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15 February 10

City Focus, City Cents

Barcelona on the Ground

Barcelona on the Ground

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Let a little Catalan cool into your life with a long weekend in beautiful, bohemian Barca! By Ramsay Short. Photography by Gunnar Knechtel.

GET THE VIBE…

IN THE CATALAN CAPITAL

On my first night in Barcelona over a carajillo (espresso with brandy) at a tapas joint near Parc Guell, local documentary film professor and my guide for the evening, Ricard Mamblona Aguera, related to me a Catalan pun about Barcelona’s inhabitants. Translated, it goes: “We who live here (l’habitem) sometimes levitate (levitem) from the pure joy of being here, and other times avoid it (l’evitem) from the pure fatigue of having to suffer it.”

Four intense days later – going with the flow and enjoying the Barcelona buzz immensely – this play on words began to make sense, though I avoided relatively little and did lots.

First point: a weekend in Barcelona is not enough, so take Friday and Monday off work, fly out Thursday night and roll your way through in a daze of inventive food, incredible architecture and gorgeous, hospitable people. Forget Woody Allen clichés, learn a few words of Catalan and employ it instead of Spanish and you’ll have drinks bought for you in no time.

This is a town for knocking on doors and exploring; where anything can happen if you let it. Barcelona is about quality of life, it’s a city of the right here, right now; a place of vibrant culture, street life, architecture, music, beaches, parks, tradition, creativity and innovation that still has an edge despite the vast amount of tourists that pass through almost all-year round, and a feeling among hip travellers that it is past its edgy, underground best of the nineties and noughties.

A decade since my last visit for the Millennium celebrations, though much has changed nothing disappoints. The best way to get a sense of Barcelona is to grab a map and walk – remember the sea is on one side and the Tibidabo mountain on the other and you’ll be fine. Or head down to the port to take a 15-minute helicopter ride over the city for €80 with Cathelicopters (tel: +34 93 224 0710, www.cathelicopters.com). The views and thrill are worth the cost, and you can easily differentiate between areas and see some extra sights.

Barcelona isn’t large but is divided into distinctive neighbourhoods – see our handy map on page 59 – and the place to start is at its heart, the old medieval town of Ciutat Vella, itself divided into four quarters. The Barri Gotic quarter, bounded by La Rambla avenue and the traffic-heavy Via Laietana, is all meandering lanes and alleys, delightful restaurants and shops, Roman ruins and grand churches. On the other side of Via Laietana, the Casc Antic quarter is a little more modern but equally beautiful. Here, stylish restaurants, bars and trendy outlets rub shoulders with a host of museums, including the Picasso, and arguably the best park in the city, Parc de la Ciutadella.

The Barceloneta quarter, and Vila Olimpica, stretches along the sandy beach, with its cafés and seafood restaurants that really come alive in summer. Then there’s El Raval across La Rambla – organic, multicultural, run-down and poorly lit, but all the better and more urban for it. The narrow streets may house a few undesirables but also late-night bars, a quirky Botero cat sculpture, boutique hotels, and the MACBA modern art museum.

North of Ciutat Vella is L’Eixample district, a modernist area made up of a grid of rectangular blocks in a lattice layout – home to high-end shopping, Gaudi’s stunning Casa Batllo and his Sagrada Familia. Above Eixample, Gracia is the other main district to check out – trendy but with a village feel, public squares and lively bars. Add Poble Sec on the far side of Raval beneath Montjuic hill, with more bars and eateries, and the best of Barcelona is there for the taking. Though its natives may take a rest sometimes, their city never stands still. So just levitate and embrace it.

ON THE STREET…

NO TWO DAYS ARE THE SAME

Barcelonans see their town as the capital of Catalonia rather than Spain’s second city, and it’s important to remember this when your eyes are swallowing up Gaudi’s incredible architecture, Miro’s sculptures and Picasso’s art. Parks, squares, markets and outdoor cafés are the centres of life here too – and a love of art, architecture and design is visible everywhere.

Hidden away down side streets you’ll find all kinds of museums (see box, right) and independent galleries. My favourite of the latter is Rojo Artspace in Eixample (www.rojo-barcelona.com 1), which hosts varied exhibitions from contemporary Spanish and international artists. Look out too for the edgy and excellent street art, buskers and other strange performers on bustling La Rambla.

For Swedish-born Barcelona resident René Lönngren – founder and owner of Le Cool Publishing, creator of influential webzine and guide to the city Le Cool, as well as gorgeous and in-the-know printed city guide books – the living, breathing city itself is the best cultural experience to be had. “Barcelona is a great walking city and in under an hour you can walk from the oh-so private and exclusive (as in walled mansions) Pedrables quarter to almost too-real Raval (as in ethnic and eclectic),” he says. “I love the cultural experience of being out of your comfort zone simply strolling around.”

He’s not wrong, and on any day your best bet is just to mosey through Ciutat Vella, checking out all the monuments, markets and churches. If you don’t stop at every sight, you can walk around Barri Gotic, La Ribera and El Raval in a morning or so, then make it down to the beach in the afternoon.

