Valencia
Fuente del Túria, Plaça de la Mare de Déu
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Basílica De Nuestra Señora De Los Desamparados...Renowned shrine to the patron saint of Valencia, with a dome of blue tiles & frescos by Palomino.
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Walking the streets in Valencia City Center.
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Walking the streets in Valencia City Center.
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Walking the streets in Valencia City Center.
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Walking the streets in Valencia City Center.
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The outside of the Torres de Quart. Up high, notice the pockmarks caused by French cannonballs during the 19th-century Napoleonic invasion.
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The Quart Towers...Twin gothic-style defensive towers that were built in the 1400s as part of Valencia's city wall.
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The massive wooden dooor at Torres de Quart.
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The passage through the Torres de Quart.
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Valencia's Central Market or Mercat Cantral is the largest market with fresh produce in all of Europe. It opened in 1928 and is one of the main works of the Valencian Art Nouveau.
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Valencia's Central Market or Mercat Cantral is the largest market with fresh produce in all of Europe. It opened in 1928 and is one of the main works of the Valencian Art Nouveau.
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There are over 1000 stalls in the Central Market.
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There are over 1000 stalls in the Central Market.
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Located within Valencia’s Central Market, Valenciano chef Ricard Camarena’s Central Bar delivers classic Spanish dishes infused with complex flavors, and of course, everything is market-fresh. The bar-in-market concept isn’t a new one, especially in Spain, but the Spanish seem to be taking it to new levels, from markets entirely dedicated to ready-to-eat gourmet cuisine and outposts by Michelin-starred chefs, like Camarena’s Central Bar, in more traditional city markets.
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Valencia's Central Market or Mercat Cantral is the largest market with fresh produce in all of Europe. It opened in 1928 and is one of the main works of the Valencian Art Nouveau.
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Walking the back streets of old town Valencia.
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Placa de la Mare de Deu.
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The Silk Market is the main monument of the city and a masterpiece of civil Gothic architecture. The building has been declared by UNESCO as part of Humanity's Heritage. Construction on the Lonja began in 1483, a project of renowned master builder Pere Compte. Its resemblance to old Medieval castles is based on the rigid appearance of a fortress accentuated by its stone walls. The building contains four main parts, each one for a different use: the main Tower, the Consulado del Mar room, the Patio de los Naranjos (Orange tree courtyard), and the Contracts Room (with many spiral columns).
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Snail detail on the ornate dorrway to La Lonja.
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The Orange Tree Courtyard at La Lonja.
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This architectural masterpiece was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1996. Visitors entering the forest of palm-tree-shaped columns that span its magnificent main hall, are spellbound by its enigmatic carvings, which hold the secrets and mysteries of a society that was just opening itself up to the Renaissance - secrets that still remain hidden to us today.
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This architectural masterpiece was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1996. Visitors entering the forest of palm-tree-shaped columns that span its magnificent main hall, are spellbound by its enigmatic carvings, which hold the secrets and mysteries of a society that was just opening itself up to the Renaissance - secrets that still remain hidden to us today.
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The architectural details at La Lonja tell many tales.
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Consulat del Mar, or Consulate of the Sea
The man behind this project was the engineer and architect, Pere Compte, but he never saw his work completed. After his death a number of masterbuilders continued to work on the part of the building that was to become the Consulat del Mar, or Consulate of the Sea, which Compte had begun in 1498, and which was finished in 1548.
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The top floor of the Consulado del Mar.
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The top floor of the Consulado del Mar.
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These downspouts with faces are all over the old town in Valencia. Many of them have been painted in whimsical ways.
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These downspouts with faces are all over the old town in Valencia. Many of them have been painted in whimsical ways.
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