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Wikipedia

Barcelona

Barcelona (/ˌbɑːrsəˈlnə/ BAR-sə-LOH-nə, Catalan: [bəɾsəˈlonə], Spanish: [baɾθeˈlona]) is a city on the coast of northeastern Spain. It is the capital and largest city of the autonomous community of Catalonia, as well as the second most populous municipality of Spain. With a population of 1.6 million within city limits,[7] its urban area extends to numerous neighbouring municipalities within the Province of Barcelona and is home to around 4.8 million people,[3] making it the fifth most populous urban area in the European Union after Paris, the Ruhr area, Madrid, and Milan.[3] It is one of the largest metropolises on the Mediterranean Sea, located on the coast between the mouths of the rivers Llobregat and Besòs, and bounded to the west by the Serra de Collserola mountain range, the tallest peak of which is 512 metres (1,680 feet) high.

Barcelona
Nicknames: 
Ciutat Comtal (Catalan)
Ciudad Condal (Spanish)
"Comital City" or "City of Counts"

Cap i Casal de Catalunya (Catalan)
'Head and Hearth of Catalonia'

Abbreviation(s):
Barna, BCN
Location in the Province of Barcelona
Location in Catalonia
Location in Spain
Location in Europe
Coordinates: 41°23′N 2°11′E / 41.383°N 2.183°E / 41.383; 2.183Coordinates: 41°23′N 2°11′E / 41.383°N 2.183°E / 41.383; 2.183
Country Spain
Autonomous community Catalonia
ProvinceBarcelona
ComarcaBarcelonès
Districts
Government
 • TypeAyuntamiento
 • BodyAjuntament de Barcelona
 • MayorAda Colau Ballano[1] (Barcelona en Comú)
Area
 • City101.4 km2 (39.2 sq mi)
Elevation
 (AMSL)
12 m (39 ft)
Population
 (2018)[5]
 • City1,620,343
 • Rank2nd
 • Density16,000/km2 (41,000/sq mi)
 • Urban
4,840,000[3]
 • Metro
5,474,482[4]
DemonymsBarcelonan, Barcelonian
barceloní, -ina (Catalan)
barcelonés, -esa (Spanish)
Postal code
080xx
Area code+34 (E) 93 (B)
INE code08 0193
City budget (2021)€2.4 billion[6]
Official languageCatalan and Spanish
Main festivityLa Mercè
Patron saintEulalia of Barcelona
Websitewww.barcelona.cat
Click on the map for a fullscreen view

Founded as a Roman city, in the Middle Ages Barcelona became the capital of the County of Barcelona. After joining with the Kingdom of Aragon to form the confederation of the Crown of Aragon, Barcelona, which continued to be the capital of the Principality of Catalonia, became the most important city in the Crown of Aragon and the main economic and administrative centre of the Crown, only to be overtaken by Valencia, wrested from Arab domination by the Catalans, shortly before the dynastic union between the Crown of Castile and the Crown of Aragon in 1492. Barcelona has a rich cultural heritage and is today an important cultural centre and a major tourist destination. Particularly renowned are the architectural works of Antoni Gaudí and Lluís Domènech i Montaner, which have been designated UNESCO World Heritage Sites. The city is home to two of the most prestigious universities in Spain: the University of Barcelona and Pompeu Fabra University. The headquarters of the Union for the Mediterranean are located in Barcelona. The city is known for hosting the 1992 Summer Olympics as well as world-class conferences and expositions and also many international sport tournaments.

Barcelona is a major cultural, economic, and financial centre in southwestern Europe,[8] as well as the main biotech hub in Spain.[9] As a leading world city, Barcelona's influence in global socio-economic affairs qualifies it for global city status (Beta +).[10]

Barcelona is a transport hub, with the Port of Barcelona being one of Europe's principal seaports and busiest European passenger port,[11] an international airport, Barcelona–El Prat Airport, which handles over 50 million passengers per year,[12] an extensive motorway network, and a high-speed rail line with a link to France and the rest of Europe.[13]

Names

The name Barcelona comes from the ancient Iberian Baŕkeno, attested in an ancient coin inscription found on the right side of the coin in Iberian script as  ,[14] in ancient Greek sources as Βαρκινών, Barkinṓn;[15][16] and in Latin as Barcino,[17] Barcilonum[18] and Barcenona.[19][20][21]

Some older sources suggest that the city may have been named after the Carthaginian general Hamilcar Barca, who was supposed to have founded the city in the 3rd century BC,[22] but there is no evidence that Barcelona was ever a Carthaginian settlement, or that its name in antiquity, Barcino, had any connection with the Barcid family of Hamilcar.[23] During the Middle Ages, the city was variously known as Barchinona, Barçalona, Barchelonaa, and Barchenona.

Internationally,[citation needed] Barcelona's name is abbreviated colloquially to 'Barça' in reference to the football club FC Barcelona, whose anthem is the Cant del Barça "Barça chant". A common abbreviated form used by locals for the city is Barna.

Another common abbreviation is 'BCN', which is also the IATA airport code of the Barcelona-El Prat Airport.

The city is referred to as the Ciutat Comtal in Catalan and Ciudad Condal in Spanish (i.e., "Comital City" or "City of Counts"), owing to its past as the seat of the Count of Barcelona.[24]

History

 
A marble plaque in the Museu d'Història de la Ciutat de Barcelona, dated from around 110–130 AD and dedicated to the Roman colony of Barcino

Pre-history

The origin of the earliest settlement at the site of present-day Barcelona is unclear. The ruins of an early settlement have been found, including different tombs and dwellings dating to earlier than 5000 BC.[25][26] The founding of Barcelona is the subject of two different legends. The first attributes the founding of the city to the mythological Hercules. The second legend attributes the foundation of the city directly to the historical Carthaginian general, Hamilcar Barca, father of Hannibal, who supposedly named the city Barcino after his family in the 3rd century BC,[27] but there is no historical or linguistic evidence that this is true.[23] Archeological evidence in the form of coins from the 3rd Century BC have been found on the hills at the foot of Montjuïc with the name Bárkeno written in an ancient script in the Iberian language. Thus, we can conclude that the Laietani, an ancient Iberian (Pre-Roman) people of the Iberian peninsula, who inhabited the area occupied by the city of Barcelona around 3 – 2 BC, called the area Bàrkeno, which means "The Place of the Plains" (Barrke = plains/terrace).[28]

Roman Barcelona

In about 15 BC, the Romans redrew the town as a castrum (Roman military camp) centred on the "Mons Taber", a little hill near the Generalitat (Catalan Government) and city hall buildings. The Roman Forum, at the crossing of the Cardo Maximus and Decumanus Maximus, was approximately placed where current Plaça de Sant Jaume is. Thus, the political center of the city, Catalonia, and its domains has remained in the same place for over 2000 years.

Under the Romans, it was a colony with the surname of Faventia,[29] or, in full, Colonia Faventia Julia Augusta Pia Barcino[30] or Colonia Julia Augusta Faventia Paterna Barcino. Pomponius Mela[31] mentions it among the small towns of the district, probably as it was eclipsed by its neighbour Tarraco (modern Tarragona), but it may be gathered from later writers that it gradually grew in wealth and consequence, favoured as it was with a beautiful situation and an excellent harbour.[32] It enjoyed immunity from imperial burdens.[33] The city minted its own coins; some from the era of Galba survive.

 
The Mare de Déu de la Mercè statue on the Basílica de la Mercè

Important Roman vestiges are displayed in Plaça del Rei underground, as a part of the Barcelona City History Museum (MUHBA); the typically Roman grid plan is still visible today in the layout of the historical centre, the Barri Gòtic (Gothic Quarter). Some remaining fragments of the Roman walls have been incorporated into the cathedral.[34] The cathedral, known very formally by the long name of Catedral Basílica Metropolitana de Barcelona, is also sometimes called La Seu, which simply means cathedral (and see, among other things) in Catalan.[35][36] It is said to have been founded in 343.

Medieval Barcelona

The city was conquered by the Visigoths in the early 5th century, becoming for a few years the capital of all Hispania. After being conquered by the Arabs in the early 8th century, it was conquered after a siege in 801 by Charlemagne's son Louis, who made Barcelona the seat of the Carolingian "Hispanic March" (Marca Hispanica), a buffer zone ruled by the Count of Barcelona.[37]

The Counts of Barcelona became increasingly independent and expanded their territory to include much of modern Catalonia, although on 6 July 985, Barcelona was sacked by the army of Almanzor.[38] The sack was so traumatic that most of Barcelona's population was either killed or enslaved.[39] In 1137, Aragon and the County of Barcelona merged in dynastic union[40][41] by the marriage of Ramon Berenguer IV and Petronilla of Aragon, their titles finally borne by only one person when their son Alfonso II of Aragon ascended to the throne in 1162. His territories were later to be known as the Crown of Aragon, which conquered many overseas possessions and ruled the western Mediterranean Sea with outlying territories in Naples and Sicily and as far as Athens in the 13th century.

Barcelona was the leading slave trade centre of the Crown of Aragon up until the 15th century, when it was eclipsed by Valencia.[42] It initially fed from eastern and balkan slave stock later drawing from a Maghribian and, ultimately, Subsaharan pool of slaves.[43]

The Bank of Barcelona or Taula de canvi, often viewed as the oldest public bank in Europe, was established by the city magistrates in 1401. It originated from necessities of the state, as did the Bank of Venice (1402) and the Bank of Genoa (1407).[44]

 
Barcelona in 1563

Barcelona under the Spanish monarchy

The marriage of Ferdinand II of Aragon and Isabella I of Castile in 1469 united the two royal lines. Madrid became the centre of political power whilst the colonisation of the Americas reduced the financial importance (at least in relative terms) of Mediterranean trade. Barcelona was a centre of Catalan separatism, including the Catalan Revolt (1640–52) against Philip IV of Spain. The great plague of 1650–1654 halved the city's population.[45]

 
The fortress at Montjuïc, the most southerly point from which measurements were made when calculating the meridional definition of the metre

In the 18th century, a fortress was built at Montjuïc that overlooked the harbour. In 1794, this fortress was used by the French astronomer Pierre François André Méchain for observations relating to a survey stretching to Dunkirk that provided the official basis of the measurement of a metre.[46] The definitive metre bar, manufactured from platinum, was presented to the French legislative assembly on 22 June 1799. Much of Barcelona was negatively affected by the Napoleonic wars, but the start of industrialisation saw the fortunes of the province improve.

The Spanish Civil War and the Franco period

 
Barcelona was the capital of the Republic of Spain from November 1937 until January 1939.[47][48] During that Spanish Civil War period, both Barcelona and Madrid were still under the rule of the republic. In the image Azaña and Negrín on the city outskirts.

During the Spanish Civil War, the city, and Catalonia in general, were resolutely Republican. Many enterprises and public services were collectivised by the CNT and UGT unions. As the power of the Republican government and the Generalitat diminished, much of the city was under the effective control of anarchist groups. The anarchists lost control of the city to their own allies, the Communists and official government troops, after the street fighting of the Barcelona May Days. The fall of the city on 26 January 1939, caused a mass exodus of civilians who fled to the French border. The resistance of Barcelona to Franco's coup d'état was to have lasting effects after the defeat of the Republican government. The autonomous institutions of Catalonia were abolished,[49] and the use of the Catalan language in public life was suppressed. Barcelona remained the second largest city in Spain, at the heart of a region which was relatively industrialised and prosperous, despite the devastation of the civil war. The result was a large-scale immigration from poorer regions of Spain (particularly Andalusia, Murcia and Galicia), which in turn led to rapid urbanisation.

Late twentieth century

In 1992, Barcelona hosted the Summer Olympics. The after-effects of this are credited with driving major changes in what had, up until then, been a largely industrial city. As part of the preparation for the games, industrial buildings along the sea-front were demolished and 3 kilometres (2 miles) of beach were created. New construction increased the road capacity of the city by 17%, the sewage handling capacity by 27% and the amount of new green areas and beaches by 78%. Between 1990 and 2004, the number of hotel rooms in the city doubled. Perhaps more importantly, the outside perception of the city was changed making, by 2012, Barcelona the 12th most popular city destination in the world and the 5th amongst European cities.[50][51][52][53][54]

Recent history

 
Supporters of Catalan independence in October 2019
 
Protest against independence in October 2017

The death of Franco in 1975 brought on a period of democratisation throughout Spain. Pressure for change was particularly strong in Barcelona, which considered that it had been punished during nearly forty years of Francoism for its support of the Republican government.[55] Massive, but peaceful, demonstrations on 11 September 1977 assembled over a million people in the streets of Barcelona to call for the restoration of Catalan autonomy. It was granted less than a month later.[56]

The development of Barcelona was promoted by two events in 1986: Spanish accession to the European Community, and particularly Barcelona's designation as host city of the 1992 Summer Olympics.[57][58] The process of urban regeneration has been rapid, and accompanied by a greatly increased international reputation of the city as a tourist destination. The increased cost of housing has led to a slight decline (−16.6%) in the population over the last two decades of the 20th century as many families move out into the suburbs. This decline has been reversed since 2001, as a new wave of immigration (particularly from Latin America and from Morocco) has gathered pace.[59]

In 1987, an ETA car bombing at Hipercor killed 21 people. On 17 August 2017, a van was driven into pedestrians on La Rambla, killing 14 and injuring at least 100, one of whom later died. Other attacks took place elsewhere in Catalonia. The Prime Minister of Spain, Mariano Rajoy, called the attack in Barcelona a jihadist attack. Amaq News Agency attributed indirect responsibility for the attack to the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL).[60][61][62] During the 2010s, Barcelona became the focus city[citation needed] for the ongoing Catalan independence movement, its consequent standoff between the regional and national government and later protests.[63]

Geography

 
A panoramic view of Barcelona

Location

 
Barcelona as seen by the European Space Agency's Copernicus Sentinel-2 mission

Barcelona is located on the northeast coast of the Iberian Peninsula, facing the Mediterranean Sea, on a plain approximately 5 km (3 mi) wide limited by the mountain range of Collserola, the Llobregat river to the southwest and the Besòs river to the north.[64] This plain covers an area of 170 km2 (66 sq mi),[64] of which 101 km2 (39.0 sq mi)[65] are occupied by the city itself. It is 120 kilometres (75 miles) south of the Pyrenees and the Catalan border with France.

Tibidabo, 512 m (1,680 ft) high, offers striking views over the city[66] and is topped by the 288.4 m (946.2 ft) Torre de Collserola, a telecommunications tower that is visible from most of the city. Barcelona is peppered with small hills, most of them urbanised, that gave their name to the neighbourhoods built upon them, such as Carmel (267 metres or 876 feet), Putget (es) (181 metres or 594 feet) and Rovira (261 metres or 856 feet). The escarpment of Montjuïc (173 metres or 568 feet), situated to the southeast, overlooks the harbour and is topped by Montjuïc Castle, a fortress built in the 17–18th centuries to control the city as a replacement for the Ciutadella. Today, the fortress is a museum and Montjuïc is home to several sporting and cultural venues, as well as Barcelona's biggest park and gardens.

The city borders on the municipalities of Santa Coloma de Gramenet and Sant Adrià de Besòs to the north; the Mediterranean Sea to the east; El Prat de Llobregat and L'Hospitalet de Llobregat to the south; and Sant Feliu de Llobregat, Sant Just Desvern, Esplugues de Llobregat, Sant Cugat del Vallès, and Montcada i Reixac to the west. The municipality includes two small sparsely-inhabited exclaves to the north-west.

Climate

According to the Köppen climate classification, Barcelona has a hot summer Mediterranean climate (Csa), with mild winters and warm to hot summers,[67] while the rainiest seasons are autumn and spring. The rainfall pattern is characterised by a short (3 months) dry season in summer, as well as less winter rainfall than in a typical Mediterranean climate. However, both June and August are wetter than February, which is unusual for the Mediterranean climate. This subtype, labelled as "Portuguese" by the French geographer George Viers after the climate classification of Emmanuel de Martonne[68] and found in the NW Mediterranean area (e.g. Marseille), can be seen as transitional to the humid subtropical climate (Cfa) found in inland areas.