Talking of churches, there’s no doubt Gaudi’s Sagrada Familia in Eixample is the principal symbol of the city, incomplete as it is. If you don’t fancy the €16 fee to get into what is effectively a construction site, just walk around the outside of this fascinating creation instead.

Gaudi’s Casa Mila (www.lapedreraeducacio.org 2), on the other hand, is well worth checking out as an awe- inspiring piece of modernist architecture. Finished in 1912 its trademark wave-like rocky massif on the façade is matched in Gaudi’s other buildings like Casa Batllo, as well as in the famous Parc Guell.

For me though, the better parks to see are Parc Joan Miro near Placa Espana, with the artist’s weird and wonderful sculptures, and the gorgeous and relaxed Parc de la Ciutadella, hosting fountains and the city’s zoo. Montjuic hill is nice too, offering great views and the lovely Museu Nacional d’Art de Catalunya (www.mnac.cat) and Joan Miro Museum (www.fundaciomiro-bcn.org).

For more great views, do as the locals do. “Ride the Ferris wheel in the amusement park up on Tibidabo mountain above Barcelona,” says René. “Sharing a bottle of wine with friends as you slowly rotate above the city is simply mind-blowing.”

MORE HIP MUSEUMS

MACBA (www.macba.cat 3) in Raval is a stage for the best contemporary art from home and abroad. It’s housed in a gothic chapel and a gleaming white building. CCCB (www.cccb.org) adjoins MACBA and is the multi-use cultural centre of Barcelona, built in the shell of an 18th-century hospice. See exhibitions on urban design, architecture and more.

CaixaForum (www.caixaforum.com 4) is a converted factory with a breathtaking façade. It houses contemporary art shows and the private collection of the Caixa bank.

Museu Frederic Marès (www.museumares.bcn.es 5). Tucked away in an ancient Barri Gotic building, this place houses the obsessive collection of everyday objects of sculptor and traveller Frederic Marès, such as rusty iron keys and erotic Victorian cigarette cards.

Museu del Futbol Club de Barcelona (www.fcbarcelona.es). One for fans, the museum at Camp Nou is always packed and features displays of pictures, posters, jerseys, boots and balls, as well as offering a tour of the huge stadium.

AT THE HOTEL…

THE BEST BEDS AROUND TOWN

I press the button beside the huge bed and the curtains slide open to reveal floor-to-ceiling windows, and the sea and eclectic skyline of Barcelona spread out before me. I jump up, run to the window and press my face against the glass, basking in the sunshine, before remembering to put some clothes on. Not that anyone can see mind, being that I am on the 17th floor!

W Barcelona (www.w-barcelona.com, doubles from €257 a night 6 ), one of the city’s newest hotels – built on the edge of the beach in Barceloneta, with its stylish, plush Ricardo Bofill interiors – is simply a wonderful place to stay.

Controversial among some Barcelonans, it may look like it has been dropped onto the beach from Dubai, but let that go and staying here is like a dream. Wake up to breakfast in the Bravo restaurant, where you can feel Barcelona- born chef Carlos Abellán’s culinary touch everywhere. The spread is vast, and my fried eggs on toast resembled a work of art! Then take a walk along the beach or the seafront promenade. Come summer, the terrace and pool will be the place to be seen.

Being full of tourists, Barcelona is brimming with choice when it comes to hotels, and for most the closer to the heart of things in Ciutat Vella the better. One of the most comfortable and fun is Casa Camper in Raval (www.casacamper.com, doubles from €190 a night 7). A restored 19th-century building, Casa Camper – owned by the famous Mallorcan shoe company – is all about eco and cool. There are plants everywhere, and bicycles hang from the roof in the lobby that you can use to ride around town. With just 25 warm and cosy rooms, and a café open 24 hours a day for guests, it’s a total delight.

Nearby, the more classic option is Le Méridien (www.lemeridienbarcelona.es, doubles from €226 a night 8), just off La Rambla. Recently refurbished, and featuring contemporary art and an Illy café, Le Méridien is all about comfort, ease of getting around, and the friendliest staff I can remember. It also caters well for families.

Two of the classiest hotels for me are Hotel Neri (www.hotelneri.com, doubles from €285 a night 9) and Hotel Omm (www.hotelomm.es, doubles from €200 a night 10). The former is hidden away in the most tranquil closed-off square in the otherwise hectic Barri Gotic: Placa de Sant Felip Neri. The 22-room, 18th- century palace is all exquisite boutique style and charm, with a lovely library for reading the papers and relaxing.

The Omm, on the other hand, in modernist Eixample, is the ultimate in cool. Many of it’s 91 rooms face onto an inner courtyard in the style of a Moroccan riad; the lounge bar comes straight out of the 1950s; there’s a rooftop pool and spa, and the hotel’s basement club is as hip as Barcelona gets.

Finally, if you want to spend little on accommodation in an ideal location, then hostel Alberguest (www.alberguest.com, single bunk from €18.70 a night 11), two minutes from Placa de Catalunya, is it. Run by the extremely friendly Al and filled with the young and creatively minded, it has clean dorm rooms and no curfew. The place is so affordable, some guests stay for weeks on end!

