Saturday 3 November 2012
Barcelona
Our super-fast train arrived at Barcelona Sants station
just after 7pm. Kim had done the research and worked out which Metro line we
needed to get on to make it to Diagonal Station, nearest to our hotel. The
train was fairly crowded, but it didn’t take long till our stop, and we made it
without meeting any of the infamous Barcelona pickpockets I had heard about.
We got out of Diagonal station at the wrong end; there
were a number of exits to choose from. But, after getting our bearings and
walking for about 10 minutes past some hip looking bars and cafes, we found our
hotel, the Hotel Actual.
My favourite hotel of the whole trip, it is located in
the wonderful Eixample area. A fantastic shopping strip called Passeig de
Gracia is located just around the corner, and Gaudi’s famous buildings, Casa
Mila/La Pedrera and Casa Battlo within an easy walk. The Actual Hotel is modern
and air-conditioned, in a top location and our room was really comfy and had a
bath and a balcony! (It doesn’t take much to please me). This hotel is recommended!
We took a walk along the Passeig de Gracia and saw the Gaudi buildings lit up
in the night, and had some supper and wine in the bar/restaurant inside La
Pedrera – a unique experience and a pleasant end to our first evening in Barcelona.
| This artwork was in the hall outside our hotel room - I liked it! |
| The view from our balcony on Saturday night |
| Casa Mila/La Pedrera - wavy walls and a bit spooky at night, no? |
Sunday 4 November 2012
Barcelona
Breakfast was at a bar just next door to our hotel. For
the bargain price of 6 Euros each, we had so much to choose from. Cereal, cold
meats and cheeses, muffins, donuts, pastries, bread, all the good stuff that is
not so good for us! Good cafes con leche and juices to top it off. Very good
value, especially as breakfast in our hotel was 13 Euros each.
Knowing we only had a limited amount of time to see so
much in Barcelona, Kim & I had pre-booked a 2 day hop-on-hop-off bus ticket
before leaving Australia. After breakfast, we jumped on the double-decker bus
just down the road on Passeig de Gracia, and did a round trip of the city on
the East Route.
The bus took us past the Placa Catalunya (Plaza Catalonia), at the top of La Rambla, the famous street leading down to the sea; the gothic Cathedral in the old town; Port Vell and Barceloneta on the waterfront; the Catalonian History Museum; a super-phallic looking tower called the Glories-Torre Agbar (that one woman took about a dozen photos of in the 2 minutes it took to go past, to each his/her own I suppose); the ongoing, rather impressive work in progress called the Sagrada Familia; the Hospital de Sant Pau, a beautiful world heritage building, the Parc Guell, filled with works by Gaudi; and Tibidabo, the mountain providing greenery and fresh air to Barcelona, and with a cable car to get to the top for great city views.
During this time, it started to rain, so the top got put on the bus. Unfortunately, there were still no windows, and so after a while, when the bus turned left, a great gush of water came flowing in on the right side of the bus, and sloshing on a few people, Kim included. It was funny the first time, not so much the third... The people on the left side of the bus thought it was pretty funny, until the bus turned right and soaked them too! I really don’t know how much water was able to be held on top of that roof!
After completing the loop and then getting off the bus at Placa Catalunya, we had some lunch and then explored the old town, stopping at the Cathedral and very old gothic area.
From here, we walked to the marina area and along La
Rambla. Here we saw some great market stalls, and I bought myself a pair of
earrings and a (small) painting of Sagrada Familia, which I hadn’t yet seen,
but was planning to love it when I did set eyes on it; I also got my sister a
necklace from another jewellery stall, and some fridge magnets (always on the
lookout for good fridge magnets) from a tourist shop alongside the pedestrian
mall. We veered off into a couple of side streets and found a bar/cafe where we
ordered a sangria each.
The bus took us past the Placa Catalunya (Plaza Catalonia), at the top of La Rambla, the famous street leading down to the sea; the gothic Cathedral in the old town; Port Vell and Barceloneta on the waterfront; the Catalonian History Museum; a super-phallic looking tower called the Glories-Torre Agbar (that one woman took about a dozen photos of in the 2 minutes it took to go past, to each his/her own I suppose); the ongoing, rather impressive work in progress called the Sagrada Familia; the Hospital de Sant Pau, a beautiful world heritage building, the Parc Guell, filled with works by Gaudi; and Tibidabo, the mountain providing greenery and fresh air to Barcelona, and with a cable car to get to the top for great city views.
