The building dates from 1880 and was acquired by José Benlliure and Gil on their return from Rome in 1912. The house was renovated and Benlliure equipped it with furniture brought from Italy, which are ...
The round fountain in the rose garden of these gardens was previously in the Plaza de la Reina. The rose garden has approximately 6,000 roses of different species.
These gardens also have a wide variety ...
The Museum of Natural Sciences is located in a building built in the Jardines del Real. It is a museum that allows you to admire groups such as the Botet collection, previously exhibited in the Almudín, ...
The layout of these gardens corresponds to different styles of gardening due to the different remodeling carried out.
The gardens have numerous sculptures and monumental fountains, a rose garden, a pond ...
The Trinidad convent is of great historical importance, as it was founded in 1444 by María de Castilla, who was the consort of Alfonso the Magnanimous and regent during his long absence in Naples. Maria ...
The garden had four fountains in the corners, of which today only the Neptune fountain remains. The flood of the Turia River in 1957 wiped out the other three.
The iron-backed stone bench that surrounds ...
This street, which takes the curious name of rinconada, is dedicated to a writer and member of the Royal Academy of the Spanish Language who died in 1964.
The street is located where the old Jewish quarter ...
This building, started in 1758, went from being a Customs Office to being a Tobacco Factory (1828). It was carried out by Felipe Rubio, Antonio Gilabert and Tomás Miner. In 1895 it suffered a terrible ...
This long street is actually a piece of the famous Roman Via Augusta. Around 1850 the street was widened by 10 m. at 14 m. wide. Medieval buildings disappeared, in this section that goes from the Plaza ...
This rococo palace was partially occupied, the mid-twentieth century, by the College of Architects. In 1971 it was acquired by Banco Urquijo. It currently houses the Banco de Sabadell.
This street is dedicated to the Setabense painter José de Ribera. The street is almost parallel to the Ruzafa Walk and in it was the Capitol cinema (1930) in Art Deco style, the work of Joaquín Rieta ...
This pedestrian street, formerly led to the Ruzafa gate of the medieval wall. On the street was the Trianón Palace or Lyric Theater, designed by Javier Goerlich and inaugurated in 1914. It was demolished ...
In this street there are three emblematic buildings of the city of Valencia: the North Station, the Plaza de Toros and the Luis Vives Institute.
The Luis Vives Institute dates from 1562, although most ...
Ruzafa, in its oldest part, has a nucleus of irregular streets. This is testament to its Islamic layout.
One of its best known inhabitants was the poet Al-Russafí, who died in Granada in 1177. The two ...
After the conquest of Valencia by Jaime I, the Ruzafa gardens became farmlands with farmhouses occupied by the conquerors. The army of Jaime I settled in Ruzafa to direct the siege and the conquest of ...
This street is named after a convent that was between San Vicente Mártir street and it. The Jerusalem convent was from the 15th century and was torn down in 1933.
This station, the work of the architect Demetrio Ribes, was designed in 1906 for the Compañía de Ferrocarriles del Norte. It is one of the buildings inspired by Viennese modernism (Viennese Secession) ...
This bridge communicated the city with the Camí de la Mar (current Avda. Del Puerto), hence its name. It was built during the years 1592-1596. During the Republic, the ramps were replaced by stairs (according ...