There are so many ways to enjoy Barcelona: the handy trams running alongside the leafy streets, the panoramic telefèric bringing you to dizzying heights on the top of Montjuïc hill, or even, if you really want to get the adrenaline pumping, a helicopter ride to admire the satisfying symmetry of the Eixample district. Walking, however, is still the best way to admire the variety of architecture styles found in the Catalan capital, so here are my suggestions for three walking tours to explore the neighbourhoods around some of my favourite music venues.
1 Contemporary colours
Let's head towards Plaça de les Glòries first. What was once an industrial area, whose heart lies in the modernist arches and metalwork of the former Estació del Nord railway site, has been transformed in the last 20 years into a trendy tech and design hub. Start with an early morning stroll on the Rambla del Poblenou, through Carrer de Marià Aguiló, where 19th-century buildings have been converted into houses, shops, art galleries, eateries and microbreweries. Stop at Can Felipa, on Carrer Pallars, whose arched windows and sloping roofs and attics would have you believe that you’re looking at an elegant apartment building in London or Paris rather than at a former textile factory. Now a civic centre, it hosts cultural activities and exhibitions, as well as historic archives.
Keep walking towards the Jardins de Miquel Martí and stop at the Museu Can Framis, also a former textile factory, now repurposed as a striking contemporary art space. Paintings by Catalonian artists from the 1960s onwards can be admired in this eclectic venue, composed by two historic buildings connected by a new structure. A tranquil courtyard, paved with stones recovered from the former factory, leads into the museum, in a balance between old and new enhanced by the contrasting texture of the materials – from wood to glass and exposed concrete – creating an exhibition space where light and shadows are purposely designed to enhance the art experience.
While continuing your walk, don’t forget to look around. Worth of special attention is the Media Tic building, an information and communication technology centre often described as a piece of "performative architecture". Designed using innovative digital techniques, what appears as a facade covered in a fluid mosaic of concave and convex triangles is not only symbolic of biological atoms merging and the marvel of digital communication, but it’s also a piece of highly advanced tech in itself, thanks to its cladding made in energy-saving, eco-efficient materials.
Next stop, head to Torre Glòries: if at first sight it might look like a long lost cousin of London’s Gherkin, this 38-story skyscraper – designed by "starchitect" Jean Nouvel – is actually a slimmer, more elegant affair, a pinnacle of multi-coloured aluminium and glass that transform the tower into a seasonal chameleon, changing its hue at every hour of the day, including at night, when it’s artificially illuminated.
It might now be time for a bite, and my suggestion for a late lunch is the Cafeteria in the Museu del Disseny, where you can enjoy a menu focusing on local ingredients while relaxing on one of the vibrant benches upholstered with kilims by local designer Nani Marquina.
Time to explore the museum itself, that serves as the design heart of the city. From sleek furniture from Miquel Milà i Sagnier, Philippe Starck and Marcel Breuer, to fashion by Paco Rabanne, Manuel Pertegaz and Balenciaga, the Barcelona Design Museum houses over 70,000 items coming from four previously independent museums. The zinc-clad building itself, which is partly underground, was designed to represent the flexibility and dynamism of design, as well as the interconnection between different materials and inspirations. The large cantilevered volume on top of the building contains an auditorium, and allows you to look over the minimalist artificial lake.
If you have any time left, we recommend a browse through the stalls of the Mercat dels Encants – a flea market housed under a striking 25-metre high canopy roof. To stay true to the feel of the original open air market, inclined planes and ramps loops under the roof's mirrored surface, that helps bring light into every corner.
To end the day, head to L'Auditori, the glass-and-steel music venue designed by Rafael Moneo. Both its industrial, metal-and-cork-wood exterior and the elegantly maple-lined interior serve as acoustic barriers against unwanted noises, as well as adding to the sensory experience. And from 3rd to 5th December this contemporary landmark will welcome Japanese virtuoso violinist Fumiaki Miura and his mentor, Pinchas Zukerman, in a programme of Mendelsshon and Bach, as part of the Barcelona Obertura Fall Festival.
2 Old world wanderings
But if it's something a little more historical you're after, it's time for a quick dip into the Roman and Medieval flavours of Barcelona.
Our walk starts at the atmospheric Plaça del Rei, the core of Ciutat Vella, the old town. Just looking around will transport you right into the city’s past, as you can admire the complex of historic buildings known as Palau Reial Major – a residence for Catalan nobility since the 11th century – and a fragment of Roman walls, echoing the colony called Barcino founded in the year 15 B.C.
A few blocks away is the 15th-century catholic Basilica de Santa Maria del Pi, a gem of Catalan Gothic: don't miss the treasury and its collection of Catalan goldsmiths' work. Going back into the depth of the Gothic quarter, all the way to the Carrer de Montcada, you will reach the Museu Picasso, housed in former 13th- and 14th-century palaces, also in Gothic Catalan style. This museum hosts an impressive collection showcasing the artist's journey from stunning realistic paintings created in his teens to the cubist revelations of his adulthood.