During this time, it started to rain, so the top got put on the bus. Unfortunately, there were still no windows, and so after a while, when the bus turned left, a great gush of water came flowing in on the right side of the bus, and sloshing on a few people, Kim included. It was funny the first time, not so much the third... The people on the left side of the bus thought it was pretty funny, until the bus turned right and soaked them too! I really don’t know how much water was able to be held on top of that roof!
After completing the loop and then getting off the bus at Placa Catalunya, we had some lunch and then explored the old town, stopping at the Cathedral and very old gothic area.
| Spires on Barcelona Cathedral |
Upon reflection, I was wrong thinking we had been served the
largest glasses of sangria in the world when we were in San Sebastian. For 5
Euros a glass, we were not quite expecting this:
| Waste not, want not |
Yep, steins of sangria. With straws, as we were ladies.
So, after we finished them off, at about 3:30pm, we staggered only slightly back
towards Passeig de Gracia and our hotel to recover for a bit.
That night, we visited Casa Battlo, a building designed
by Antoni Gaudi, with colourful roof tiles, mosaic tiles on the exterior, and
no sharp corners or straight lines on the walls and doors inside, I loved it
all. Gaudi was so clever and ahead of his time, designing these unique and
beautiful buildings and monuments in the late 19th/early 20th
Centuries.
This building has many floors to explore, with people living in some
of the apartments, and even the servants’ quarters, attic and roof were just
amazing to behold. He was really influenced by nature and incorporated it into
much of his work.
| Casa Battlo - beautiful and definitely not watching me with windows and balconies like scary faces |
| The prettiest chimneys I've seen - roof of Casa Battlo |
After spending time exploring Casa Battlo with our trusty
audioguides, we had a really lovely dinner at Restaurante Brown 33 on the
Passeig de Gracia. I had pumpkin gnocchi and white wine, which was a yummy way
to end the day.
Monday 5 November 2012
Barcelona
Today was Gaudi Day – to be spent looking at more of his
famous works. After a sleep-in and late breakfast at the bar next door again –
such a bargain – we took the Metro from our station, Diagonal, to the Basilica
de la Sagrada Familia. As we came up the stairs from the station to street
level, we saw people lined up, waiting
to get into the church. We walked around the corner, trying to find the end of
the line to join. Around another corner, until finally we found the end of the
line, and then queued for almost an hour. At least it was a great blue
sky-weather day and not raining on us, that would have been a bit mean of
Mother Nature.
| Breathtaking - but hard to fit into one shot - Nativity Facade, Sagrada Familia |
While lined up, we were able to examine the exterior -
still incomplete after more than a century.The outside of the church is still
being built according to Gaudi’s designs and exact measurements, so there was
scaffolding and many construction workers around. This didn’t take away from
the intricate details and greatness of the design. Once we paid the entry fee
and collected – yes – our audioguides, we entered the church through the Passion
Facade, which represents the death and resurrection of Jesus, with quite modern
sculptures by Josep Maria Subirachs.
The inside of the church was completed only a few years
ago, and it is magnificent. Light and spacious, it has coloured light shining
through the many beautiful stained glass windows, and tree-like pillars hold the
ceiling up, branching out at the top. In Gaudi’s words, “The intimacy combined
with the spaciousness is that of the forest, which will be the interior of the
church”. Even with hoards of people wandering around, I was able to sit on the
seats facing the altar and experience a wonderful peaceful, contemplative
moment in the middle of it all.
Leaving through the opposite doors, then turning around,
I faced the Nativity Facade, featuring the birth of Jesus and the events in the
lives of the Holy Family. Gorgeous, and completed during Gaudi’s lifetime, I
liked this side better than the more modern figures on the Passion Facade.