Barcelona is densely populated, thus heavily influenced by the urban heat island effect. Areas outside of the urbanised districts can have as much as 2 °C of difference in temperatures throughout the year.[69] Its average annual temperature is 21.2 °C (70.2 °F) during the day and 15.1 °C (59.2 °F) at night. The average annual temperature of the sea is about 20 °C (68 °F). In the coldest month, January, the temperature typically ranges from 12 to 18 °C (54 to 64 °F) during the day, 6 to 12 °C (43 to 54 °F) at night and the average sea temperature is 13 °C (55 °F).[70] In the warmest month, August, the typical temperature ranges from 27 to 31 °C (81 to 88 °F) during the day, about 23 °C (73 °F) at night and the average sea temperature is 26 °C (79 °F).[70] Generally, the summer or "holiday" season lasts about six months, from May to October. Two months – April and November – are transitional; sometimes the temperature exceeds 20 °C (68 °F), with an average temperature of 18–19 °C (64–66 °F) during the day and 11–13 °C (52–55 °F) at night. December, January and February are the coldest months, with average temperatures around 15 °C (59 °F) during the day and 9 °C (48 °F) at night. Large fluctuations in temperature are rare, particularly in the summer months. Because of the proximity to the warm sea plus the urban heat island, frosts are very rare in the city of Barcelona. Snow is also very infrequent in the city of Barcelona, but light snowfalls can occur yearly in the nearby Collserola mountains, such as in the Fabra Observatory located in a nearby mountain.[71]

Barcelona averages 78 rainy days per year (≥ 1 mm), and annual average relative humidity is 72%, ranging from 69% in July to 75% in October. Rainfall totals are highest in late summer and autumn (September–November) and lowest in early and mid-summer (June–August), with a secondary winter minimum (February–March). Sunshine duration is 2,524 hours per year, from 138 (average 4.5 hours of sunshine a day) in December to 310 (average 10 hours of sunshine a day) in July.[72]

Climate data for Barcelona Can Bruixa – Barcelona (1987–2010)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 14.8
(58.6)
15.6
(60.1)
17.4
(63.3)
19.1
(66.4)
22.5
(72.5)
26.1
(79.0)
28.6
(83.5)
29.0
(84.2)
26.0
(78.8)
22.5
(72.5)
17.9
(64.2)
15.1
(59.2)
21.2
(70.2)
Daily mean °C (°F) 11.8
(53.2)
12.4
(54.3)
14.2
(57.6)
15.8
(60.4)
19.3
(66.7)
22.9
(73.2)
25.7
(78.3)
26.1
(79.0)
23.0
(73.4)
19.5
(67.1)
14.9
(58.8)
12.3
(54.1)
18.2
(64.8)
Average low °C (°F) 8.8
(47.8)
9.3
(48.7)
10.9
(51.6)
12.5
(54.5)
16.1
(61.0)
19.8
(67.6)
22.7
(72.9)
23.1
(73.6)
20.0
(68.0)
16.5
(61.7)
11.9
(53.4)
9.5
(49.1)
15.1
(59.2)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 43.7
(1.72)
31.4
(1.24)
33.0
(1.30)
47.7
(1.88)
47.4
(1.87)
32.5
(1.28)
25.1
(0.99)
40.8
(1.61)
81.9
(3.22)
96.5
(3.80)
45.1
(1.78)
46.8
(1.84)
571.9
(22.53)
Average precipitation days (≥ 1 mm) 7.0 5.0 6.2 7.9 7.5 5.5 3.1 5.8 8.0 9.0 6.6 7.0 78.6
Mean monthly sunshine hours 149 163 200 220 244 262 310 282 219 180 146 138 2,524
Source 1: Servei Meteorològic de Catalunya[73]
Source 2: Agencia Estatal de Meteorología (sunshine hours)[citation needed]
Climate data for El Prat de Llobregat (Barcelona–El Prat Airport) (1981-2010) at 15 kilometres (9.3 mi)) from the city centre of Barcelona.
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 13.6
(56.5)
14.3
(57.7)
16.1
(61.0)
18.0
(64.4)
21.1
(70.0)
24.9
(76.8)
28.0
(82.4)
28.5
(83.3)
26.0
(78.8)
22.1
(71.8)
17.3
(63.1)
14.3
(57.7)
20.3
(68.5)
Daily mean °C (°F) 9.2
(48.6)
9.9
(49.8)
11.8
(53.2)
13.7
(56.7)
16.9
(62.4)
20.9
(69.6)
23.9
(75.0)
24.4
(75.9)
21.7
(71.1)
17.8
(64.0)
13.0
(55.4)
10.0
(50.0)
16.1
(61.0)
Average low °C (°F) 4.7
(40.5)
5.4
(41.7)
7.4
(45.3)
9.4
(48.9)
12.8
(55.0)
16.8
(62.2)
19.8
(67.6)
20.2
(68.4)
17.4
(63.3)
13.5
(56.3)
8.6
(47.5)
5.7
(42.3)
11.8
(53.2)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 37
(1.5)
35
(1.4)
36
(1.4)
40
(1.6)
47
(1.9)
30
(1.2)
21
(0.8)
62
(2.4)
81
(3.2)
91
(3.6)
59
(2.3)
40
(1.6)
588
(23.1)
Average precipitation days (≥ 1 mm) 4 4 5 5 5 4 2 5 5 6 5 4 53
Mean monthly sunshine hours 158 171 206 239 258 287 293 264 229 196 153 137 2,591
Source: Agencia Estatal de Meteorología[74]

Demographics

 
Demographic evolution, 1900–2007, according to the Spanish Instituto Nacional de Estadística

According to Barcelona's City Council, Barcelona's population as of 1 January 2016 was 1,608,746 people,[75] on a land area of 101.4 km2 (39 sq mi). It is the main component of an administrative area of Greater Barcelona, with a population of 3,218,071 in an area of 636 square kilometres (246 square miles) (density 5,060 inhabitants/km2). The population of the urban area was 4,840,000.[3] It is the central nucleus of the Barcelona metropolitan area, which relies on a population of 5,474,482.[4]

Spanish is the most spoken language in Barcelona (according to the linguistic census held by the Government of Catalonia in 2013) and it is understood almost universally. Catalan is also very commonly spoken in the city: it is understood by 95% of the population, while 72.3% can speak it, 79% can read it, and 53% can write it.[76] Knowledge of Catalan has increased significantly in recent decades thanks to a language immersion educational system.

In 1900, Barcelona had a population of 533,000,[64] which grew steadily but slowly until 1950, when it started absorbing a high number of people from other less-industrialised parts of Spain. Barcelona's population peaked in 1979 at 1,906,998, and fell throughout the 1980s and 1990s as more people sought a higher quality of life in outlying cities in the Barcelona Metropolitan Area. After bottoming out in 2000 with 1,496,266 residents, the city's population began to rise again as younger people started to return, causing a great increase in housing prices.[77]

Population density

Note: This text is entirely based on the municipal statistical database provided by the city council.

 
Aerial view of the centre and the Eixample, with the Serra de Collserola at the background.

Barcelona is one of the most densely populated cities in Europe. For the year 2008 the city council calculated the population to 1,621,090 living in the 102.2 km2 sized municipality, giving the city an average population density of 15,926 inhabitants per square kilometre with Eixample being the most populated district.

In the case of Barcelona though, the land distribution is extremely uneven. Half of the municipality or 50.2 km2, all of it located on the municipal edge is made up of the ten least densely populated neighbourhoods containing less than 10% of the city's population, the uninhabited Zona Franca industrial area and Montjuïc forest park. Leaving the remaining 90% or slightly below 1.5 million inhabitants living on the remaining 52 square kilometres (20 square miles) at an average density close to 28,500 inhabitants per square kilometre.

Of the 73 neighbourhoods in the city, 45 had a population density above 20,000 inhabitants per square kilometre with a combined population of 1,313,424 inhabitants living on 38.6 km2 at an average density of 33,987 inhabitants per square km. The 30 most densely populated neighbourhoods accounted for 57.5% of the city population occupying only 22.7% of the municipality, or in other words, 936,406 people living at an average density of 40,322 inhabitants per square kilometre. The city's highest density is found at and around the neighbourhood of la Sagrada Família where four of the city's most densely populated neighbourhoods are located side by side, all with a population density above 50,000 inhabitants per square kilometre.

Age structure

In 1900, almost a third (28.9 percent) of the population were children (aged younger than 14 years). In 2017, this age group constituted only 12.7% of the population. In 2017, people aged between 15 and 24 years made up 9 percent of the population; those aged between 25 and 44 years made up 30.6 percent of the population; while those aged between 45 and 64 years formed 56.9% of all Barcelonans. In 1900, people aged 65 and older made up just 6.5 percent of the population. In 2017, this age group made up 21.5 percent of the population.[78][79]

Migration

Largest groups of foreign residents in Barcelona[80]
Nationality Population
(2019)
Italy 36,276
China 21,658
Pakistan 20,643
France 16,940
Morocco 14,418
Colombia 12,290
Honduras 11,744
Peru 10,558
Venezuela 10,185
Philippines 9,439

In 2016, about 59% of the inhabitants of the city were born in Catalonia and 18.5% coming from the rest of the country. In addition to that, 22.5% of the population was born outside of Spain, a proportion which has more than doubled since 2001 and more than quintupled since 1996 when it was 8.6% respectively 3.9%.[75]

The most important region of origin of migrants is Europe, with many coming from Italy (26,676) or France (13,506).[75] Moreover, many migrants come from Latin American nations such as Bolivia, Ecuador or Colombia. Since the 1990s, and similar to other migrants, many Latin Americans have settled in northern parts of the city.[81]

There exists a relatively large Pakistani community in Barcelona with up to twenty thousand nationals. The community consists of significantly more men than women. Many of the Pakistanis are living in Ciutat Vella. First Pakistani migrants came in the 1970s, with increasing numbers in the 1990s.[82]

Other significant migrant groups come from Asia as from China and the Philippines.[75] There is a Japanese community clustered in Bonanova, Les Tres Torres, Pedralbes, and other northern neighbourhoods, and a Japanese international school serves that community.[83]

Religion

Most of the inhabitants state they are Roman Catholic (208 churches).[84] In a 2011 survey conducted by InfoCatólica, 49.5% of Barcelona residents of all ages identified themselves as Catholic.[85] This was the first time that more than half of respondents did not identify themselves as Catholic Christians.[85] The numbers reflect a broader trend in Spain whereby the numbers of self-identified Catholics have declined.[85] In 2019, a survey by Centro de Investigaciones Sociológicas showed that 53.2% of residents in Barcelona identified themselves as Catholic (9.9% practising Catholics, 43.3% non-practising Catholics).[86]

The province has the largest Muslim community in Spain, 322,698 people in Barcelona province are of Muslim religion.[87] A considerable number of Muslims live in Barcelona due to immigration (169 locations, mostly professed by Moroccans in Spain).[84] In 2014, 322,698 out of 5.5 million people in the province of Barcelona identified themselves as Muslim,[87] which makes 5.6% of the total population.

The city also has the largest Jewish community in Spain, with an estimated 3,500 Jews living in the city.[88] There are also a number of other groups, including Evangelical (71 locations, mostly professed by Roma), Jehovah's Witnesses (21 Kingdom Halls), Buddhists (13 locations),[89] and Eastern Orthodox.[90]

Economy

General information

 
A portion of the 22@Barcelona business and innovation district

The Barcelona metropolitan area comprises over 66% of the people of Catalonia, one of the richer regions in Europe and the fourth richest region per capita in Spain, with a GDP per capita amounting to €28,400 (16% more than the EU average). The greater Barcelona metropolitan area had a GDP amounting to $177 billion (equivalent to $34,821 in per capita terms, 44% more than the EU average), making it the 4th most economically powerful city by gross GDP in the European Union, and 35th in the world in 2009.[91] Barcelona city had a very high GDP of €80,894 per head in 2004, according to Eurostat.[92] Furthermore, Barcelona was Europe's fourth best business city and fastest improving European city, with growth improved by 17% per year as of 2009.[93]

Barcelona was the 24th most "livable city" in the world in 2015 according to lifestyle magazine Monocle.[94] Similarly, according to Innovation Analysts 2thinknow, Barcelona occupies 13th place in the world on Innovation Cities™ Global Index.[95] At the same time it is according to the Global Wealth and Lifestyle Report 2020 one of the most affordable cities in the world for a luxury lifestyle.[96]

Barcelona has a long-standing mercantile tradition. Less well known is that the city industrialised early, taking off in 1833, when Catalonia's already sophisticated textile industry began to use steam power. It became the first and most important industrial city in the Mediterranean basin. Since then, manufacturing has played a large role in its history.

Borsa de Barcelona (Barcelona Stock Exchange) is the main stock exchange in the northeastern part of the Iberian Peninsula.

Barcelona was recognised as the Southern European City of the Future for 2014/15, based on its economic potential,[97] by FDi Magazine in their bi-annual rankings.[98]

Trade fair and exhibitions

 
The Palau de Congressos de Barcelona

Drawing upon its tradition of creative art and craftsmanship, Barcelona is known for its award-winning industrial design. It also has several congress halls, notably Fira de Barcelona – the second largest trade fair and exhibition centre in Europe, that host a quickly growing number of national and international events each year (at present above 50). The total exhibition floor space of Fira de Barcelona venues is 405,000 m2 (41 ha), not counting Gran Via centre on the Plaza de Europa. However, the Eurozone crisis and deep cuts in business travel affected the council's positioning of the city as a convention centre.

An important business centre, the World Trade Center Barcelona, is located in Barcelona's Port Vell harbour.

The city is known for hosting well as world-class conferences and expositions, including the 1888 Exposición Universal de Barcelona, the 1929 Barcelona International Exposition (Expo 1929), the 2004 Universal Forum of Cultures and the 2004 World Urban Forum.[99]

Tourism

 
Part of the beach promenade and the beach of La Barceloneta towards Port Olimpic
 
Beaches of Barcelona, Spain

Barcelona was the 20th-most-visited city in the world by international visitors and the fifth most visited city in Europe after London, Paris, Istanbul and Rome, with 5.5 million international visitors in 2011.[100] By 2015, both Prague and Milan had more international visitors.[101] With its popular tree-lined pedestrian street, Les Rambles (Las Ramblas), Barcelona is ranked the most popular city to visit in Spain.[102]

Barcelona is internationally renowned a tourist destination, with numerous recreational areas, one of the best beaches in the world,[103][104] mild and warm climate, historical monuments, including eight UNESCO World Heritage Sites, 519 hotels as of March 2016[105] including 35 five star hotels,[106] and developed tourist infrastructure.

Due to its large influx of tourists each year, Barcelona, like many other tourism capitals, has to deal with pickpockets, with wallets and passports being commonly stolen items. For this reason, most travel guides recommend that visitors take precautions to ensure their possessions' safety, especially inside the metro. Despite its moderate pickpocket rate, Barcelona is considered one of the safest cities in terms of security and personal safety,[107] mainly because of a sophisticated policing strategy that has dropped crime by 32% in just over three years and has led it to be considered the 15th safest city in the world by Business Insider in 2016.[108]

While tourism produces economic benefits, according to one report,[citation needed] the city is "overrun [by] hordes of tourists". In early 2017, over 150,000 protesters warned that tourism is destabilizing the city. Slogans included "Tourists go home", "Barcelona is not for sale" and "We will not be driven out". By then, number of visitors had increased from 1.7 million in 1990 to 32 million in a city with a population of 1.62 million, increasing the cost of rental housing for residents and overcrowding the public places. While tourists spent an estimated €30 billion in 2017, they are viewed by some as a threat to Barcelona's identity.[109]

A May 2017 article in the British online daily The Independent included Barcelona among the "Eight Places That Hate Tourists the Most" and included a comment from Mayor Ada Colau, "We don't want the city to become a cheap souvenir shop", citing Venice as an example.[110] To moderate the problem, the city has stopped issuing licenses for new hotels and holiday apartments; it also fined AirBnb €30,000. The mayor has suggested introducing a new tourist tax and setting a limit on the number of visitors.[110] One industry insider, Justin Francis, founder of the Responsible Travel agency, stated that steps must be taken to limit the number of visitors that are causing an "overtourism crisis" in several major European cities. "Ultimately, residents must be prioritised over tourists for housing, infrastructure and access to services because they have a long-term stake in the city's success", he said.[111] "Managing tourism more responsibly can help", Francis later told a journalist, "but some destinations may just have too many tourists, and Barcelona may be a case of that".[112]

Manufacturing sector

Industry generates 21% of the total gross domestic product (GDP) of the region,[113] with the energy, chemical and metallurgy industries accounting for 47% of industrial production.[114] The Barcelona metropolitan area had 67% of the total number of industrial establishments in Catalonia as of 1997.[115]

Barcelona has long been an important European automobile manufacturing centre. Formerly there were automobile factories of AFA, Abadal, Actividades Industriales, Alvarez, America, Artés de Arcos, Balandrás, Baradat-Esteve, Biscúter, J. Castro, Clúa, David, Delfín, Díaz y Grilló, Ebro trucks, Edis [ca], Elizalde, Automóviles España, Eucort, Fenix, Fábrica Hispano, Auto Academia Garriga, Fábrica Española de Automóviles Hebe, Hispano-Suiza, Huracán Motors, Talleres Hereter, Junior SL, Kapi, La Cuadra, M.A., Automóviles Matas, Motores y Motos, Nacional Custals, National Pescara, Nacional RG, Nacional Rubi, Nacional Sitjes, Automóviles Nike, Orix, Otro Ford, Patria, Pegaso, PTV, Ricart, Ricart-España, Industrias Salvador, Siata Española, Stevenson, Romagosa y Compañía, Garaje Storm, Talleres Hereter, Trimak, Automóviles Victoria, Manufacturas Mecánicas Aleu.[116][117]

Today, the headquarters and a large factory of SEAT (the largest Spanish automobile manufacturer) are in one of its suburbs. There is also a Nissan factory in the logistics and industrial area of the city.[118] The factory of Derbi, a large manufacturer of motorcycles, scooters and mopeds, also lies near the city.[119]

As in other modern cities, the manufacturing sector has long since been overtaken by the services sector, though it remains very important. The region's leading industries are textiles, chemical, pharmaceutical, motor, electronic, printing, logistics, publishing, in telecommunications industry and culture the notable Mobile World Congress, and information technology services.

