In this square there was a building by Demetrio Ribes inspired by the Chicago School, it was the building Warehouses Ernesto Ferrer, demolished in 1977.
The square was formerly called San Jorge.
This street is named for the old butcher shops that were on it, although today there are none left.
Formerly, as it appears in a tile plate, it was called the Portal del Coixo (Portal del Cojo). The ...
This street has the origin of its layout in the old Muslim wall, which ran in the direction of the Lonja. Here the bolseros were established, who made bags with all kinds of materials.
The religious iconography of the covers of the Lonja de Valencia is consistent with the construction, conceived as a temple of the merchants. Here the merchants did business and there was the official ...
San Vicente Ferrer was born in this house in 1350, which in 1498 was bought by the convent of Santo Domingo de Valencia and two years later sold to the millinery guild, since San Vicente was its patron. ...
This street is so named because at the end of it, also bordering the Plaza del Poeta Llorente and Calle del Pintor López, was the convent of the Trinitarians. This convent disappeared in the last third ...
This street gets its name from when ball was played here in medieval times, since it was one of the ratchets preferred by the nobles. Previously it was called San Juan del Hospital.
Apparently the name of this street comes from a miracle of S. Vicente Ferrer, who in the face of a pronounced drought predicted that raindrops as large as hazelnuts would fall.
The doctor and Nobel laureate, ...
The building on the right is the palace of the Marquis de Mercader, from the late 14th century. The current appearance of the facade is a consequence of the reform of the 18th century. In the 20th century, ...
This street is named after some public baths with that name that used to be on it. The name of the baths made reference to an armory that was in the area, where a type of shield called pavés was sold. ...
This street used to have many artisan shops that manufactured and sold leather goods, especially belts, hence the name.
At the beginning of this street there is a ceramic panel that represents Jesus ...
This square was formerly called de la Almoina, because the so-called Casa de la Almoina (alms) was found here, where the poor were assisted since 1303. The house was demolished at the end of the 19th century. ...
The newest part of the Palace of the Generalitat is the tower that overlooks the Plaza de Manises. Built between 1942-1951, it does not clash with the rest of the building, which is much older.
On the left, in front of the column with the statue of Francisco Pizarro and next to the Baylia palace, is the Marqués de la Scala palace. The Marquis de la Scala (name assumed by the marriage with the ...
Although the works began in 1422, it is from 1481 when the important extensions of this palace are made, under the responsibility of Francesc Martínez de Biulaigua, Joan Guiverro and Pere Compte; that ...
The building on the right is the Palace of the Catalá de Valeriola family (15th century). In the 18th century it acquired its current appearance in a reform. It has hosted the Academy of the Nocturns, ...