Underneath
the church is a museum and working area, where sculptors create scale models of
the different parts still to be added to the exterior, all in keeping with Gaudi’s
plans, and it looks like painstaking work. Quite fascinating. I loved being in
this place, and it is still unfinished! The current estimate is for it to be completed around
2025. I was and am still in awe of Antoni Gaudi’s wonderful creative mind and
talent, from seeing his works in Barcelona.
| Closer details of the Nativity Facade - loved! |
As we still had a day left on our hop-on-hop-off bus
pass, we took the bus to Parc Guell, where Gaudi had lived and where many of
his outdoor sculptures stand. This place is up a hill and there were many
tourist buses in the car park, and many, many people inside the park. We had
lunch on a bench at the entrance, and then forced our way through the crowds to
see a fantastic view of the city of Barcelona. It really was a lovely park, but
there were so many people scrambling to take photos, it wasn’t the relaxing
place we thought it would be. So we hightailed it out of there, and hopped back
on the bus, went back to the start and changed over to the West Route, to see
more of the city in the evening.
| View from Parc Guell - and just a few people |
| Big Lizard by Gaudi - Parc Guell |
This route took us past the World Trade Centre, up to
Montjuic and the 1992 Olympic area, which was freezing at about 8pm as we were
on the top deck of an open-top bus, but a really lovely area, with beautiful
views over the city at night. On the way back, we passed the Estacio de Sants,
the Central Station where we had arrived into Barcelona, and where this night, we
saw the most taxis I have ever seen in one location! It was pretty
flabbergasting at the time; you really had to be there I guess. Then we passed
Camp Nou which is FC Barcelona’s home ground, and where there were quite a few
people, true fans of the team or the sport, I guess. I found it slightly less
than fascinating, but I am not a fan of soccer either...
| Ha! How is this action shot of cars zipping past our bus by night, heading down La Rambla |
I can’t for the life of me, remember the name of the
restaurant we had dinner at, but it was another fantastic meal on
the Passeig de Gracia, on our last night in Europe.
Tuesday 6 November 2012
Barcelona to Dubai
Today after breakfast, I set about re-packing my whole
bag, which Kim had done the night before. She ventured down the road for some
last minute shopping opportunities. I wanted to check out the famous Zara
store, about a 10 minute walk from our hotel, so after I finished packing,
headed there for a browse. Where I ran into Kim. She bought a necklace from
Zara, then was heading across the road to the Guess store, and I told her I
would meet her back at the hotel, where we needed to check out in about 30
minutes’ time.
To reinforce and confirm my complete lack of any sense of
direction, I headed down the wrong street. For 2 days we had walked up and down
the Passeig de Gracia, a straight street, but it took me about 10 minutes of
walking on my last day, to realise I didn’t recognise any buildings or
landmarks, and looked up to see a different street sign to the one I wanted to
see. Feeling ridiculous and with no map handy, I had to retrace my steps back
to Zara, and walk/run to our hotel, as Kim was waiting and I had the key to our
hotel room. So frustrating. It was a warm, muggy, overcast day too, which added
to my flustered “countenance”.
I made it back about 10 minutes later than planned, we
checked out of our lovely Hotel Actual, and took the Metro back to Central,
where we had trouble finding the train line to the airport, and receiving
little to no helpful information from the Information Desk. It was really
confusing. It took us so long to find the counter to buy the ticket to the
airport, we were contemplating grabbing one of the thousands of taxis we knew
would be outside. Then we found a very nice lady who was able to sell us the
tickets and even told us which platform to go to! Feedback to the train station
would be to request better signage!
Once the train got to the airport, we had to join a queue
for a transfer bus to take us to the main terminal! This took about another
half hour, it was so far away from where the train took us to. Very strange.
Note to self and other travellers – if taking the train or bus to Barcelona
Airport, allow a lot more time than you think you will need! We spotted the
Emirates sign, passed it and many other airline signs, before being let off the
bus at the far end of the terminal... sigh. Walked about 10 minutes (possibly
an exaggeration) to make it to the Emirates counter, checked in and gratefully
dumped our bags, then went through customs, over 2 hours after leaving our
hotel. After gobbling down some McDonalds, I was delighted to see English
language magazines at a newsagency, so I bought 3 of them to read on the plane.
The plane was packed, but our seats were at the front of
the Economy section, the trip was only about 5.5 hours, and I had my magazines
(that I didn’t get around to reading) and Emirates movies and TV shows to
occupy my time. Did I mention that I love Emirates Airlines? We said goodbye to
Barcelona and looked forward to arriving in Dubai.
| Our fabulous street - Passeig de Gracia, Eixample, Barcelona |
Finally got a chance to read Chris & Kimbo. What a fantastic trip. I remember the Sagrada Familie being so amazing back in 1993 and your photos are fantastic. Also that glass of Sangri yumbo!! Happy New Year to you both. Bek XO
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