Fashion

 
The Brandery fashion show of 2011

The traditional importance of textiles is reflected in Barcelona's drive to become a major fashion centre. There have been many attempts to launch Barcelona as a fashion capital, notably Gaudi Home.[citation needed]

Beginning in the summer of 2000, the city hosted the Bread & Butter urban fashion fair until 2009, when its organisers announced that it would be returning to Berlin. This was a hard blow for the city as the fair brought €100 m to the city in just three days.[120][121]

Since 2009, The Brandery, an urban fashion show, has been held in Barcelona twice a year until 2012. According to the Global Language Monitor's annual ranking of the world's top fifty fashion capitals Barcelona was named as the seventh most important fashion capital of the world right after Milan and before Berlin in 2015.[122]

Government and administrative divisions

As the capital of the autonomous community of Catalonia, Barcelona is the seat of the Catalan government, known as the Generalitat de Catalunya; of particular note are the executive branch, the parliament, and the High Court of Justice of Catalonia. The city is also the capital of the Province of Barcelona and the Barcelonès comarca (district).

Barcelona is governed by a city council formed by 41 city councillors, elected for a four-year term by universal suffrage. As one of the two biggest cities in Spain, Barcelona is subject to a special law articulated through the Carta Municipal (Municipal Law). A first version of this law was passed in 1960 and amended later, but the current version was approved in March 2006.[123] According to this law, Barcelona's city council is organised in two levels: a political one, with elected city councillors, and one executive, which administrates the programs and executes the decisions taken on the political level.[124] This law also gives the local government a special relationship with the central government and it also gives the mayor wider prerogatives by the means of municipal executive commissions.[125] It expands the powers of the city council in areas like telecommunications, city traffic, road safety and public safety. It also gives a special economic regime to the city's treasury and it gives the council a veto in matters that will be decided by the central government, but that will need a favourable report from the council.[123]

 
The City Hall of Barcelona

The Comissió de Govern (Government Commission) is the executive branch, formed by 24 councillors, led by the Mayor, with 5 lieutenant-mayors and 17 city councillors, each in charge of an area of government, and 5 non-elected councillors.[126] The plenary, formed by the 41 city councillors, has advisory, planning, regulatory, and fiscal executive functions.[127] The six Commissions del Consell Municipal (City council commissions) have executive and controlling functions in the field of their jurisdiction. They are composed by a number of councillors proportional to the number of councillors each political party has in the plenary.[128] The city council has jurisdiction in the fields of city planning, transportation, municipal taxes, public highways security through the Guàrdia Urbana (the municipal police), city maintenance, gardens, parks and environment, facilities (like schools, nurseries, sports centres, libraries, and so on), culture, sports, youth and social welfare. Some of these competencies are not exclusive, but shared with the Generalitat de Catalunya or the central Spanish government. In some fields with shared responsibility (such as public health, education or social services), there is a shared Agency or Consortium between the city and the Generalitat to plan and manage services.[129]

 
The Saló de Cent, in the City Hall of Barcelona

The executive branch is led by a Chief Municipal Executive Officer which answers to the Mayor. It is made up of departments which are legally part of the city council and by separate legal entities of two types: autonomous public departments and public enterprises.[130]

The seat of the city council is on the Plaça de Sant Jaume, opposite the seat of Generalitat de Catalunya. Since the coming of the Spanish democracy, Barcelona had been governed by the PSC, first with an absolute majority and later in coalition with ERC and ICV. After the May 2007 election, the ERC did not renew the coalition agreement and the PSC governed in a minority coalition with ICV as the junior partner.

After 32 years, on 22 May 2011, CiU gained a plurality of seats at the municipal election, gaining 15 seats to the PSC's 11. The PP hold 8 seats, ICV 5 and ERC 2.

Districts

 
Districts of Barcelona

Since 1987, the city has been divided into 10 administrative districts (districtes in Catalan, distritos in Spanish):

The districts are based mostly on historical divisions, and several are former towns annexed by the city of Barcelona in the 18th and 19th centuries that still maintain their own distinct character. Each district has its own council led by a city councillor. The composition of each district council depends on the number of votes each political party had in that district, so a district can be led by a councillor from a different party than the executive council.

Education

 
Main hall of the University of Barcelona
 
Roger de Llúria building at Campus de la Ciutadella, Pompeu Fabra University

Barcelona has a well-developed higher education system of public universities. Most prominent among these are the University of Barcelona (established in 1450) and the more modern Pompeu Fabra University.[131][132] Barcelona is also home to the Polytechnic University of Catalonia, and in the private sector the EADA Business School (founded in 1957), which became the first Barcelona institution to run manager training programmes for the business community. IESE Business School, as well as the largest private educational institution, the Ramon Llull University, which encompasses schools and institutes such as the ESADE Business School. The Autonomous University of Barcelona, another public university, is located in Bellaterra, a town in the Metropolitan Area. Toulouse Business School and the Open University of Catalonia (a private Internet-centred open university) are also based in Barcelona.

The city has a network of public schools, from nurseries to high schools, under the responsibility of a consortium led by city council (though the curriculum is the responsibility of the Generalitat de Catalunya). There are also many private schools, some of them Roman Catholic. Most such schools receive a public subsidy on a per-student basis, are subject to inspection by the public authorities, and are required to follow the same curricular guidelines as public schools, though they charge tuition. Known as escoles concertades, they are distinct from schools whose funding is entirely private (escoles privades).

The language of instruction at public schools and escoles concertades is Catalan, as stipulated by the 2009 Catalan Education Act. Spanish may be used as a language of instruction by teachers of Spanish literature or language, and foreign languages by teachers of those languages. An experimental partial immersion programme adopted by some schools allows for the teaching of a foreign language (English, generally) across the curriculum, though this is limited to a maximum of 30% of the school day. No public school or escola concertada in Barcelona may offer 50% or full immersion programmes in a foreign language, nor does any public school or escola concertada offer International Baccalaureate programmes.

Culture

Barcelona's cultural roots go back 2000 years. Since the arrival of democracy, the Catalan language (very much repressed during the dictatorship of Franco) has been promoted, both by recovering works from the past and by stimulating the creation of new works. Barcelona is designated as a world-class city by the Globalization and World Cities Study Group and Network.[133] It has also been part of the UNESCO Creative Cities Network as a City of Literature since 2015.[134]

Entertainment and performing arts

 
The Liceu opera house

Barcelona has many venues for live music and theatre, including the world-renowned Gran Teatre del Liceu opera house, the Teatre Nacional de Catalunya, the Teatre Lliure and the Palau de la Música Catalana concert hall. Barcelona also is home to the Barcelona Symphony and Catalonia National Orchestra (Orquestra Simfònica de Barcelona i Nacional de Catalunya, usually known as OBC), the largest symphonic orchestra in Catalonia. In 1999, the OBC inaugurated its new venue in the brand-new Auditorium (L'Auditori). It performs around 75 concerts per season and its current director is Eiji Oue.[135] It is home to the Barcelona Guitar Orchestra, directed by Sergi Vicente. The major thoroughfare of La Rambla is home to mime artists and street performers. Yearly, two major pop music festivals take place in the city, the Sónar Festival and the Primavera Sound Festival. The city also has a thriving alternative music scene, with groups such as The Pinker Tones receiving international attention.[136] Barcelona is an international hub of highly active and diverse nightlife with bars, dance bars and nightclubs staying open well past midnight.[137]

Media

El Periódico de Catalunya, La Vanguardia and Ara are Barcelona's three major daily newspapers (the first two with Catalan and Spanish editions, Ara only in Catalan) while Sport and El Mundo Deportivo (both in Spanish) are the city's two major sports daily newspapers, published by the same companies. The city is also served by a number of smaller publications such as Ara and El Punt Avui (in Catalan), by nationwide newspapers with special Barcelona editions like El País (in Spanish, with an online version in Catalan) and El Mundo (in Spanish), and by several free newspapers like 20 minutos and Què (all bilingual).

Barcelona's oldest and main online newspaper VilaWeb is also the oldest one in Europe (with Catalan and English editions).

Several major FM stations include Catalunya Ràdio, RAC 1, RAC 105 and Cadena SER. Barcelona also has a local TV station, BTV, owned by city council. The headquarters of Televisió de Catalunya, Catalonia's public network, are located in Sant Joan Despí, in Barcelona's metropolitan area.

Sports

 
Estadi Olímpic de Montjuïc (Barcelona Olympic Stadium) built for the 1936 Summer Olympics named People's Olympiad, main stadium of 1992 Summer Olympics

Barcelona has a long sporting tradition and hosted the highly successful 1992 Summer Olympics as well as several matches during the 1982 FIFA World Cup (at the two stadiums). It has hosted about 30 sports events of international significance.[citation needed]

 
The Camp Nou, the largest stadium in Europe

FC Barcelona is a sports club best known worldwide for its football team, one of the largest and the second richest in the world.[138] It has 74 national trophies (while finishing 46 times as runners-up) and 17 continental prizes (with being runners-up 11 times), including five UEFA Champions League trophies out of eight finals and three FIFA Club World Cup wins out of four finals. The club won six trophies in a calendar year in 2009, becoming one of only 2 male football teams in the world to win the coveted sextuple, apart from FC Bayern Munich in 2020. FC Barcelona also has professional teams in other sports like FC Barcelona Regal (basketball), FC Barcelona Handbol (handball), FC Barcelona Hoquei (roller hockey), FC Barcelona Ice Hockey (ice hockey), FC Barcelona Futsal (futsal) and FC Barcelona Rugby (rugby union), all at one point winners of the highest national and/or European competitions. The club's museum is the second most visited in Catalonia. The matches against cross-town rivals RCD Espanyol are of particular interest, but there are other Barcelonan football clubs in lower categories, like CE Europa and UE Sant Andreu. FC Barcelona's basketball team has a noted rivalry in the Liga ACB with nearby Joventut Badalona.

 
Palau Sant Jordi (St. George's sporting arena) and Montjuïc Communications Tower

Barcelona has three UEFA elite stadiums: FC Barcelona's Camp Nou, the largest stadium in Europe with a capacity of 99,354; the publicly owned Estadi Olímpic Lluís Companys, with a capacity of 55,926; used for the 1992 Olympics; and Estadi Cornellà-El Prat, with a capacity of 40,500. Furthermore, the city has several smaller stadiums such as Mini Estadi (also owned by FC Barcelona) with a capacity of 15,000, Camp Municipal Narcís Sala with a capacity of 6,563 and Nou Sardenya with a capacity of 7,000. The city has a further three multifunctional venues for sports and concerts: the Palau Sant Jordi with a capacity of 12,000 to 24,000 (depending on use), the Palau Blaugrana with a capacity of 7,500, and the Palau dels Esports de Barcelona with a capacity of 3,500.

Barcelona was the host city for the 2013 World Aquatics Championships, which were held at the Palau San Jordi.[139]

 
Circuit de Catalunya/Circuit de Barcelona, race track of Formula 1 and MotoGP on the suburb of Barcelona

Several road running competitions are organised year-round in Barcelona: the Barcelona Marathon every March with over 10,000 participants in 2010, the Cursa de Bombers in April, the Cursa de El Corte Inglés in May (with about 60,000 participants each year), the Cursa de la Mercè, the Cursa Jean Bouin, the Milla Sagrada Família and the San Silvestre. There's also the Ultratrail Collserola which passes 85 kilometres (53 miles) through the Collserola forest. The Open Seat Godó, a 50-year-old ATP World Tour 500 Series tennis tournament, is held annually in the facilities of the Real Club de Tenis Barcelona. Each year on Christmas Day, a 200-meter swimming race across the Old Port of Barcelona takes place.[140] Near Barcelona, in Montmeló, the 107,000 capacity Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya racetrack hosts the Formula One Spanish Grand Prix, the Catalan motorcycle Grand Prix, the Spanish GT Championship and races in the GP2 Series. Skateboarding and cycling are also very popular in Barcelona; in and around the city there are dozens of kilometers of bicycle paths.[citation needed]

Top sport clubs in Barcelona:
Club League Sport Venue Established Capacity
FC Barcelona Primera División Football Camp Nou 1899 100,000
RCD Espanyol[141] Primera División Football Estadi Cornellà-El Prat 1900 40,500
CE Europa Tercera División Football Nou Sardenya 1907 7,000
FC Barcelona Bàsquet Primera División Basketball Palau Blaugrana 1926 7,585
FC Barcelona Handbol Primera División Handball Palau Blaugrana 1942 7,585
FC Barcelona Ice Hockey Primera División Ice hockey Palau de Gel 1972 1,256
FC Barcelona Hoquei Primera División Roller hockey Palau Blaugrana 1942 7,585
FC Barcelona Futsal Primera División Futsal Palau Blaugrana 1986 7,585
FC Barcelona Rugby Primera División Rugby union CDMVdHT 1924 no data
Barcelona Dragons World League American football Estadi Olímpic Lluís Companys 1991 (withheld) 56,000
Barcelona Búfals Primera División American football Camp Municipal Narcís Sala 1987 6,550

Squatter's Movement

Barcelona is also home to numerous social centres and illegal squats that effectively form a shadow society mainly made up of the unemployed, immigrants, dropouts, anarchists, anti-authoritarians and autonomists.[142] Peter Gelderloos estimates that there around 200 squatted buildings and 40 social centres across the city with thousands of inhabitants, making it one of the largest squatter movements in the world. He notes that they pirate electricity, internet and water allowing them to live on less than one euro a day. He argues that these squats embrace an anarcho-communist and anti-work philosophy, often freely fixing up new houses, cleaning, patching roofs, installing windows, toilets, showers, lights and kitchens. In the wake of austerity, the squats have provided a number of social services to the surrounding residents, including bicycle repair workshops, carpentry workshops, self-defense classes, free libraries, community gardens, free meals, computer labs, language classes, theatre groups, free medical care and legal support services.[143] The squats help elderly residents avoid eviction and organise various protests throughout Barcelona. Notable squats include Can Vies and Can Masdeu. Police have repeatedly tried to shut down the squatters movement with waves of evictions and raids, but the movement is still going strong.

Transport

Airports

 
Barcelona–El Prat Airport as seen from the air

Barcelona is served by Barcelona-El Prat Airport, about 17 km (11 mi) south-west of the centre of Barcelona. It is the second-largest airport in Spain, and the largest on the Mediterranean coast, which handled more than 50.17 million passengers in 2018, showing an annual upward trend.[144] It is a main hub for Vueling Airlines and Ryanair, and also a focus for Iberia and Air Europa. The airport mainly serves domestic and European destinations, although some airlines offer destinations in Latin America, Asia and the United States. The airport is connected to the city by highway, metro (Airport T1 and Airport T2 stations), commuter train (Barcelona Airport railway station) and scheduled bus service. A new terminal (T1) has been built, and entered service on 17 June 2009.

