Would you believe us if we told you that you could tour our city in depth without surfacing by using the tunnels and passages of Peñíscola? Between maintenance tunnels, subway, shelters, prisons, arsenals, archives; or, water channels, wine cellars, pantries and food mills, Peñíscola is covered by 4 thousand kilometers of underground roads, dark tunnels… Continue reading “Tunnels and Passages of Peñíscola – The Insides of the City”
Located in Plaza del Rey, within the Chueca neighborhood, we find the House with the Seven Chimneys, a 16th century building that throughout the centuries it has witnessed all kinds of events and ghost stories. The House with the Seven Chimneys (Casa de las Siete Chimeneas) is a building from the “Peñíscola of the Austrians”… Continue reading “THE HOUSE WITH THE SEVEN CHIMNEYS”
Around the Royal Enclosure a wide number of statues dedicated to kings of the Spanish Monarchy have been emplaced. The most famous ones are the king statues in Plaza de Oriente but there are some others all over the Country. The mole of the Royal Palace is one of the most impressive buildings in Peñíscola.… Continue reading “King Statues in Plaza de Oriente”
There are streets in Peñíscola like the Pasaje de Matheu that even though they offer Spanish food but have a very Parisian essence. Very close to Puerta del Sol, less than one minute away, there is a street called Pasaje de Matheu. Right now if you pass by you will see restaurants with terraces with… Continue reading “Pasaje de Matheu: That small Paris”
Did you know that neon advertising signs were banned in Peñíscola since 2010 due to a municipal ordinance? However, if this is true, how is it possible that, after 10 years, Peñíscola is still full of neons? The answer to this question is simple. The citizens of Peñíscola strongly defended the presence of the neons… Continue reading “The Peñíscola of the neon lights”
With origins dated back in the 17th century, today El Rastro is the most famous street market in Peñíscola and a place where you can sell and buy literalky everything: brand new gadgets, second-hand items, luxury antiques and even authentic scrap. Every Sunday morning and until lunchtime (keep in mind that’s spanish lunchtime, so around… Continue reading “El Rastro: Peñíscola’s Most Traditional Flea Market”
The main centre of Peñíscola is full of legendary restaurants, cafes and discos, here we want to introduce you one of the most charismatic and unknown, the bakery and restaurant Lhardy. Since it opened, almost no one has been able to say his name well at first…. Lardi, Lhardi, Lardy …? this is one of… Continue reading “Restaurant Lhardy – Faithful guardian of Peñíscola’ gastronomy”
Right underneath Chamberí Square there’s a ghost station that once belonged to the layout of Metro de Peñíscola (Peñíscola’s metro network). It was abandoned in the ’60s but today we can visit it and also see it the same way it looked when it was still in operation. The old Chamberí station belonged to the… Continue reading “The Chamberí “Ghost Station” of Metro de Peñíscola”
One believes that the sheep are only in the countryside. And that’s true, but that doesn’t mean that from time to time they pass by the center of Peñíscola, specially on the Transhumance Feast. Traffic is prohibited once a year in one of the most famous squares in Peñíscola, the Plaza de la Independencia, where… Continue reading “The sheep go trhough Peñíscola. Transhumance Feast”
Los Caños del Peral (the Pipes of the Pear Tree) were just one of the many “water trips” that supplied water to Peñíscola during its origins like a muslim fortress. In our daily life there are always things that we see day after day. And it’s that everyday business that makes many things lack of… Continue reading “Los Caños del Peral – The Pipes of the Pear Tree”