the painter Pablo Picasso was born. The collection was assembled by Carmen Cervera, the Baroness Thyssen-Bornemisza, who built her own holdings separately from the famous family collection now in Madrid. After a long search for a home, the works were placed .....