Some low-cost airlines, also use Girona-Costa Brava Airport, about 90 km (56 mi) to the north, Reus Airport, 77 km (48 mi) to the south, or Lleida-Alguaire Airport, about 150 km (93 mi) to the west, of the city. Sabadell Airport is a smaller airport in the nearby town of Sabadell, devoted to pilot training, aerotaxi and private flights.

Seaport

The Port of Barcelona has a 2000-year-old history and a great contemporary commercial importance. It is Europe's ninth largest container port, with a trade volume of 1.72 million TEU's in 2013.[145] The port is managed by the Port Authority of Barcelona. Its 10 km2 (4 sq mi) are divided into three zones: Port Vell (the old port), the commercial port and the logistics port (Barcelona Free Port). The port is undergoing an enlargement that will double its size thanks to diverting the mouth of the Llobregat river 2 kilometres (1 mile) to the south.[146]

 
Port Vell in winter

The Barcelona harbour is the leading European cruiser port and a very important Mediterranean turnaround base.[147] In 2013, 3.6 million pleasure cruise passengers used the Port of Barcelona.[145]

The Port Vell area also houses the Maremagnum (a commercial mall), a multiplex cinema, the IMAX Port Vell and one of Europe's largest aquariumsAquarium Barcelona, containing 8,000 fish and 11 sharks contained in 22 basins filled with 4 million litres of sea water. The Maremagnum, being situated within the confines of the port, is the only commercial mall in the city that can open on Sundays and public holidays.

National and international rail

 
The main railway station Estació de Sants

Barcelona is a major hub for the Spanish rail network. The city's main Inter-city rail station is Barcelona Sants railway station, whilst Estació de França terminus serves a secondary role handling suburban, regional and medium distance services. Freight services operate to local industries and to the Port of Barcelona.

RENFE's AVE high-speed rail system, which is designed for speeds of 310 km/h (193 mph), was extended from Madrid to Barcelona in 2008 in the form of the Madrid–Barcelona high-speed rail line. A shared RENFE-SNCF high-speed rail connecting Barcelona and France (Paris, Marseilles and Toulouse, through Perpignan–Barcelona high-speed rail line) was launched in 2013. Both these lines serve Barcelona Sants terminal station.[148][149]

Metro and regional rail

 
Barcelona Metro

Barcelona is served by an extensive local public transport network that includes a metro system, a bus network, a regional railway system, trams, funiculars, rack railways, a Gondola lift and aerial cable cars. These networks and lines are run by a number of different operators but they are integrated into a coordinated fare system, administered by the Autoritat del Transport Metropolità (ATM). The system is divided into fare zones (1 to 6) and various Integrated Travel Cards are available.[150]

The Barcelona Metro network comprises twelve lines, identified by an "L" followed by the line number as well as by individual colours. The Metro largely runs underground; eight Metro lines are operated on dedicated track by the Transports Metropolitans de Barcelona (TMB), whilst four lines are operated by the Ferrocarrils de la Generalitat de Catalunya (FGC) and some of them share tracks with RENFE commuter lines.

In addition to the city Metro, several regional rail lines operated by RENFE's Rodalies de Catalunya run across the city, providing connections to outlying towns in the surrounding region.

Tram

 
Barcelona Tram

The city's two modern tram systems, Trambaix and Trambesòs, are operated by TRAMMET.[151] A heritage tram line, the Tramvia Blau, also operates between the metro Line 7 and the Funicular del Tibidabo.[152]

Funicular and cable car

Barcelona's metro and rail system is supplemented by several aerial cable cars, funiculars and rack railways that provide connections to mountain-top stations. FGC operates the Funicular de Tibidabo up the hill of Tibidabo and the Funicular de Vallvidrera (FGC), while TMB runs the Funicular de Montjuïc up Montjuïc. The city has two aerial cable cars: the Montjuïc Cable Car, which serves Montjuïc castle, and the Port Vell Aerial Tramway that runs via Torre Jaume I and Torre Sant Sebastià over the port.

Bus

Buses in Barcelona are a major form of public transport, with extensive local, interurban and night bus networks. Most local services are operated by the TMB, although some other services are operated by a number of private companies, albeit still within the ATM fare structure. A separate private bus line, known as Aerobús, links the airport with the city centre, with its own fare structure.

The Estació del Nord (Northern Station), a former railway station which was renovated for the 1992 Olympic Games, now serves as the terminus for long-distance and regional bus services.

Taxi

 
Two typical Barcelona taxis

Barcelona has a metered taxi fleet governed by the Institut Metropolità del Taxi (Metropolitan Taxi Institute), composed of more than 10,000 cars. Most of the licences are in the hands of self-employed drivers. With their black and yellow livery, Barcelona's taxis are easily spotted, and can be caught from one of many taxi ranks, hailed on street, called by telephone or via app.[153][154]

On 22 March 2007,[155] Barcelona's City Council started the Bicing service, a bicycle service understood as a public transport. Once the user has their user card, they can take a bicycle from any of the more than 400 stations spread around the city and use it anywhere the urban area of the city, and then leave it at another station.[156] The service has been a success, with 50,000 subscribed users in three months.[157]

Roads and highways

 
B-20 motorway in Barcelona

Barcelona lies on three international routes, including European route E15 that follows the Mediterranean coast, European route E90 to Madrid and Lisbon, and European route E09 to Paris. It is also served by a comprehensive network of motorways and highways throughout the metropolitan area, including A-2, A-7/AP-7, C-16, C-17, C-31, C-32, C-33, C-60.

The city is circled by three half ring roads or bypasses, Ronda de Dalt (B-20) (on the mountain side), Ronda del Litoral (B-10) (along the coast) and Ronda del Mig (separated into two parts: Travessera de Dalt in the north and the Gran Via de Carles III), two partially covered[158] fast highways with several exits that bypass the city.

The city's main arteries include Diagonal Avenue, which crosses it diagonally, Meridiana Avenue which leads to Glòries and connects with Diagonal Avenue and Gran Via de les Corts Catalanes, which crosses the city from east to west, passing through its centre. The famous boulevard of La Rambla, whilst no longer an important vehicular route, remains an important pedestrian route.

Main sights

 
Sagrada Família church, designed by Gaudí

The Barri Gòtic (Catalan for "Gothic Quarter") is the centre of the old city of Barcelona. Many of the buildings date from medieval times, some from as far back as the Roman settlement of Barcelona. Catalan modernista architecture (related to the movement known as Art Nouveau in the rest of Europe) developed between 1885 and 1950 and left an important legacy in Barcelona. Several of these buildings are World Heritage Sites. Especially remarkable is the work of architect Antoni Gaudí, which can be seen throughout the city. His best-known work is the immense but still unfinished church of the Sagrada Família, which has been under construction since 1882 and is still financed by private donations. As of 2015, completion is planned for 2026.[159]

Barcelona was also home to Mies van der Rohe's Barcelona Pavilion. Designed in 1929 for the International Exposition for Germany, it was an iconic building that came to symbolise modern architecture as the embodiment of van der Rohe's aphorisms "less is more" and "God is in the details."[160] The Barcelona pavilion was intended as a temporary structure and was torn down in 1930 less than a year after it was constructed. A modern re-creation by Spanish architects now stands in Barcelona, however, constructed in 1986.

Barcelona won the 1999 RIBA Royal Gold Medal for its architecture,[161] the first (and as of 2015, only) time that the winner has been a city rather than an individual architect.

 
Barcelona Cathedral (original) - Cathedral at night

World Heritage Sites

Barcelona is the home of many points of interest declared World Heritage Sites by UNESCO:[162]

Historic buildings and monuments

Museums

 
The National Museum of Art of Catalonia stands out for its collection of Romanesque painting, considered one of the most complete in Europe.[citation needed]

Barcelona has a great number of museums, which cover different areas and eras. The National Museum of Art of Catalonia possesses a well-known collection of Romanesque art, while the Barcelona Museum of Contemporary Art focuses on post-1945 Catalan and Spanish art. The Fundació Joan Miró, Picasso Museum, and Fundació Antoni Tàpies hold important collections of these world-renowned artists, as well as the Can Framis Museum, focused on post-1960 Catalan Art owned by Fundació Vila Casas. Several museums cover the fields of history and archaeology, like the Barcelona City History Museum (MUHBA), the Museum of the History of Catalonia, the Archeology Museum of Catalonia, the Maritime Museum of Barcelona, the Music Museum of Barcelona and the privately owned Egyptian Museum. The Erotic museum of Barcelona is among the most peculiar ones, while CosmoCaixa is a science museum that received the European Museum of the Year Award in 2006.[citation needed]

The Museum of Natural Sciences of Barcelona was founded in 1882 under the name of "Museo Martorell de Arqueología y Ciencias Naturales"[163][164] (Spanish for "Martorell Museum of Archaeology and Natural Sciences"). In 2011 the Museum of Natural Sciences ended up with a merge of five institutions: the Museum of Natural Sciences of Barcelona (the main site, at the Forum Building), the Martorell Museum (the historical seat of the Museum, opened to the public from 1924 to 2010 as a geology museum), the Laboratori de Natura, at the Castle of the Three Dragons (from 1920 to 2010: the Zoology Museum), the Historical Botanical Garden of Barcelona, founded 1930, and the Botanical garden of Barcelona, founded 1999. Those two gardens are a part of the Botanical Institute of Barcelona too.

The FC Barcelona Museum is the third most popular tourist attraction in Catalonia, with 1,51 million visitors in 2013.[165]

Parks

Barcelona contains sixty municipal parks, twelve of which are historic, five of which are thematic (botanical), forty-five of which are urban, and six of which are forest.[166] They range from vest-pocket parks to large recreation areas. The urban parks alone cover 10% of the city (549.7 ha or 1,358.3 acres).[65] The total park surface grows about 10 ha (25 acres) per year,[167] with a proportion of 18.1 square metres (195 sq ft) of park area per inhabitant.[168]

Of Barcelona's parks, Montjuïc is the largest, with 203 ha located on the mountain of the same name.[65] It is followed by Parc de la Ciutadella (which occupies the site of the old military citadel and which houses the Parliament building, the Barcelona Zoo, and several museums); 31 ha or 76.6 acres including the zoo), the Guinardó Park (19 ha or 47.0 acres), Park Güell (designed by Antoni Gaudí; 17.2 ha or 42.5 acres), Oreneta Castle Park (also 17.2 ha or 42.5 acres), Diagonal Mar Park (13.3 ha or 32.9 acres, inaugurated in 2002), Nou Barris Central Park (13.2 ha or 32.6 acres), Can Dragó Sports Park and Poblenou Park (both 11.9 ha or 29.4 acres), the Labyrinth Park (9.10 ha or 22.5 acres), named after the garden maze it contains.[65] There are also several smaller parks, for example, the Parc de Les Aigües (2 ha or 4.9 acres). A part of the Collserola Park is also within the city limits. PortAventura World, one of the largest resort in Europe, with 5,837,509 visitors per year, is located one hour's drive from Barcelona.[169][170] Also, within the city lies Tibidabo Amusement Park, a smaller amusement park in Plaza del Tibidabo, with the Muntanya Russa amusement ride.

Beaches

 
Beaches of Barcelona

Barcelona beach was listed as number one in a list of the top ten city beaches in the world according to National Geographic[103] and Discovery Channel.[171] Barcelona contains seven beaches, totalling 4.5 kilometres (2+34 miles) of coastline. Sant Sebastià, Barceloneta and Somorrostro beaches, both 1,100 m (3,610 ft) in length,[65] are the largest, oldest and the most-frequented beaches in Barcelona.

The Olympic Harbour separates them from the other city beaches: Nova Icària, Bogatell, Mar Bella, Nova Mar Bella and Llevant. These beaches (ranging from 400 to 640 m (1,310 to 2,100 ft) were opened as a result of the city restructuring to host the 1992 Summer Olympics, when a great number of industrial buildings were demolished. At present, the beach sand is artificially replenished given that storms regularly remove large quantities of material. The 2004 Universal Forum of Cultures left the city a large concrete bathing zone on the eastmost part of the city's coastline. Most recently, Llevant is the first beach to allow dogs access during summer season.

Other sights

International relations

Twin towns – sister cities

Barcelona is twinned with:[172]

Partnership and friendship

Barcelona also cooperates with:[172]

Notable people

See also

Notes and references

Notes

Citations

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Gerenal references

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  • "Barcelona". Gran Enciclopèdia Catalana. Barcelona: Ed. Enciclopèdia Catalana S.A.
  • Busquets, Joan. Barcelona: The Urban Evolution of a Compact City (Harvard UP, 2006) 468 pp.
  • McDonogh, G. W. (January 2011). "Review Essay: Barcelona: Forms, Images, and Conflicts: Joan Busquets (2005)". Journal of Urban History. 37 (1): 117–123. doi:10.1177/0096144210384250. S2CID 149302217.
  • Marshall, Tim, ed. Transforming Barcelona (Routledge, 2004), 267 pp.
  • Ramon Resina, Joan. Barcelona's Vocation of Modernity: Rise and Decline of an Urban Image (Stanford UP, 2008). 272 pp.

External links

  • Official website of Barcelona
  • Official website of Barcelona in Spain's national tourism portal

