
Bike the trails and visit the playground
Housed in a stately Renaissance building beside the cathedral in the heart of Seville, the Archivo General de Indias holds the documentary record of the Spanish empire in the Americas and the Philippines, one of the most important historical archives in the world and an inscribed UNESCO World Heritage Site. The building itself, the Casa Lonja de Mercaderes, was constructed in the late sixteenth century to designs associated with Juan de Herrera, the architect of El Escorial, originally as a merc.....
A historic aristocratic residence in the central streets of Madrid, the Bucarelli Palace is one of the city's old noble houses, reflecting the era when the Spanish capital was filled with the town palaces of the aristocracy who attended the royal court. Such palaces, built from the seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries, formed an important part of the urban fabric of old Madrid, their dignified facades lining the streets of the historic centre and their interiors furnished to reflect the wealt.....
Regarded as the finest example of an Andalusian aristocratic palace in Seville, the Casa de Pilatos is a sixteenth-century mansion that blends Mudejar, Gothic and Renaissance styles in a harmonious whole, set among the streets of the old city. The palace was built by the powerful Enriquez de Ribera family, and according to tradition it takes its name from a comparison drawn between the house and the praetorium of Pontius Pilate in Jerusalem, after one of its owners returned from a pilgrimage to .....

Hidden behind an unassuming doorway in the old quarter of Seville near the cathedral, the Casa de Salinas is a sixteenth-century Renaissance palace that remains a private family home, offering visitors an intimate glimpse into the domestic life and decorative traditions of an Andalusian noble residence. Less famous and far less crowded than the grander palaces of the city, the house provides a more personal and atmospheric experience, with guided visits leading small groups through its rooms and.....
Trading physical sets for fully digital worlds, ECLIPSO Seville is a virtual-reality experience centre on the Avenida de Kansas City that transports visitors into immersive, narrative-driven recreations of historical places and events. Part of a wider European network of immersive expedition venues, the centre equips guests with virtual-reality headsets and allows them to move freely through large physical spaces while the technology overlays detailed digital environments synchronised to their m.....
Themed around the age of Spanish exploration and the discovery of the Americas, Isla Magica is a theme park on the Isla de la Cartuja in Seville, built on the site of the 1992 Universal Exposition that the city hosted to mark the 500th anniversary of Columbus's first voyage. Opened in 1997, the park draws its theme from sixteenth-century Seville, which in that era was the gateway to the New World and one of the richest and most important cities in Europe, and its zones recreate the world of the.....
In the courtyard of a 15th-century palace house in Seville's Barrio de Santa Cruz, La Casa del Flamenco stages flamenco performances every night. The venue sits in the old Jewish quarter, a maze of narrow cobbled lanes a few steps from the Giralda and the cathedral. The shows take place in the central patio of the historic building, surrounded by marble arches and columns, coffered ceilings and traditional tilework. The setting is part of the draw, lending the performances the atmosphere of a p.....

Every night in a small room in central Seville, La Tremenderia stages live flamenco for an audience of around fifty. The intimate scale is the point: with so few seats, spectators sit close to the artists and can talk with them once the music ends. The tablao sits on Calle Madre Dolores Marquez, in the old centre within easy reach of the cathedral and the Real Alcazar, and not far from the Macarena quarter. Its setting among the narrow streets places it at the heart of the city most associated .....
Dedicated to the art that defines Andalusia in the popular imagination, the Museo del Baile Flamenco was created in 2006 by the dancer Cristina Hoyos, one of the most acclaimed performers in the history of the form, who wished to explain and preserve the traditions of flamenco dance. Set in an eighteenth-century house in the old quarter near the cathedral, the museum spreads across several floors and combines interactive exhibits, costumes, paintings, photographs and audiovisual displays that tr.....