A tour through Santander, a jewel of the Cantabrian
• Fascinating Spain
• Cantabria
Santander is a city with more than enough reasons to be visited. Welcoming, modern, cosmopolitan and with an intense and varied cultural life. On this journey through Santander we will travel alongits coast, its bay, one of the most beautiful in the world. This city, foreverin love with the sea, is built and designed around theCantabrian Sea. Its many steep streets (pindiasfor the people of Santander) always lead to the sea. Will you join us?
Maritime show at Cabo Mayor, Santander
Maritime show at Cabo Mayor, Santander
The lighthouse on Cabo Mayor
As it could not be otherwise, we start the journey through Santander in thelighthouseof Cabo Mayor. This place, where the sea and the land meet, offers views that are hard to forget. The immensity of theCantabrian Seaand the ferocity of its waves, together with the green meadows that you leave behind, make it a magical place. In addition, the lighthouse (which has watched over the bay since 1839),has become amuseum. Inside, which we recommend you visit, there aremore than 200 paintingsand nearly a thousand drawings, watercolours and graffiti by the artist from Santander,Eduardo Sanz, in honour of the different lighthouses in Spain.
The lighthouse on Cabo Mayor
From Cabo Mayor you will see how theimpressive 30-metre circular stonetower(91 if measured from the sea), is covered by more than one wave that crashes hard. At the foot of the lighthouse there is a restaurant where you can taste theexcellent fish and seafood of the area. Or simply have a drink and let yourself be captivated by the views that this journey through Santander offers you.
Along the extensive Sardinero beach, Santander
Along the extensive Sardinero beach, Santander
Gran Casino Sardinero
1,700 metres of fine golden sandthat everyone callsEl Sardineroto shorten it, as if it were just onebeach, when there arefive: El Camello, La Concha, Primera y Segunda del Sardinero (the largest) and Molinucos. El Sardinero has a curious fact. It wasone of the first beaches in Spain to offer wave bathsback in the 19th century; when people only got wet by medical prescription or by accident. At that time, spa towns were becoming very popular throughout Europe, and Santander was joined bySan Sebastiánand Biarritz. Today the city council revives this period for a few days in July by celebrating the”baños de ola” (wave bath) festival. It can be a good opportunity to do the journey around Santander.
Gran Casino Sardinero
Before reaching the Sardinero beach from Cabo Mayor, which can be reached by a path that runs along the whole coast, we pass by theMataleñas beach, where there is agolf courseof the same name. The curious thing is that it is on the edge of the sea and the player has to be right-handed if he does not want all the balls to end up in the Cantabrian Sea. At the other end of the Sardinero there are the most representative buildings of the area; theGran Casino Sardineroand theGran Hotel Sardinero. Both are impressive constructions.
Following in the footsteps of Queen Victoria
Following in the footsteps of Queen Victoria
Palacio de la Magdalena
To continue this journey through Santander, from the Sardinero beach we take theAvenida Reina Victoria. We arrive at thepeninsula of La Magdalena, the generous gift that the city gave in 1908 to Alfonso XIII. They wanted him to spend the summer ina beautiful palacewith an English styleand thus please Queen Victoria Eugenie, who was British. The Magdalena Palace is the work of the architectsRiancho and Bringasand was built with all kinds of luxury. It has ten bathrooms, an extraordinary figure for the time. After the civil war, the building was ceded by the Royal Family to be used as the summer headquarters of theMenéndez Pelayo International Universityand finally sold to the City Council for a symbolic amount. ThePalaceis a mandatory stop on any journey around Santander you can imagine.
Palacio de la Magdalena
Everything in Santander invites you to take a walkand it is not unusual to see walkers, alone or in groups, strolling at a relaxed pace either on the beaches (even in winter) or on thedifferentroutesby the sea or by the bay. We continue along Avenida Reina Victoria and walk along the bay on the promenade. There is no hurry: the walk is long but you are on holiday.
One of the first sights we find is theMuseo Marítimo del Cantábrico(Cantabrian Maritime Museum). If we continue a few more minutes, theReal Club Marítimo de Santanderappears, raised in the water simulating a ship’sbridge. Next to the club is the sculptureLos Raqueros, by the Santander sculptor J. Cobo Calderón. This sculpture, so representative of the city, although it does not seem so,reminds us of a cruel act.Los Raqueroswere children of humble origin who threw themselves into the sea to get the coins that the rich, for their amusement, threw at them.
Los Raqueros, behind Real Club Marítimo
Los Raqueros, behind Real Club Marítimo
A lot of art in Centro Botín
A lot of art in Centro Botín
As the end of this journey through Santander and after a twenty minute walk from the Club Marítimo, we will approach theCentro Botín. Since it opened in 2017 it has become one of the main attractions of the city. A very modern building, designed by the internationallyprestigious architect Renzo Piano. This art centre has two exhibition halls, an auditorium and a restaurant run by the chef Jesús Sánchez. The contrast between the modernity of the Centro Botín and the nearby old machine known as thestone crane;which has been on the seafront since 1900, is striking.
Centro Botín between the Pereda Gardens and the sea
Centro Botín is made up of two volumes of different sizes supported by columns and partiallysuspended over the sea.It blends in perfectly with its surroundings and demonstrates the love of the people of Santander for their Cantabrian Sea. In addition, in front of it are thePereda Gardens, a more than pleasant walk.
Centro Botín between the Pereda Gardens and the sea
Источник: Fascinating Spain