barcelona, this, article, about, city, spain, football, club, other, uses, disambiguation, ɑːr, catalan, bəɾsəˈlonə, spanish, baɾθeˈlona, city, coast, northeastern, spain, capital, largest, city, autonomous, community, catalonia, well, second, most, populous, . This article is about the city in Spain For the football club see FC Barcelona For other uses see Barcelona disambiguation Barcelona ˌ b ɑːr s e ˈ l oʊ n e BAR se LOH ne Catalan beɾseˈlone Spanish baɾ8eˈlona is a city on the coast of northeastern Spain It is the capital and largest city of the autonomous community of Catalonia as well as the second most populous municipality of Spain With a population of 1 6 million within city limits 7 its urban area extends to numerous neighbouring municipalities within the Province of Barcelona and is home to around 4 8 million people 3 making it the fifth most populous urban area in the European Union after Paris the Ruhr area Madrid and Milan 3 It is one of the largest metropolises on the Mediterranean Sea located on the coast between the mouths of the rivers Llobregat and Besos and bounded to the west by the Serra de Collserola mountain range the tallest peak of which is 512 metres 1 680 feet high BarcelonaCity and municipalityFrom the top 22 new business district Sagrada Familia Camp Nou Castle of the Three Dragons Palau Nacional W Barcelona hotel and beachFlagCoat of armsNicknames Ciutat Comtal Catalan Ciudad Condal Spanish Comital City or City of Counts Cap i Casal de Catalunya Catalan Head and Hearth of Catalonia Abbreviation s Barna BCNLocation in the Province of BarcelonaShow map of Province of BarcelonaLocation in CataloniaShow map of CataloniaLocation in SpainShow map of SpainLocation in EuropeShow map of EuropeCoordinates 41 23 N 2 11 E 41 383 N 2 183 E 41 383 2 183 Coordinates 41 23 N 2 11 E 41 383 N 2 183 E 41 383 2 183Country SpainAutonomous community CataloniaProvinceBarcelonaComarcaBarcelonesDistricts10 Ciutat VellaEixampleGraciaHorta GuinardoLes CortsNou BarrisSant AndreuSants MontjuicSarria Sant GervasiSant MartiGovernment TypeAyuntamiento BodyAjuntament de Barcelona MayorAda Colau Ballano 1 Barcelona en Comu Area 2 City101 4 km2 39 2 sq mi Elevation AMSL 12 m 39 ft Population 2018 5 City1 620 343 Rank2nd Density16 000 km2 41 000 sq mi Urban4 840 000 3 Metro5 474 482 4 DemonymsBarcelonan Barcelonian barceloni ina Catalan barcelones esa Spanish Postal code080xxArea code 34 E 93 B INE code08 0193City budget 2021 2 4 billion 6 Official languageCatalan and SpanishMain festivityLa MercePatron saintEulalia of BarcelonaWebsitewww wbr barcelona wbr catClick on the map for a fullscreen viewFounded as a Roman city in the Middle Ages Barcelona became the capital of the County of Barcelona After joining with the Kingdom of Aragon to form the confederation of the Crown of Aragon Barcelona which continued to be the capital of the Principality of Catalonia became the most important city in the Crown of Aragon and the main economic and administrative centre of the Crown only to be overtaken by Valencia wrested from Arab domination by the Catalans shortly before the dynastic union between the Crown of Castile and the Crown of Aragon in 1492 Barcelona has a rich cultural heritage and is today an important cultural centre and a major tourist destination Particularly renowned are the architectural works of Antoni Gaudi and Lluis Domenech i Montaner which have been designated UNESCO World Heritage Sites The city is home to two of the most prestigious universities in Spain the University of Barcelona and Pompeu Fabra University The headquarters of the Union for the Mediterranean are located in Barcelona The city is known for hosting the 1992 Summer Olympics as well as world class conferences and expositions and also many international sport tournaments Barcelona is a major cultural economic and financial centre in southwestern Europe 8 as well as the main biotech hub in Spain 9 As a leading world city Barcelona s influence in global socio economic affairs qualifies it for global city status Beta 10 Barcelona is a transport hub with the Port of Barcelona being one of Europe s principal seaports and busiest European passenger port 11 an international airport Barcelona El Prat Airport which handles over 50 million passengers per year 12 an extensive motorway network and a high speed rail line with a link to France and the rest of Europe 13 Contents 1 Names 2 History 2 1 Pre history 2 2 Roman Barcelona 2 3 Medieval Barcelona 2 4 Barcelona under the Spanish monarchy 2 5 The Spanish Civil War and the Franco period 2 6 Late twentieth century 2 7 Recent history 3 Geography 3 1 Location 3 2 Climate 4 Demographics 4 1 Population density 4 2 Age structure 4 3 Migration 4 4 Religion 5 Economy 5 1 General information 5 2 Trade fair and exhibitions 5 3 Tourism 5 4 Manufacturing sector 5 5 Fashion 6 Government and administrative divisions 6 1 Districts 7 Education 8 Culture 8 1 Entertainment and performing arts 8 2 Media 8 3 Sports 8 4 Squatter s Movement 9 Transport 9 1 Airports 9 2 Seaport 9 3 National and international rail 9 4 Metro and regional rail 9 5 Tram 9 6 Funicular and cable car 9 7 Bus 9 8 Taxi 9 9 Roads and highways 10 Main sights 10 1 World Heritage Sites 10 2 Historic buildings and monuments 10 3 Museums 10 4 Parks 10 5 Beaches 10 6 Other sights 11 International relations 11 1 Twin towns sister cities 11 2 Partnership and friendship 12 Notable people 13 See also 14 Notes and references 14 1 Notes 14 2 Citations 14 3 Gerenal references 15 External linksNamesThe name Barcelona comes from the ancient Iberian Baŕkeno attested in an ancient coin inscription found on the right side of the coin in Iberian script as 14 in ancient Greek sources as Barkinwn Barkinṓn 15 16 and in Latin as Barcino 17 Barcilonum 18 and Barcenona 19 20 21 Some older sources suggest that the city may have been named after the Carthaginian general Hamilcar Barca who was supposed to have founded the city in the 3rd century BC 22 but there is no evidence that Barcelona was ever a Carthaginian settlement or that its name in antiquity Barcino had any connection with the Barcid family of Hamilcar 23 During the Middle Ages the city was variously known as Barchinona Barcalona Barchelonaa and Barchenona Internationally citation needed Barcelona s name is abbreviated colloquially to Barca in reference to the football club FC Barcelona whose anthem is the Cant del Barca Barca chant A common abbreviated form used by locals for the city is Barna Another common abbreviation is BCN which is also the IATA airport code of the Barcelona El Prat Airport The city is referred to as the Ciutat Comtal in Catalan and Ciudad Condal in Spanish i e Comital City or City of Counts owing to its past as the seat of the Count of Barcelona 24 HistoryMain article History of Barcelona For a chronological guide see Timeline of Barcelona See also Street names in Barcelona A marble plaque in the Museu d Historia de la Ciutat de Barcelona dated from around 110 130 AD and dedicated to the Roman colony of Barcino Pre history The origin of the earliest settlement at the site of present day Barcelona is unclear The ruins of an early settlement have been found including different tombs and dwellings dating to earlier than 5000 BC 25 26 The founding of Barcelona is the subject of two different legends The first attributes the founding of the city to the mythological Hercules The second legend attributes the foundation of the city directly to the historical Carthaginian general Hamilcar Barca father of Hannibal who supposedly named the city Barcino after his family in the 3rd century BC 27 but there is no historical or linguistic evidence that this is true 23 Archeological evidence in the form of coins from the 3rd Century BC have been found on the hills at the foot of Montjuic with the name Barkeno written in an ancient script in the Iberian language Thus we can conclude that the Laietani an ancient Iberian Pre Roman people of the Iberian peninsula who inhabited the area occupied by the city of Barcelona around 3 2 BC called the area Barkeno which means The Place of the Plains Barrke plains terrace 28 Roman Barcelona In about 15 BC the Romans redrew the town as a castrum Roman military camp centred on the Mons Taber a little hill near the Generalitat Catalan Government and city hall buildings The Roman Forum at the crossing of the Cardo Maximus and Decumanus Maximus was approximately placed where current Placa de Sant Jaume is Thus the political center of the city Catalonia and its domains has remained in the same place for over 2000 years Under the Romans it was a colony with the surname of Faventia 29 or in full Colonia Faventia Julia Augusta Pia Barcino 30 or Colonia Julia Augusta Faventia Paterna Barcino Pomponius Mela 31 mentions it among the small towns of the district probably as it was eclipsed by its neighbour Tarraco modern Tarragona but it may be gathered from later writers that it gradually grew in wealth and consequence favoured as it was with a beautiful situation and an excellent harbour 32 It enjoyed immunity from imperial burdens 33 The city minted its own coins some from the era of Galba survive The Mare de Deu de la Merce statue on the Basilica de la Merce Important Roman vestiges are displayed in Placa del Rei underground as a part of the Barcelona City History Museum MUHBA the typically Roman grid plan is still visible today in the layout of the historical centre the Barri Gotic Gothic Quarter Some remaining fragments of the Roman walls have been incorporated into the cathedral 34 The cathedral known very formally by the long name of Catedral Basilica Metropolitana de Barcelona is also sometimes called La Seu which simply means cathedral and see among other things in Catalan 35 36 It is said to have been founded in 343 Medieval Barcelona The city was conquered by the Visigoths in the early 5th century becoming for a few years the capital of all Hispania After being conquered by the Arabs in the early 8th century it was conquered after a siege in 801 by Charlemagne s son Louis who made Barcelona the seat of the Carolingian Hispanic March Marca Hispanica a buffer zone ruled by the Count of Barcelona 37 The Counts of Barcelona became increasingly independent and expanded their territory to include much of modern Catalonia although on 6 July 985 Barcelona was sacked by the army of Almanzor 38 The sack was so traumatic that most of Barcelona s population was either killed or enslaved 39 In 1137 Aragon and the County of Barcelona merged in dynastic union 40 41 by the marriage of Ramon Berenguer IV and Petronilla of Aragon their titles finally borne by only one person when their son Alfonso II of Aragon ascended to the throne in 1162 His territories were later to be known as the Crown of Aragon which conquered many overseas possessions and ruled the western Mediterranean Sea with outlying territories in Naples and Sicily and as far as Athens in the 13th century Barcelona was the leading slave trade centre of the Crown of Aragon up until the 15th century when it was eclipsed by Valencia 42 It initially fed from eastern and balkan slave stock later drawing from a Maghribian and ultimately Subsaharan pool of slaves 43 The Bank of Barcelona or Taula de canvi often viewed as the oldest public bank in Europe was established by the city magistrates in 1401 It originated from necessities of the state as did the Bank of Venice 1402 and the Bank of Genoa 1407 44 Barcelona in 1563 Barcelona under the Spanish monarchy The marriage of Ferdinand II of Aragon and Isabella I of Castile in 1469 united the two royal lines Madrid became the centre of political power whilst the colonisation of the Americas reduced the financial importance at least in relative terms of Mediterranean trade Barcelona was a centre of Catalan separatism including the Catalan Revolt 1640 52 against Philip IV of Spain The great plague of 1650 1654 halved the city s population 45 The fortress at Montjuic the most southerly point from which measurements were made when calculating the meridional definition of the metre In the 18th century a fortress was built at Montjuic that overlooked the harbour In 1794 this fortress was used by the French astronomer Pierre Francois Andre Mechain for observations relating to a survey stretching to Dunkirk that provided the official basis of the measurement of a metre 46 The definitive metre bar manufactured from platinum was presented to the French legislative assembly on 22 June 1799 Much of Barcelona was negatively affected by the Napoleonic wars but the start of industrialisation saw the fortunes of the province improve The Spanish Civil War and the Franco period Barcelona was the capital of the Republic of Spain from November 1937 until January 1939 47 48 During that Spanish Civil War period both Barcelona and Madrid were still under the rule of the republic In the image Azana and Negrin on the city outskirts During the Spanish Civil War the city and Catalonia in general were resolutely Republican Many enterprises and public services were collectivised by the CNT and UGT unions As the power of the Republican government and the Generalitat diminished much of the city was under the effective control of anarchist groups The anarchists lost control of the city to their own allies the Communists and official government troops after the street fighting of the Barcelona May Days The fall of the city on 26 January 1939 caused a mass exodus of civilians who fled to the French border The resistance of Barcelona to Franco s coup d etat was to have lasting effects after the defeat of the Republican government The autonomous institutions of Catalonia were abolished 49 and the use of the Catalan language in public life was suppressed Barcelona remained the second largest city in Spain at the heart of a region which was relatively industrialised and prosperous despite the devastation of the civil war The result was a large scale immigration from poorer regions of Spain particularly Andalusia Murcia and Galicia which in turn led to rapid urbanisation Late twentieth century In 1992 Barcelona hosted the Summer Olympics The after effects of this are credited with driving major changes in what had up until then been a largely industrial city As part of the preparation for the games industrial buildings along the sea front were demolished and 3 kilometres 2 miles of beach were created New construction increased the road capacity of the city by 17 the sewage handling capacity by 27 and the amount of new green areas and beaches by 78 Between 1990 and 2004 the number of hotel rooms in the city doubled Perhaps more importantly the outside perception of the city was changed making by 2012 Barcelona the 12th most popular city destination in the world and the 5th amongst European cities 50 51 52 53 54 Recent history Main articles History of Barcelona and Timeline of Barcelona Supporters of Catalan independence in October 2019 Protest against independence in October 2017 The death of Franco in 1975 brought on a period of democratisation throughout Spain Pressure for change was particularly strong in Barcelona which considered that it had been punished during nearly forty years of Francoism for its support of the Republican government 55 Massive but peaceful demonstrations on 11 September 1977 assembled over a million people in the streets of Barcelona to call for the restoration of Catalan autonomy It was granted less than a month later 56 The development of Barcelona was promoted by two events in 1986 Spanish accession to the European Community and particularly Barcelona s designation as host city of the 1992 Summer Olympics 57 58 The process of urban regeneration has been rapid and accompanied by a greatly increased international reputation of the city as a tourist destination The increased cost of housing has led to a slight decline 16 6 in the population over the last two decades of the 20th century as many families move out into the suburbs This decline has been reversed since 2001 as a new wave of immigration particularly from Latin America and from Morocco has gathered pace 59 In 1987 an ETA car bombing at Hipercor killed 21 people On 17 August 2017 a van was driven into pedestrians on La Rambla killing 14 and injuring at least 100 one of whom later died Other attacks took place elsewhere in Catalonia The Prime Minister of Spain Mariano Rajoy called the attack in Barcelona a jihadist attack Amaq News Agency attributed indirect responsibility for the attack to the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant ISIL 60 61 62 During the 2010s Barcelona became the focus city citation needed for the ongoing Catalan independence movement its consequent standoff between the regional and national government and later protests 63 Geography A panoramic view of Barcelona Location Barcelona as seen by the European Space Agency s Copernicus Sentinel 2 mission Barcelona is located on the northeast coast of the Iberian Peninsula facing the Mediterranean Sea on a plain approximately 5 km 3 mi wide limited by the mountain range of Collserola the Llobregat river to the southwest and the Besos river to the north 64 This plain covers an area of 170 km2 66 sq mi 64 of which 101 km2 39 0 sq mi 65 are occupied by the city itself It is 120 kilometres 75 miles south of the Pyrenees and the Catalan border with France Tibidabo 512 m 1 680 ft high offers striking views over the city 66 and is topped by the 288 4 m 946 2 ft Torre de Collserola a telecommunications tower that is visible from most of the city Barcelona is peppered with small hills most of them urbanised that gave their name to the neighbourhoods built upon them such as Carmel 267 metres or 876 feet Putget es 181 metres or 594 feet and Rovira 261 metres or 856 feet The escarpment of Montjuic 173 metres or 568 feet situated to the southeast overlooks the harbour and is topped by Montjuic Castle a fortress built in the 17 18th centuries to control the city as a replacement for the Ciutadella Today the fortress is a museum and Montjuic is home to several sporting and cultural venues as well as Barcelona s biggest park and gardens The city borders on the municipalities of Santa Coloma de Gramenet and Sant Adria de Besos to the north the Mediterranean Sea to the east El Prat de Llobregat and L Hospitalet de Llobregat to the south and Sant Feliu de Llobregat Sant Just Desvern Esplugues de Llobregat Sant Cugat del Valles and Montcada i Reixac to the west The municipality includes two small sparsely inhabited exclaves to the north west Climate Main article Climate of Barcelona According to the Koppen climate classification Barcelona has a hot summer Mediterranean climate Csa with mild winters and warm to hot summers 67 while the rainiest seasons are autumn and spring The rainfall pattern is characterised by a short 3 months dry season in summer as well as less winter rainfall than in a typical Mediterranean climate However both June and August are wetter than February which is unusual for the Mediterranean climate This subtype labelled as Portuguese by the French geographer George Viers after the climate classification of Emmanuel de Martonne 68 and found in the NW Mediterranean area e g Marseille can be seen as transitional to the humid subtropical climate