Überblick
Futuristic Architecture
Food & Paella
Beach & Mediterranean
History & Heritage
Geschichte
Kultur
Praktisches
Valencia has emerged as one of Europe's most appealing mid-sized cities — warmer and cheaper than Barcelona, more relaxed than Madrid, with a food culture, beach, historic centre and futuristic architecture that few cities of its size can match. The City of Arts and Sciences — Santiago Calatrava's complex of sweeping white structures in the former Turia riverbed — includes the Oceanogràfic (Europe's largest aquarium), the Hemisfèric (IMAX and planetarium), the Príncipe Felipe Science Museum and the Palau de les Arts opera house. The old town preserves the Lonja de la Seda (Silk Exchange, UNESCO World Heritage), the Cathedral (which claims to hold the Holy Grail), the Mercado Central (one of Europe's largest and most beautiful covered markets, built in art nouveau style in 1928) and the Torres de Serranos gateway. The Turia Gardens — a 9 km park running through the city in the old riverbed — connect the old town to the City of Arts and Sciences on foot or by bike. The Malvarrosa and Las Arenas beaches are urban and accessible. And then there's the food: Valencia is the birthplace of paella, and locals take their arroz (rice dishes) very seriously — paella valenciana (with rabbit, chicken, snails and broad beans, never seafood) is the canonical version. The city has become a major digital nomad destination, with coworking spaces, affordable rents and a Mediterranean quality of life that draws remote workers from across Europe.
Valencia entdecken
1 Vertretung in dieser Stadt, nach Region gruppiert.