Although I love city breaks there is one aspect of them which has always presented me with a problem – it’s that last afternoon before you go back to the airport. Once you’ve ticked off most main attractions, with the clock ticking until your flight back, how do you make the most of those last few hours?
The Friday (assuming you’ve managed to take that much time off) is usually spent getting there and finding your bearings. You’ve got your city guide and you’re finding what is what and where it is. Hopefully, you’ve got an mp3cityguides audio guide to Rome, guide to Florence, guide to Berlin or guide to Paris which has helped you get orientated and get under the skin of the city much faster.
Either way, the first morning or afternoon of your city break usually has a sense of purpose. You’re also probably trying to switch off from work. Did I send that email? Have I got everything for that meeting next week? Oh, look there’s a nice café, shall we stop there? Was that report I finished at 10 O’clock last night OK?
After that – usually the Saturday – you get into your stride and you really begin to feel you’re on holiday. Museums, art galleries, churches, shops and beautiful squares manage to edge work out of your brain and your only concern is which restaurant to go tonight and whether to have an ice cream now or wait until later. (Sod it! Let’s do it now and later…)
You’ve usually got something planned for Sunday morning and then there’s the question of where to have lunch but already you’re counting back from your flight home’s departure time. You don’t want to be late but considering that you’ve looked forward to and saved up for this weekend, just killing time seems like a crime.
My advice is to decide even before you go on the one thing that you’re going to save for the Sunday afternoon. A small museum is a good idea. People who use our Paris mp3 tour seem really like the Nissim de Camondo (63 Rue de Monceau, 8ieme) and the Cognacq-Jay (Hôtel Donon, 8 Rue Elzévir, 3ieme) are beautiful town houses that take about an hour to an hour and a half to cover. In Rome, as our guide to Rome will tell you, the Museum of the Baths (Via Viminale) has pieces from the great baths of Diocletian amongst others plus a pleasant garden. It’s just by the Termini station for trains back to Fiumicino Airport or a taxi or bus to Ciampino.
Strolling around and sitting quietly in a church is often a nice way to enjoy some calm before the stress of travel. The Church of Santa Maria Novella (Piazza Santa Maria Novella) as we do in our Florence audio tour is beautiful and it’s just five minutes away from the station where you can get trains to the Pisa Airport as well as buses and taxis. Around the corner is the Officina Profumo Farmaceutica Santa Maria Novella (16 Via della Scala) which sells beautifully decorated fragrances and cosmetics – so much better than the overpriced tat you’ll find at the airport. It’s open until 6pm on Sundays.
Another option is to take a walk and get some fresh air. In Barcelona have lunch in Barceloneta or one of the restaurants by the Museu d’historia de Catalunya, the Museum of the Catalonia and then walk along the beach.
One final thought – if Sunday afternoon isn’t the end of your trip and you’re staying until Monday give even more thought to what you’ll do then. In many cities museums and galleries are closed on Mondays. So, be prepared!
Posts Tagged ‘Barcelona guide’
what do to on the Sunday afternoon before you go home after a weekend break
Sunday, January 31st, 2010Tags: Barcelona guide, city breaks, mini breaks, paris guide, weekend breaks
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Barcelona’s Coolest Neighbourhood
Friday, November 6th, 2009It’s late summer in Barcelona and the Ramblas is full of tourists, each clutching a guide to Barcelona, it seems. One of the most famous thoroughfares in the world, this broad street which leads from central Barcelona down to the sea front is brimming with life plus the inevitable tourist schlock. Tourists at the cafes are drinking café con leche, huge steins of beer or cups of rich cioccolato con curros (hot chocolate with elongated doughnuts).
But just a few hundred metres from the tourists and the kiss-me-quick razzmatazz is the real Barcelona. The Raval district runs to the west of the Ramblas – off the radar of most tourists. The name Raval comes from the old Catalan word for ‘outside’ since up until the fourteenth century this area was beyond the city walls and even today it feels distinctly different from the rest of the city. But in recent years it has benefited from public investment and an influx of trendy, shops bars and restaurants, many of whom are escaping from higher rents elsewhere in Barcelona’s old town. It now has some of Barcelona’s coolest bars and restaurants.
The Carrer de L’Hospital which winds it through Raval from the Ramblas to the San Antonio market is the focus of activity. But streets such as the Carrer del Carme and San Antoni Abat are increasingly hosting new enterprises such as restaurants with neo industrial décor or cool bars with kitsch aesthetic interiors which are squeezing in between the Halal butchers and decades-old tapas bars, linen shops and grocers. My mp3cityguides guide to Barcelona has the best of them.
One of the most visible examples of the public investment in Raval is the striking new modern arts complex, the MACBA or Museu d’Art Contemporani de Barcelona which opened in 1995. Designed by American architect Richard Meier, the building with its gleaming white edifice pays homage to Le Corbusier and provides a perfect contrast to
the wrought iron balconies and traditional shutters of the nineteenth century apartment blocks around it.
Unlike the spacious avenues of the grid iron Eixample district, in Raval many of these balconies are just a few metres away from each other in the narrower streets but this higgledy-piggledy street plan, almost reminiscent of Dickensian London is part of the charm and the effect of shafts of Mediterranean sunlight picking out pots of geraniums and drying clothes is quite magical.
The open, spacious Rambla de Raval, with its pine trees, cafes and restaurants spilling out onto the pavement has recently benefited from refurbishment. But even today there are areas such as the streets which run south of Carrer de L’Hospital and east of the Rambla de Raval – which are best avoided.
Raval is also the home of the Mercat San Josep, Barcelona’s largest food market and, it’s said, the most beautiful in the world. No guide to Barcelona whether it’s an audio guide to Barcelona or not should miss this – and neither should you.
Tags: Barcelona, Barcelona guide, Barcelona tourist guide, city guide, Raval
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