Cfa found in inland areas Barcelona is densely populated thus heavily influenced by the urban heat island effect Areas outside of the urbanised districts can have as much as 2 C of difference in temperatures throughout the year 69 Its average annual temperature is 21 2 C 70 2 F during the day and 15 1 C 59 2 F at night The average annual temperature of the sea is about 20 C 68 F In the coldest month January the temperature typically ranges from 12 to 18 C 54 to 64 F during the day 6 to 12 C 43 to 54 F at night and the average sea temperature is 13 C 55 F 70 In the warmest month August the typical temperature ranges from 27 to 31 C 81 to 88 F during the day about 23 C 73 F at night and the average sea temperature is 26 C 79 F 70 Generally the summer or holiday season lasts about six months from May to October Two months April and November are transitional sometimes the temperature exceeds 20 C 68 F with an average temperature of 18 19 C 64 66 F during the day and 11 13 C 52 55 F at night December January and February are the coldest months with average temperatures around 15 C 59 F during the day and 9 C 48 F at night Large fluctuations in temperature are rare particularly in the summer months Because of the proximity to the warm sea plus the urban heat island frosts are very rare in the city of Barcelona Snow is also very infrequent in the city of Barcelona but light snowfalls can occur yearly in the nearby Collserola mountains such as in the Fabra Observatory located in a nearby mountain 71 Barcelona averages 78 rainy days per year 1 mm and annual average relative humidity is 72 ranging from 69 in July to 75 in October Rainfall totals are highest in late summer and autumn September November and lowest in early and mid summer June August with a secondary winter minimum February March Sunshine duration is 2 524 hours per year from 138 average 4 5 hours of sunshine a day in December to 310 average 10 hours of sunshine a day in July 72 Climate data for Barcelona Can Bruixa Barcelona 1987 2010 Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage high C F 14 8 58 6 15 6 60 1 17 4 63 3 19 1 66 4 22 5 72 5 26 1 79 0 28 6 83 5 29 0 84 2 26 0 78 8 22 5 72 5 17 9 64 2 15 1 59 2 21 2 70 2 Daily mean C F 11 8 53 2 12 4 54 3 14 2 57 6 15 8 60 4 19 3 66 7 22 9 73 2 25 7 78 3 26 1 79 0 23 0 73 4 19 5 67 1 14 9 58 8 12 3 54 1 18 2 64 8 Average low C F 8 8 47 8 9 3 48 7 10 9 51 6 12 5 54 5 16 1 61 0 19 8 67 6 22 7 72 9 23 1 73 6 20 0 68 0 16 5 61 7 11 9 53 4 9 5 49 1 15 1 59 2 Average precipitation mm inches 43 7 1 72 31 4 1 24 33 0 1 30 47 7 1 88 47 4 1 87 32 5 1 28 25 1 0 99 40 8 1 61 81 9 3 22 96 5 3 80 45 1 1 78 46 8 1 84 571 9 22 53 Average precipitation days 1 mm 7 0 5 0 6 2 7 9 7 5 5 5 3 1 5 8 8 0 9 0 6 6 7 0 78 6Mean monthly sunshine hours 149 163 200 220 244 262 310 282 219 180 146 138 2 524Source 1 Servei Meteorologic de Catalunya 73 Source 2 Agencia Estatal de Meteorologia sunshine hours citation needed Climate data for El Prat de Llobregat Barcelona El Prat Airport 1981 2010 at 15 kilometres 9 3 mi from the city centre of Barcelona Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage high C F 13 6 56 5 14 3 57 7 16 1 61 0 18 0 64 4 21 1 70 0 24 9 76 8 28 0 82 4 28 5 83 3 26 0 78 8 22 1 71 8 17 3 63 1 14 3 57 7 20 3 68 5 Daily mean C F 9 2 48 6 9 9 49 8 11 8 53 2 13 7 56 7 16 9 62 4 20 9 69 6 23 9 75 0 24 4 75 9 21 7 71 1 17 8 64 0 13 0 55 4 10 0 50 0 16 1 61 0 Average low C F 4 7 40 5 5 4 41 7 7 4 45 3 9 4 48 9 12 8 55 0 16 8 62 2 19 8 67 6 20 2 68 4 17 4 63 3 13 5 56 3 8 6 47 5 5 7 42 3 11 8 53 2 Average precipitation mm inches 37 1 5 35 1 4 36 1 4 40 1 6 47 1 9 30 1 2 21 0 8 62 2 4 81 3 2 91 3 6 59 2 3 40 1 6 588 23 1 Average precipitation days 1 mm 4 4 5 5 5 4 2 5 5 6 5 4 53Mean monthly sunshine hours 158 171 206 239 258 287 293 264 229 196 153 137 2 591Source Agencia Estatal de Meteorologia 74 Demographics Demographic evolution 1900 2007 according to the Spanish Instituto Nacional de Estadistica According to Barcelona s City Council Barcelona s population as of 1 January 2016 update was 1 608 746 people 75 on a land area of 101 4 km2 39 sq mi It is the main component of an administrative area of Greater Barcelona with a population of 3 218 071 in an area of 636 square kilometres 246 square miles density 5 060 inhabitants km2 The population of the urban area was 4 840 000 3 It is the central nucleus of the Barcelona metropolitan area which relies on a population of 5 474 482 4 Spanish is the most spoken language in Barcelona according to the linguistic census held by the Government of Catalonia in 2013 and it is understood almost universally Catalan is also very commonly spoken in the city it is understood by 95 of the population while 72 3 can speak it 79 can read it and 53 can write it 76 Knowledge of Catalan has increased significantly in recent decades thanks to a language immersion educational system In 1900 Barcelona had a population of 533 000 64 which grew steadily but slowly until 1950 when it started absorbing a high number of people from other less industrialised parts of Spain Barcelona s population peaked in 1979 at 1 906 998 and fell throughout the 1980s and 1990s as more people sought a higher quality of life in outlying cities in the Barcelona Metropolitan Area After bottoming out in 2000 with 1 496 266 residents the city s population began to rise again as younger people started to return causing a great increase in housing prices 77 Population density Note This text is entirely based on the municipal statistical database provided by the city council Aerial view of the centre and the Eixample with the Serra de Collserola at the background Barcelona is one of the most densely populated cities in Europe For the year 2008 the city council calculated the population to 1 621 090 living in the 102 2 km2 sized municipality giving the city an average population density of 15 926 inhabitants per square kilometre with Eixample being the most populated district In the case of Barcelona though the land distribution is extremely uneven Half of the municipality or 50 2 km2 all of it located on the municipal edge is made up of the ten least densely populated neighbourhoods containing less than 10 of the city s population the uninhabited Zona Franca industrial area and Montjuic forest park Leaving the remaining 90 or slightly below 1 5 million inhabitants living on the remaining 52 square kilometres 20 square miles at an average density close to 28 500 inhabitants per square kilometre Of the 73 neighbourhoods in the city 45 had a population density above 20 000 inhabitants per square kilometre with a combined population of 1 313 424 inhabitants living on 38 6 km2 at an average density of 33 987 inhabitants per square km The 30 most densely populated neighbourhoods accounted for 57 5 of the city population occupying only 22 7 of the municipality or in other words 936 406 people living at an average density of 40 322 inhabitants per square kilometre The city s highest density is found at and around the neighbourhood of la Sagrada Familia where four of the city s most densely populated neighbourhoods are located side by side all with a population density above 50 000 inhabitants per square kilometre Age structure In 1900 almost a third 28 9 percent of the population were children aged younger than 14 years In 2017 this age group constituted only 12 7 of the population In 2017 people aged between 15 and 24 years made up 9 percent of the population those aged between 25 and 44 years made up 30 6 percent of the population while those aged between 45 and 64 years formed 56 9 of all Barcelonans In 1900 people aged 65 and older made up just 6 5 percent of the population In 2017 this age group made up 21 5 percent of the population 78 79 Migration Largest groups of foreign residents in Barcelona 80 Nationality Population 2019 Italy 36 276China 21 658Pakistan 20 643France 16 940Morocco 14 418Colombia 12 290Honduras 11 744Peru 10 558Venezuela 10 185Philippines 9 439In 2016 about 59 of the inhabitants of the city were born in Catalonia and 18 5 coming from the rest of the country In addition to that 22 5 of the population was born outside of Spain a proportion which has more than doubled since 2001 and more than quintupled since 1996 when it was 8 6 respectively 3 9 75 The most important region of origin of migrants is Europe with many coming from Italy 26 676 or France 13 506 75 Moreover many migrants come from Latin American nations such as Bolivia Ecuador or Colombia Since the 1990s and similar to other migrants many Latin Americans have settled in northern parts of the city 81 There exists a relatively large Pakistani community in Barcelona with up to twenty thousand nationals The community consists of significantly more men than women Many of the Pakistanis are living in Ciutat Vella First Pakistani migrants came in the 1970s with increasing numbers in the 1990s 82 Other significant migrant groups come from Asia as from China and the Philippines 75 There is a Japanese community clustered in Bonanova Les Tres Torres Pedralbes and other northern neighbourhoods and a Japanese international school serves that community 83 Religion Main article Religion in Barcelona Temple Expiatori del Sagrat Cor Most of the inhabitants state they are Roman Catholic 208 churches 84 In a 2011 survey conducted by InfoCatolica 49 5 of Barcelona residents of all ages identified themselves as Catholic 85 This was the first time that more than half of respondents did not identify themselves as Catholic Christians 85 The numbers reflect a broader trend in Spain whereby the numbers of self identified Catholics have declined 85 In 2019 a survey by Centro de Investigaciones Sociologicas showed that 53 2 of residents in Barcelona identified themselves as Catholic 9 9 practising Catholics 43 3 non practising Catholics 86 The province has the largest Muslim community in Spain 322 698 people in Barcelona province are of Muslim religion 87 A considerable number of Muslims live in Barcelona due to immigration 169 locations mostly professed by Moroccans in Spain 84 In 2014 322 698 out of 5 5 million people in the province of Barcelona identified themselves as Muslim 87 which makes 5 6 of the total population The city also has the largest Jewish community in Spain with an estimated 3 500 Jews living in the city 88 There are also a number of other groups including Evangelical 71 locations mostly professed by Roma Jehovah s Witnesses 21 Kingdom Halls Buddhists 13 locations 89 and Eastern Orthodox 90 EconomyGeneral information A portion of the 22 Barcelona business and innovation district The Barcelona metropolitan area comprises over 66 of the people of Catalonia one of the richer regions in Europe and the fourth richest region per capita in Spain with a GDP per capita amounting to 28 400 16 more than the EU average The greater Barcelona metropolitan area had a GDP amounting to 177 billion equivalent to 34 821 in per capita terms 44 more than the EU average making it the 4th most economically powerful city by gross GDP in the European Union and 35th in the world in 2009 91 Barcelona city had a very high GDP of 80 894 per head in 2004 according to Eurostat 92 Furthermore Barcelona was Europe s fourth best business city and fastest improving European city with growth improved by 17 per year as of 2009 update 93 Barcelona was the 24th most livable city in the world in 2015 according to lifestyle magazine Monocle 94 Similarly according to Innovation Analysts 2thinknow Barcelona occupies 13th place in the world on Innovation Cities Global Index 95 At the same time it is according to the Global Wealth and Lifestyle Report 2020 one of the most affordable cities in the world for a luxury lifestyle 96 Barcelona has a long standing mercantile tradition Less well known is that the city industrialised early taking off in 1833 when Catalonia s already sophisticated textile industry began to use steam power It became the first and most important industrial city in the Mediterranean basin Since then manufacturing has played a large role in its history Borsa de Barcelona Barcelona Stock Exchange is the main stock exchange in the northeastern part of the Iberian Peninsula Barcelona was recognised as the Southern European City of the Future for 2014 15 based on its economic potential 97 by FDi Magazine in their bi annual rankings 98 Trade fair and exhibitions The World Trade Center Barcelona The Palau de Congressos de Barcelona Drawing upon its tradition of creative art and craftsmanship Barcelona is known for its award winning industrial design It also has several congress halls notably Fira de Barcelona the second largest trade fair and exhibition centre in Europe that host a quickly growing number of national and international events each year at present above 50 The total exhibition floor space of Fira de Barcelona venues is 405 000 m2 41 ha not counting Gran Via centre on the Plaza de Europa However the Eurozone crisis and deep cuts in business travel affected the council s positioning of the city as a convention centre An important business centre the World Trade Center Barcelona is located in Barcelona s Port Vell harbour The city is known for hosting well as world class conferences and expositions including the 1888 Exposicion Universal de Barcelona the 1929 Barcelona International Exposition Expo 1929 the 2004 Universal Forum of Cultures and the 2004 World Urban Forum 99 Tourism Part of the beach promenade and the beach of La Barceloneta towards Port Olimpic Beaches of Barcelona Spain Barcelona was the 20th most visited city in the world by international visitors and the fifth most visited city in Europe after London Paris Istanbul and Rome with 5 5 million international visitors in 2011 100 By 2015 both Prague and Milan had more international visitors 101 With its popular tree lined pedestrian street Les Rambles Las Ramblas Barcelona is ranked the most popular city to visit in Spain 102 Barcelona is internationally renowned a tourist destination with numerous recreational areas one of the best beaches in the world 103 104 mild and warm climate historical monuments including eight UNESCO World Heritage Sites 519 hotels as of March 2016 update 105 including 35 five star hotels 106 and developed tourist infrastructure Due to its large influx of tourists each year Barcelona like many other tourism capitals has to deal with pickpockets with wallets and passports being commonly stolen items For this reason most travel guides recommend that visitors take precautions to ensure their possessions safety especially inside the metro Despite its moderate pickpocket rate Barcelona is considered one of the safest cities in terms of security and personal safety 107 mainly because of a sophisticated policing strategy that has dropped crime by 32 in just over three years and has led it to be considered the 15th safest city in the world by Business Insider in 2016 108 While tourism produces economic benefits according to one report citation needed the city is overrun by hordes of tourists In early 2017 over 150 000 protesters warned that tourism is destabilizing the city Slogans included Tourists go home Barcelona is not for sale and We will not be driven out By then number of visitors had increased from 1 7 million in 1990 to 32 million in a city with a population of 1 62 million increasing the cost of rental housing for residents and overcrowding the public places While tourists spent an estimated 30 billion in 2017 they are viewed by some as a threat to Barcelona s identity 109 A May 2017 article in the British online daily The Independent included Barcelona among the Eight Places That Hate Tourists the Most and included a comment from Mayor Ada Colau We don t want the city to become a cheap souvenir shop citing Venice as an example 110 To moderate the problem the city has stopped issuing licenses for new hotels and holiday apartments it also fined AirBnb 30 000 The mayor has suggested introducing a new tourist tax and setting a limit on the number of visitors 110 One industry insider Justin Francis founder of the Responsible Travel agency stated that steps must be taken to limit the number of visitors that are causing an overtourism crisis in several major European cities Ultimately residents must be prioritised over tourists for housing infrastructure and access to services because they have a long term stake in the city s success he said 111 Managing tourism more responsibly can help Francis later told a journalist but some destinations may just have too many tourists and Barcelona may be a case of that 112 Manufacturing sector Industry generates 21 of the total gross domestic product GDP of the region 113 with the energy chemical and metallurgy industries accounting for 47 of industrial production 114 The Barcelona metropolitan area had 67 of the total number of industrial establishments in Catalonia as of 1997 115 Barcelona has long been an important European automobile manufacturing centre Formerly there were automobile factories of AFA Abadal Actividades Industriales Alvarez America Artes de Arcos Balandras Baradat Esteve Biscuter J Castro Clua David Delfin Diaz y Grillo Ebro trucks Edis ca Elizalde Automoviles Espana Eucort Fenix Fabrica Hispano Auto Academia Garriga Fabrica Espanola de Automoviles Hebe Hispano Suiza Huracan Motors Talleres Hereter Junior SL Kapi La Cuadra M A Automoviles Matas Motores y Motos Nacional Custals National Pescara Nacional RG Nacional Rubi Nacional Sitjes Automoviles Nike Orix Otro Ford Patria Pegaso PTV Ricart Ricart Espana Industrias Salvador Siata Espanola Stevenson Romagosa y Compania Garaje Storm Talleres Hereter Trimak Automoviles Victoria Manufacturas Mecanicas Aleu 116 117 Today the headquarters and a large factory of SEAT the largest Spanish automobile manufacturer are in one of its suburbs There is also a Nissan factory in the logistics and industrial area of the city 118 The factory of Derbi a large manufacturer of motorcycles scooters and mopeds also lies near the city 119 As in other modern cities the manufacturing sector has long since been overtaken by the services sector though it remains very important The region s leading industries are textiles chemical pharmaceutical motor electronic printing logistics publishing in telecommunications industry and culture the notable Mobile World Congress and information technology services Fashion The Brandery fashion show of 2011 Main article Fashion in Barcelona The traditional importance of textiles is reflected in Barcelona s drive to become a major fashion centre There have been many attempts to launch Barcelona as a fashion capital notably Gaudi Home citation needed Beginning in the summer of 2000 the city hosted the Bread amp Butter urban fashion fair until 2009 when its organisers announced that it would be returning to Berlin This was a hard blow for the city as the fair brought 100 m to the city in just three days 120 121 Since 2009 The Brandery an urban fashion show has been held in Barcelona twice a year until 2012 According to the Global Language Monitor s annual ranking of the world s top fifty fashion capitals Barcelona was named as the seventh most important fashion capital of the world right after Milan and before Berlin in 2015 122 Government and administrative divisionsSee also Municipal elections in Barcelona and List of mayors of Barcelona Palau de la Generalitat de Catalunya As the capital of the autonomous community of Catalonia Barcelona is the seat of the Catalan government known as the Generalitat de Catalunya of particular note are the executive branch the parliament and the High Court of Justice of Catalonia The city is also the capital of the Province of Barcelona and the Barcelones comarca district Barcelona is governed by a city council formed by 41 city councillors elected for a four year term by universal suffrage As one of the two biggest cities in Spain Barcelona is subject to a special law articulated through the Carta Municipal Municipal Law A first version of this law was passed in 1960 and amended later but the current version was approved in March 2006 123 According to this law Barcelona s city council is organised in two levels a political one with elected city councillors and one executive which administrates the programs and executes the decisions taken on the political level 124 This law also gives the local government a special relationship with the central government and it also gives the mayor wider prerogatives by the means of municipal executive commissions 125 It expands the powers of the city council in areas like telecommunications city traffic road safety and public safety It also gives a special economic regime to the city s treasury and it gives the council a veto in matters that will be decided by the central government but that will need a favourable report from the council 123 The City Hall of Barcelona The Comissio de Govern Government Commission is the executive branch formed by 24 councillors led by the Mayor with 5 lieutenant mayors and 17 city councillors each in charge of an area of government and 5 non elected councillors 126 The plenary formed by the 41 city councillors has advisory planning regulatory and fiscal executive functions 127 The six Commissions del Consell Municipal City council commissions have executive and controlling functions in the field of their jurisdiction They are composed by a number of councillors proportional to the number of councillors each political party has in the plenary 128 The city council has jurisdiction in the fields of city planning transportation municipal taxes public highways security through the Guardia Urbana the municipal police city maintenance gardens parks and environment facilities like schools nurseries sports centres libraries and so on culture sports youth and social welfare Some of these competencies are not exclusive but shared with the Generalitat de Catalunya or the central Spanish government In some fields with shared responsibility such as public health education or social services there is a shared Agency or Consortium between the city and the Generalitat to plan and manage services 129 The Salo de Cent in the City Hall of Barcelona The executive branch is led by a Chief Municipal Executive Officer which answers to the Mayor It is made up of departments which are legally part of the city council and by separate legal entities of two types autonomous public departments and public enterprises 130 The seat of the city council is on the Placa de Sant Jaume opposite the seat of Generalitat de Catalunya Since the coming of the Spanish democracy Barcelona had been governed by the PSC first with an absolute majority and later in coalition with ERC and ICV After the May 2007 election the ERC did not renew the coalition agreement and the PSC governed in a minority coalition with ICV as the junior partner After 32 years on 22 May 2011 CiU gained a plurality of seats at the municipal election gaining 15 seats to the PSC s 11 The PP hold 8 seats ICV 5 and ERC 2 Districts Districts of Barcelona Main article Districts of Barcelona See also Street names in Barcelona Since 1987 the city has been divided into 10 administrative districts districtes in Catalan distritos in Spanish Ciutat Vella Eixample Sants Montjuic Les Corts Sarria Sant Gervasi Gracia Horta Guinardo Nou Barris Sant Andreu Sant MartiThe districts are based mostly on historical divisions and several are former towns annexed by the city of Barcelona in the 18th and 19th centuries that still maintain their own distinct character Each district has its own council led by a city councillor The composition of each district council depends on the number of votes each political party had in that district so a district can be led by a councillor from a different party than the executive council EducationMain article Education in Spain Main hall of the University of Barcelona Roger de Lluria building at Campus de la Ciutadella Pompeu Fabra University Barcelona has a well developed higher education system of public universities Most prominent among these are the University of Barcelona established in 1450 and the more modern Pompeu Fabra University 131 132 Barcelona is also home to the Polytechnic University of Catalonia and in the private sector the EADA Business School founded in 1957 which became the first Barcelona institution to run manager training programmes for the business community IESE Business School as well as the largest private educational institution the Ramon Llull University which encompasses schools and institutes such as the ESADE Business School The Autonomous University of Barcelona another public university is located in Bellaterra a town in the Metropolitan Area Toulouse Business School and the Open University of Catalonia a private Internet centred open university are also based in Barcelona The city has a network of public schools from nurseries to high schools under the responsibility of a consortium led by city council though the curriculum is the responsibility of the Generalitat de Catalunya There are also many private schools some of them Roman Catholic Most such schools receive a public subsidy on a per student basis are subject to inspection by the public authorities and are required to follow the same curricular guidelines as public schools though they charge tuition Known as escoles concertades they are distinct from schools whose funding is entirely private escoles privades The language of instruction at public schools and escoles concertades is Catalan as stipulated by the 2009 Catalan Education Act Spanish may be used as a language of instruction by teachers of Spanish literature or language and foreign languages by teachers of those languages An experimental partial immersion programme adopted by some schools allows for the teaching of a foreign language English generally across the curriculum though this is limited to a maximum of 30 of the school day No public school or escola concertada in Barcelona may offer 50 or full immersion programmes in a foreign language nor does any public school or escola concertada offer International Baccalaureate programmes CultureMain article Culture of Barcelona Barcelona s cultural roots go back 2000 years Since the arrival of democracy the Catalan language very much repressed during the dictatorship of Franco has been promoted both by recovering works from the past and by stimulating the creation of new works Barcelona is designated as a world class city by the Globalization and World Cities Study Group and Network 133 It has also been part of the UNESCO Creative Cities Network as a City of Literature since 2015 134 Entertainment and performing arts Main article List of theatres and concert halls in Barcelona The Liceu opera house Barcelona has many venues for live music and theatre including the world renowned Gran Teatre del Liceu opera house the Teatre Nacional de Catalunya the Teatre Lliure and the Palau de la Musica Catalana concert hall Barcelona also is home to the Barcelona Symphony and Catalonia National Orchestra Orquestra Simfonica de Barcelona i Nacional de Catalunya usually known as OBC the largest symphonic orchestra in Catalonia In 1999 the OBC inaugurated its new venue in the brand new Auditorium L Auditori It performs around 75 concerts per season and its current director is Eiji Oue 135 It is home to the Barcelona Guitar Orchestra directed by Sergi Vicente The major thoroughfare of La Rambla is home to mime artists and street performers Yearly two major pop music festivals take place in the city the Sonar Festival and the Primavera Sound Festival The city also has a thriving alternative music scene with groups such as The Pinker Tones receiving international attention 136 Barcelona is an international hub of highly active and diverse nightlife with bars dance bars and nightclubs staying open well past midnight 137 Media El Periodico de Catalunya La Vanguardia and Ara are Barcelona s three major daily newspapers the first two with Catalan and Spanish editions Ara only in Catalan while Sport and El Mundo Deportivo both in Spanish are the city s two major sports daily newspapers published by the same companies The city is also served by a number of smaller publications such as Ara and El Punt Avui in Catalan by nationwide newspapers with special Barcelona editions like El Pais in Spanish with an online version in Catalan and El Mundo in Spanish and by several free newspapers like 20 minutos and Que all bilingual Barcelona s oldest and main online newspaper VilaWeb is also the oldest one in Europe with Catalan and English editions Several major FM stations include Catalunya Radio RAC 1 RAC 105 and Cadena SER Barcelona also has a local TV station BTV owned by city council The headquarters of Televisio de Catalunya Catalonia s public network are located in Sant Joan Despi in Barcelona s metropolitan area Sports Main article Sport in Barcelona Estadi Olimpic de Montjuic Barcelona Olympic Stadium built for the 1936 Summer Olympics named People s Olympiad main stadium of 1992 Summer Olympics Barcelona has a long sporting tradition and hosted the highly successful 1992 Summer Olympics as well as several matches during the 1982 FIFA World Cup at the two stadiums It has hosted about 30 sports events of international significance citation needed The Camp Nou the largest stadium in Europe FC Barcelona is a sports club best known worldwide for its football team one of the largest and the second richest in the world 138 It has 74 national trophies while finishing 46 times as runners up and 17 continental prizes with being runners up 11 times including five UEFA Champions League trophies out of eight finals and three FIFA Club World Cup wins out of four finals The club won six trophies in a calendar year in 2009 becoming one of only 2 male football teams in the world to win the coveted sextuple apart from FC Bayern Munich in 2020 FC Barcelona also has professional teams in other sports like FC Barcelona Regal basketball FC Barcelona Handbol handball FC Barcelona Hoquei roller hockey FC Barcelona Ice Hockey ice hockey FC Barcelona Futsal futsal and FC Barcelona Rugby rugby union all at one point winners of the highest national and or European competitions The club s museum is the second most visited in Catalonia The matches against cross town rivals RCD Espanyol are of particular interest but there are other Barcelonan football clubs in lower categories like CE Europa and UE Sant Andreu FC Barcelona s basketball team has a noted rivalry in the Liga ACB with nearby Joventut Badalona Palau Sant Jordi St George s sporting arena and Montjuic Communications Tower Barcelona has three UEFA elite stadiums FC Barcelona s Camp Nou the largest stadium in Europe with a capacity of 99 354 the publicly owned Estadi Olimpic Lluis Companys with a capacity of 55 926 used for the 1992 Olympics and Estadi Cornella El Prat with a capacity of 40 500 Furthermore the city has several smaller stadiums such as Mini Estadi also owned by FC Barcelona with a capacity of 15 000 Camp Municipal Narcis Sala with a capacity of 6 563 and Nou Sardenya with a capacity of 7 000 The city has a further three multifunctional venues for sports and concerts the Palau Sant Jordi with a capacity of 12 000 to 24 000 depending on use the Palau Blaugrana with a capacity of 7 500 and the Palau dels Esports de Barcelona with a capacity of 3 500 Barcelona was the host city for the 2013 World Aquatics Championships which were held at the Palau San Jordi 139 Circuit de Catalunya Circuit de Barcelona race track of Formula 1 and MotoGP on the suburb of Barcelona Several road running competitions are organised year round in Barcelona the Barcelona Marathon every March with over 10 000 participants in 2010 the Cursa de Bombers in April the Cursa de El Corte Ingles in May with about 60 000 participants each year the Cursa de la Merce the Cursa Jean Bouin the Milla Sagrada Familia and the San Silvestre There s also the Ultratrail Collserola which passes 85 kilometres 53 miles through the Collserola forest The Open Seat Godo a 50 year old ATP World Tour 500 Series tennis tournament is held annually in the facilities of the Real Club de Tenis Barcelona Each year on Christmas Day a 200 meter swimming race across the Old Port of Barcelona takes place 140 Near Barcelona in Montmelo the 107 000 capacity Circuit de Barcelona Catalunya racetrack hosts the Formula One Spanish Grand Prix the Catalan motorcycle Grand Prix the Spanish GT Championship and races in the GP2 Series Skateboarding and cycling are also very popular in Barcelona in and around the city there are dozens of kilometers of bicycle paths citation needed Top sport clubs in Barcelona Club League Sport Venue Established CapacityFC Barcelona Primera Division Football Camp Nou 1899 100 000RCD Espanyol 141 Primera Division Football Estadi Cornella El Prat 1900 40 500CE Europa Tercera Division Football Nou Sardenya 1907 7 000FC Barcelona Basquet Primera Division Basketball Palau Blaugrana 1926 7 585FC Barcelona Handbol Primera Division Handball Palau Blaugrana 1942 7 585FC Barcelona Ice Hockey Primera Division Ice hockey Palau de Gel 1972 1 256FC Barcelona Hoquei Primera Division Roller hockey Palau Blaugrana 1942 7 585FC Barcelona Futsal Primera Division Futsal Palau Blaugrana 1986 7 585FC Barcelona Rugby Primera Division Rugby union CDMVdHT 1924 no dataBarcelona Dragons World League American football Estadi Olimpic Lluis Companys 1991 withheld 56 000Barcelona Bufals Primera Division American football Camp Municipal Narcis Sala 1987 6 550Squatter s Movement Barcelona is also home to numerous social centres and illegal squats that effectively form a shadow society mainly made up of the unemployed immigrants dropouts anarchists anti authoritarians and autonomists 142 Peter Gelderloos estimates that there around 200 squatted buildings and 40 social centres across the city with thousands of inhabitants making it one of the largest squatter movements in the world He notes that they pirate electricity internet and water allowing them to live on less than one euro a day He argues that these squats embrace an anarcho communist and anti work philosophy often freely fixing up new houses cleaning patching roofs installing windows toilets showers lights and kitchens In the wake of austerity the squats have provided a number of social services to the surrounding residents including bicycle repair workshops carpentry workshops self defense classes free libraries community gardens free meals computer labs language classes theatre groups free medical care and legal support services 143 The squats help elderly residents avoid eviction and organise various protests throughout Barcelona Notable squats include Can Vies and Can Masdeu Police have repeatedly tried to shut down the squatters movement with waves of evictions and raids but the movement is still going strong TransportMain article Transport in Barcelona Airports Barcelona El Prat Airport as seen from the air Barcelona is served by Barcelona El Prat Airport about 17 km 11 mi south west of the centre of Barcelona It is the second largest airport in Spain and the largest on the Mediterranean coast which handled more than 50 17 million passengers in 2018 showing an annual upward trend 144 It is a main hub for Vueling Airlines and Ryanair and also a focus for Iberia and Air Europa The airport mainly serves domestic and European destinations although some airlines offer destinations in Latin America Asia and the United States The airport is connected to the city by highway metro Airport T1 and Airport T2 stations commuter train Barcelona Airport railway station and scheduled bus service A new terminal T1 has been built and entered service on 17 June 2009 Some low cost airlines also use Girona Costa Brava Airport about 90 km 56 mi to the north Reus Airport 77 km 48 mi to the south or Lleida Alguaire Airport about 150 km 93 mi to the west of the city Sabadell Airport is a smaller airport in the nearby town of Sabadell devoted to pilot training aerotaxi and private flights Seaport The Port of Barcelona The Port of Barcelona has a 2000 year old history and a great contemporary commercial importance It is Europe s ninth largest container port with a trade volume of 1 72 million TEU s in 2013 145 The port is managed by the Port Authority of Barcelona Its 10 km2 4 sq mi are divided into three zones Port Vell the old port the commercial port and the logistics port Barcelona Free Port The port is undergoing an enlargement that will double its size thanks to diverting the mouth of the Llobregat river 2 kilometres 1 mile to the south 146 Port Vell in winter The Barcelona harbour is the leading European cruiser port and a very important Mediterranean turnaround base 147 In 2013 3 6 million pleasure cruise passengers used the Port of Barcelona 145 The Port Vell area also houses the Maremagnum a commercial mall a multiplex cinema the IMAX Port Vell and one of Europe s largest aquariums Aquarium Barcelona containing 8 000 fish and 11 sharks contained in 22 basins filled with 4 million litres of sea water The Maremagnum being situated within the confines of the port is the only commercial mall in the city that can open on Sundays and public holidays National and international rail The main railway station Estacio de Sants Barcelona is a major hub for the Spanish rail network The city s main Inter city rail station is Barcelona Sants railway station whilst Estacio de Franca terminus serves a secondary role handling suburban regional and medium distance services Freight services operate to local industries and to the Port of Barcelona RENFE s AVE high speed rail system which is designed for speeds of 310 km h 193 mph was extended from Madrid to Barcelona in 2008 in the form of the Madrid Barcelona high speed rail line A shared RENFE SNCF high speed rail connecting Barcelona and France Paris Marseilles and Toulouse through Perpignan Barcelona high speed rail line was launched in 2013 Both these lines serve Barcelona Sants terminal station 148 149 Metro and regional rail Barcelona Metro Barcelona is served by an extensive local public transport network that includes a metro system a bus network a regional railway system trams funiculars rack railways a Gondola lift and aerial cable cars These networks and lines are run by a number of different operators but they are integrated into a coordinated fare system administered by the Autoritat del Transport Metropolita ATM The system is divided into fare zones 1 to 6 and various Integrated Travel Cards are available 150 The Barcelona Metro network comprises twelve lines identified by an L followed by the line number as well as by individual colours The Metro largely runs underground eight Metro lines are operated on dedicated track by the Transports Metropolitans de Barcelona TMB whilst four lines are operated by the Ferrocarrils de la Generalitat de Catalunya FGC and some of them share tracks with RENFE commuter lines In addition to the city Metro several regional rail lines operated by RENFE s Rodalies de Catalunya run across the city providing connections to outlying towns in the surrounding region Tram Barcelona Tram The city s two modern tram systems Trambaix and Trambesos are operated by TRAMMET 151 A heritage tram line the Tramvia Blau also operates between the metro Line 7 and the Funicular del Tibidabo 152 Funicular and cable car Barcelona s metro and rail system is supplemented by several aerial cable cars funiculars and rack railways that provide connections to mountain top stations FGC operates the Funicular de Tibidabo up the hill of Tibidabo and the Funicular de Vallvidrera FGC while TMB runs the Funicular de Montjuic up Montjuic The city has two aerial cable cars the Montjuic Cable Car which serves Montjuic castle and the Port Vell Aerial Tramway that runs via Torre Jaume I and Torre Sant Sebastia over the port Bus Buses in Barcelona are a major form of public transport with extensive local interurban and night bus networks Most local services are operated by the TMB although some other services are operated by a number of private companies albeit still within the ATM fare structure A separate private bus line known as Aerobus links the airport with the city centre with its own fare structure The Estacio del Nord Northern Station a former railway station which was renovated for the 1992 Olympic Games now serves as the terminus for long distance and regional bus services Taxi Two typical Barcelona taxis Barcelona has a metered taxi fleet governed by the Institut Metropolita del Taxi Metropolitan Taxi Institute composed of more than 10 000 cars Most of the licences are in the hands of self employed drivers With their black and yellow livery Barcelona s taxis are easily spotted and can be caught from one of many taxi ranks hailed on street called by telephone or via app 153 154 On 22 March 2007 155 Barcelona s City Council started the Bicing service a bicycle service understood as a public transport Once the user has their user card they can take a bicycle from any of the more than 400 stations spread around the city and use it anywhere the urban area of the city and then leave it at another station 156 The service has been a success with 50 000 subscribed users in three months 157 Roads and highways B 20 motorway in Barcelona Barcelona lies on three international routes including European route E15 that follows the Mediterranean coast European route E90 to Madrid and Lisbon and European route E09 to Paris It is also served by a comprehensive network of motorways and highways throughout the metropolitan area including A 2 A 7 AP 7 C 16 C 17 C 31 C 32 C 33 C 60 The city is circled by three half ring roads or bypasses Ronda de Dalt B 20 on the mountain side Ronda del Litoral B 10 along the coast and Ronda del Mig separated into two parts Travessera de Dalt in the north and the Gran Via de Carles III two partially covered 158 fast highways with several exits that bypass the city The city s main arteries include Diagonal Avenue which crosses it diagonally Meridiana Avenue which leads to Glories and connects with Diagonal Avenue and Gran Via de les Corts Catalanes which crosses the city from east to west passing through its centre The famous boulevard of La Rambla whilst no longer an important vehicular route remains an important pedestrian route Main sights Sagrada Familia church designed by Gaudi The Barri Gotic Catalan for Gothic Quarter is the centre of the old city of Barcelona Many of the buildings date from medieval times some from as far back as the Roman settlement of Barcelona Catalan modernista architecture related to the movement known as Art Nouveau in the rest of Europe developed between 1885 and 1950 and left an important legacy in Barcelona Several of these buildings are World Heritage Sites Especially remarkable is the work of architect Antoni Gaudi which can be seen throughout the city His best known work is the immense but still unfinished church of the Sagrada Familia which has been under construction since 1882 and is still financed by private donations As of 2015 update completion is planned for 2026 159 Barcelona was also home to Mies van der Rohe s Barcelona Pavilion Designed in 1929 for the International Exposition for Germany it was an iconic building that came to symbolise modern architecture as the embodiment of van der Rohe s aphorisms less is more and God is in the details 160 The Barcelona pavilion was intended as a temporary structure and was torn down in 1930 less than a year after it was constructed A modern re creation by Spanish architects now stands in Barcelona however constructed in 1986 Barcelona won the 1999 RIBA Royal Gold Medal for its architecture 161 the first and as of 2015 update only time that the winner has been a city rather than an individual architect Placa Reial Barcelona Cathedral original Cathedral at night World Heritage Sites Barcelona is the home of many points of interest declared World Heritage Sites by UNESCO 162 Name Park Guell Palau Guell Casa Mila Casa VicensCode year 320 001 1984 320 002 1984 320 003 1984 320 004 2005Coordinates 41 24 59 6 N 2 09 07 9 E 41 416556 N 2 152194 E 41 416556 2 152194 Park Guell 41 22 45 N 2 10 28 E 41 379183 N 2 174445 E 41 379183 2 174445 Palau Guell 41 23 51 3 N 2 09 46 9 E 41 397583 N 2 163028 E 41 397583 2 163028 Casa Mila 41 24 13 N 2 09 04 E 41 40361 N 2 15111 E 41 40361 2 15111 Casa Vicens Name Sagrada Familia Casa Batllo Palau de la Musica Catalana Hospital de Sant PauCode year 320 005 2005 320 006 2005 804 001 1997 804 002 1997Coordinates 41 24 19 8 N 2 10 30 2 E 41 405500 N 2 175056 E 41 405500 2 175056 Temple Expiatori de la Sagrada Familia 41 22 00 3 N 2 09 59 0 E 41 366750 N 2 166389 E 41 366750 2 166389 41 23 16 N 2 10 30 E 41 38778 N 2 17500 E 41 38778 2 17500 41 24 50 N 2 10 30 E 41 41389 N 2 17500 E 41 41389 2 17500 Historic buildings and monuments Further information List of Modernista buildings in Barcelona See also Category Buildings and structures in Barcelona Barcelona Cathedral Minor basilica of Sagrada Familia the symbol of Barcelona Palau de la Musica Catalana and Hospital de Sant Pau designed by Lluis Domenech i Montaner included in the UNESCO Heritage List in 1997 Works by Antoni Gaudi including Park Guell Palau Guell Casa Mila La Pedrera Casa Vicens Sagrada Familia Nativity facade and crypt Casa Batllo crypt in Church of Colonia Guell The first three works were inscribed as a World Heritage Site in 1984 The other four were added as extensions to the site in 2005 The Cathedral of the Holy Cross and St Eulalia Gothic Gothic basilica of Santa Maria del Mar Gothic basilica of Santa Maria del Pi Romanesque church of Sant Pau del Camp Palau Reial Major medieval residence of the sovereign Counts of Barcelona later Kings of Aragon The Royal Shipyard gothic Monastery of Pedralbes gothic The Columbus Monument The Arc de Triomf a triumphal arch built for entrance to 1888 Barcelona Universal Exposition Expiatory church of the Sacred Heart of Jesus on the summit of Tibidabo The Historic Building of the University of BarcelonaMuseums Main article List of museums in Barcelona The National Museum of Art of Catalonia stands out for its collection of Romanesque painting considered one of the most complete in Europe citation needed Barcelona has a great number of museums which cover different areas and eras The National Museum of Art of Catalonia possesses a well known collection of Romanesque art while the Barcelona Museum of Contemporary Art focuses on post 1945 Catalan and Spanish art The Fundacio Joan Miro Picasso Museum and Fundacio Antoni Tapies hold important collections of these world renowned artists as well as the Can Framis Museum focused on post 1960 Catalan Art owned by Fundacio Vila Casas Several museums cover the fields of history and archaeology like the Barcelona City History Museum MUHBA the Museum of the History of Catalonia the Archeology Museum of Catalonia the Maritime Museum of Barcelona the Music Museum of Barcelona and the privately owned Egyptian Museum The Erotic museum of Barcelona is among the most peculiar ones while CosmoCaixa is a science museum that received the European Museum of the Year Award in 2006 citation needed The Museum of Natural Sciences of Barcelona was founded in 1882 under the name of Museo Martorell de Arqueologia y Ciencias Naturales 163 164 Spanish for Martorell Museum of Archaeology and Natural Sciences In 2011 the Museum of Natural Sciences ended up with a merge of five institutions the Museum of Natural Sciences of Barcelona the main site at the Forum Building the Martorell Museum the historical seat of the Museum opened to the public from 1924 to 2010 as a geology museum the Laboratori de Natura at the Castle of the Three Dragons from 1920 to 2010 the Zoology Museum the Historical Botanical Garden of Barcelona founded 1930 and the Botanical garden of Barcelona founded 1999 Those two gardens are a part of the Botanical Institute of Barcelona too The FC Barcelona Museum is the third most popular tourist attraction in Catalonia with 1 51 million visitors in 2013 165 Parks Parc de la Ciutadella north of La Barceloneta Barcelona contains sixty municipal parks twelve of which are historic five of which are thematic botanical forty five of which are urban and six of which are forest 166 They range from vest pocket parks to large recreation areas The urban parks alone cover 10 of the city 549 7 ha or 1 358 3 acres 65 The total park surface grows about 10 ha 25 acres per year 167 with a proportion of 18 1 square metres 195 sq ft of park area per inhabitant 168 Of Barcelona s parks Montjuic is the largest with 203 ha located on the mountain of the same name 65 It is followed by Parc de la Ciutadella which occupies the site of the old military citadel and which houses the Parliament building the Barcelona Zoo and several museums 31 ha or 76 6 acres including the zoo the Guinardo Park 19 ha or 47 0 acres Park Guell designed by Antoni Gaudi 17 2 ha or 42 5 acres Oreneta Castle Park also 17 2 ha or 42 5 acres Diagonal Mar Park 13 3 ha or 32 9 acres inaugurated in 2002 Nou Barris Central Park 13 2 ha or 32 6 acres Can Drago Sports Park and Poblenou Park both 11 9 ha or 29 4 acres the Labyrinth Park 9 10 ha or 22 5 acres named after the garden maze it contains 65 There are also several smaller parks for example the Parc de Les Aigues 2 ha or 4 9 acres A part of the Collserola Park is also within the city limits PortAventura World one of the largest resort in Europe with 5 837 509 visitors per year is located one hour s drive from Barcelona 169 170 Also within the city lies Tibidabo Amusement Park a smaller amusement park in Plaza del Tibidabo with the Muntanya Russa amusement ride Beaches Beaches of Barcelona Barcelona beach was listed as number one in a list of the top ten city beaches in the world according to National Geographic 103 and Discovery Channel 171 Barcelona contains seven beaches totalling 4 5 kilometres 2 3 4 miles of coastline Sant Sebastia Barceloneta and Somorrostro beaches both 1 100 m 3 610 ft in length 65 are the largest oldest and the most frequented beaches in Barcelona The Olympic Harbour separates them from the other city beaches Nova Icaria Bogatell Mar Bella Nova Mar Bella and Llevant These beaches ranging from 400 to 640 m 1 310 to 2 100 ft were opened as a result of the city restructuring to host the 1992 Summer Olympics when a great number of industrial buildings were demolished At present the beach sand is artificially replenished given that storms regularly remove large quantities of material The 2004 Universal Forum of Cultures left the city a large concrete bathing zone on the eastmost part of the city s coastline Most recently Llevant is the first beach to allow dogs access during summer season Other sights Santa Maria del Mar church Santa Maria del Pi church The Roman and Medieval walls Can Framis Museum Fabra Observatory The Arc de Triomf Castell dels Tres Dragons Hotel Arts left and Torre Mapfre right Torre Agbar The Torre de Collserola on Tibidabo Sagrat Cor on Tibidabo The view from Gaudi s Park Guell Port Vell Aerial Tramway Statue of Christopher Columbus W Barcelona Hotel Vela Colon building Magic Fountain of Montjuic The Venetian Towers in Placa d Espanya Placa de Catalunya Barcelona s beach promenade in La Barceloneta and Somorrostro Beach La Rambla Gothic Quarter Barcelona s old Customs building at Port Vell La Illa de la Discordia Rovira City LandscapeInternational relationsTwin towns sister cities See also List of twin towns and sister cities in Spain Barcelona is twinned with 172 Antwerp Belgium 1997 Athens Greece 1999 Boston United States 1983 Busan South Korea 1983 Cologne Germany 1984 Dublin Ireland 1998 Gaza City Palestine 1998 Havana Cuba 1993 Istanbul Turkey 1997 Kobe Japan 1993 Monterrey Mexico 1977 Montevideo Uruguay 1985 Montpellier France 1963 Rio de Janeiro Brazil 1972 Saint Petersburg Russia 1985 San Francisco United States 2010 Sao Paulo Brazil 1985 Sarajevo Bosnia and Herzegovina 2000 Shanghai China 2001 Tel Aviv Israel 1998 suspended 2023 173 Tunis Tunisia 1969 Valparaiso Chile 2001 Partnership and friendship Barcelona also cooperates with 172 Amman Jordan Guangzhou China Isfahan Iran Kyoto Japan Lampedusa Italy Lesbos Greece Maputo Mozambique New York City United States Ningbo China Paris France Rosario Argentina Saida Algeria Seoul South Korea Tetouan Morocco Turin ItalyNotable peopleFurther information Category People from BarcelonaSee also Spain portal Cities portal European Union portalOutline of Barcelona Architecture of Barcelona Urban planning of Barcelona Street names in Barcelona List of markets in Barcelona List of tallest buildings in Barcelona Public art in Barcelona Mobile World Congress OPENCitiesNotes and referencesNotes Citations Ajuntament de Barcelona Generalitat of Catalonia Archived from the original on 4 January 2017 Retrieved 13 November 2015 El municipi en xifres Barcelona Statistical Institute of Catalonia Archived from the original on 24 November 2015 Retrieved 23 November 2015 a b c d Demographia World Urban Areas Archived 3 May 2018 at the Wayback Machine Demographia April 2018 a b Population on 1 January by broad age group sex and metropolitan regions Archived 22 August 2016 at the Wayback Machine Eurostat 2017 Municipal Register of Spain 2018 National Statistics Institute THE BUDGET 2021 Barcelona Poblacion por municipios y sexo Archived 6 August 2016 at the Wayback Machine Instituto Nacional de Estadistica National Statistics Institute 2012 Global Cities Index Archived from the original on 20 October 2013 Retrieved 30 March 2014 Uecke Oliver De Cock Robin Crispeels Thomas Clarysse Bart eds 2014 Effective Technology Transfer In Biotechnology Best Practice Case Studies In Europe Imperial College Press p 198 ISBN 9781783266821 The World According to GaWC 2020 GaWC Research Network Globalization and World Cities Retrieved 31 August 2020 Port of Barcelona traffic statistics Accumulated data December 2013 PDF Statistics Service p 6 Archived from the original PDF on 14 June 2014 Retrieved 14 June 2014 AENA December 2018 Report PDF 14 January 2019 Archived from the original PDF on 15 January 2019 First commercial trips in Spanish Europapress es 10 December 2010 Archived from the original on 10 April 2014 Retrieved 30 March 2014 Emerita Revista de Linguistica y Filologia clasica 11 1943 p 468 Ptolemy ii 6 8 Gudmund 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Butter confirma oficialmente que la feria abandona Barcelona El Periodico Retrieved 22 July 2009 Karl Heinz Muller the entrepreneur behind B amp B in announcing the move in a press conference held on January 23 2009 said No llores Barcelona levantate y haz algo don t cry Barcelona get up and do something about it Barcelona in Europe is a metropolis of fashion Paris Towers Over World of Fashion as Top Global Fashion Capital for 2015 Archived 6 June 2017 at the Wayback Machine retrieved 12 June 2017 a b BOE LEY 1 2006 de 13 de marzo por la que se regula el Regimen Especial del municipio de Barcelona Boe es 14 March 2006 Archived from the original on 30 April 2008 Retrieved 26 June 2010 Ajuntament de Barcelona gt Ajuntament gt El Govern de la Ciutat W3 bcn es Archived from the original on 28 July 2010 Retrieved 26 June 2010 Ajuntament de Barcelona Organitzacio politica Bcn cat Archived from the original on 23 July 2013 Retrieved 26 June 2010 Ajuntament de Barcelona gt Council gt The city 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Parcs gt Els Parcs de Barcelona Bcn es Archived from the original on 5 January 2010 Retrieved 26 June 2010 Parcs i Jardins Institut Municipal Parcs i Jardins gt Els Parcs gt Historia gt La ciutat i el verd Bcn es Archived from the original on 3 October 2009 Retrieved 26 June 2010 Parcs i Jardins Institut Municipal Parcs i Jardins gt Els Parcs gt Historia gt La democracia Bcn es Archived from the original on 31 March 2009 Retrieved 26 June 2010 Corporate responsibility report 2017 Archived 26 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine investindustrial com Archived 3 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine 2018 The Global Attractions Attendance Report Themed Entertainment Association 2009 Archived 19 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Movie Worlds Best Beaches Discovery Channel 2005 Video on YouTube a b Direccio de Relacions Internacionals ajuntament barcelona cat in Catalan Barcelona Retrieved 2 August 2020 Barcelona suspende el hermanamiento con Tel Aviv No podemos quedarnos inmoviles ante la violacion de derechos ajuntament barcelona cat in Spanish El Diario Retrieved 8 February 2023 Gerenal references This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Smith William ed 1854 1857 Barcelona Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography London John Murray Barcelona Gran Enciclopedia Catalana Barcelona Ed Enciclopedia Catalana S A Busquets Joan Barcelona The Urban Evolution of a Compact City Harvard UP 2006 468 pp McDonogh G W January 2011 Review Essay Barcelona Forms Images and Conflicts Joan Busquets 2005 Journal of Urban History 37 1 117 123 doi 10 1177 0096144210384250 S2CID 149302217 Marshall Tim ed Transforming Barcelona Routledge 2004 267 pp Ramon Resina Joan Barcelona s Vocation of Modernity Rise and Decline of an Urban Image Stanford UP 2008 272 pp External linksBarcelona at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Travel information from Wikivoyage Resources from Wikiversity Official website of Barcelona Official website of Barcelona in Spain s national tourism portal Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Barcelona amp oldid 1138249388, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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