NAUGHTY NIGHTS

Barcelonans have never been shy about demonstrating their love, as writers from Jean Genet to the city’s very own Juli Vallmitjana have documented. And where do they express themselves but the town’s legendary “meublés”, or “love hotels”. Perfectly legal in Spain, they have been around for a century, and were established with young couples still living at home in mind. Although as a rule not talked about openly, they are an established part of Barcelonan society. You can pay by the hour, they are clean and tidy, rooms are often themed and discretion is the watchword. The most famous is La Casita Blanca (“The Little White House”, www.casitablanca.com) on C/ Bolivar, north-west of Gracia. Here you’ll find 50 opulently decorated rooms, featuring mirrored walls and ceilings, huge baths and kinky extras in drawers! You can’t reserve, so just turn up and order drinks while you wait – it really is that popular. Prices start from €50 for an hour, but the longer you stay the cheaper it is.

AT THE TABLE…

EAT YOUR WAY AROUND TOWN

With so many good restaurants serving all types of cuisine, where do you start? For me it has to be the restaurants serving Catalan tapas, seafood and the regional cuisine – many of which are scattered across Barri Gotic, El Raval and L’Eixample. But my first experience on this visit was a restaurant up in the working class neighbourhood of Carmelo. Mirador del Carmelo ( 12 ) is a spit and sawdust sort of place where locals come to watch FC Barcelona on the TV and eat fresh shellfish and Iberian ham from the counter bar. A bowl of clams, fried potatoes with mayonnaise, anchovies in oil and the delicious Catalan staple pan de pages (toast rubbed with garlic, fresh tomatoes, olive oil and salt), all washed down with local beer Moritz, is as good as it gets – and all for about €20.

Over in Eixample, go upmarket at Inopia (www.barinopia.com 13) – a must-visit tapas joint created by Albert “brother of Ferran” Adrià with business partner Joan Martinez. There’s traditional tiling, a blackboard menu, strip lighting and a zinc bar where you can tuck into plates of fried prawns, olives, cold meats and mini-hamburgers – all with a modern twist and the freshest ingredients. It’s hugely popular for its warm atmosphere and attention to detail. I ask Albert what his secret is, and his answer is immediate. “Olive oil, my liquid gold, is what makes the difference!”

Three more Catalan eateries not to miss are Agullers ( 14 ), El Tossal ( 15 ) and Quimet & Quimet ( 16 ). The first in El Born is something of a hidden gem and features mouth-watering dishes at low prices, like fideuá, a Catalan paella that uses noodles instead of rice. At El Tossal, owned by a hunter, you eat what’s he’s caught – try the homemade stews. Quimet & Quimet is a famous, tiny bodega in Poble Sec, serving farmhouse cheeses, charcuterie and conservas (seafood in a tin) in bite-sized montaditos (canapés), which are dreamy washed down with a glass of wine.

More stylish, and pricier, is wine-lovers’ paradise Monvinic (www.monvinic.com 17), where I spent a three-hour lunch so decadent I couldn’t eat supper till 11pm! Sit at white, communal tables and choose from 3,000 wines by the glass, along with Mediterranean cuisine.

Finally, you’d be amiss not to make a reservation at Tapioles 53 (www.tapioles53.com 18) – in fact no walk-ins are allowed. Australian chef/owner Sarah Stothart serves up a Mediterranean-Asian fusion at this part- restaurant, part-photography-gallery (www.lafabrica.com), where a three-course set menu costs €38. Ingredients are bought at local markets on the day, and the open kitchen and down-to-earth vibe make it one of Barcelona’s more intimate dining experiences.

HOW TO MUNCH

Like so many Mediterranean cities, food and drink in Barcelona are a big – if not the biggest – part of life. Everyone eats well, eats a lot and takes time over their meals – honestly, I had three or four courses at lunch, which generally happens about 2pm and lasts until 4pm! Dinner doesn’t start until much later at 9pm, but in between everyone seems to walk around a lot, which may account for the lack of obesity considering the fact that Catalan cuisine is so rich and oily.

Breakfast, if it’s not churros dipped in hot chocolate, is often hearty-and-filling egg and sausage at a café. You can get cheap lunches at most cafés in the old town, especially with the menu del dia – an all-inclusive set menu designed with the working man/woman in mind. These menus always include wine or coffee and sometimes dessert, too. Definitely pass by a Basque bar where they do pintxos, little snacks on sticks costing €1–€2 each. When tipping, use your discretion – it is not expected, but is always appreciated.

AT THE BAR…

SOAK UP BARCELONA’S SCENE

When darkness falls, if you want to party until the early hours any day of the week, any time of the year, this city is open to it. There are so many brilliant venues it’s impossible to mention them all – but here’s a selection of our favourites. And don’t forget to pick up the “freezines” in cafés for the latest gigs and events.

The live music scene is varied and plentiful, from local indie bands to flamenco and even French chanson at Raval’s tiny old-school Bar Pastis 19. It’s easy to get around town – on foot, by cab, metro (it’s fast and runs until 1am), or night bus – so don’t count on going to bed.

But doing Barcelona like a drunken tourist, carousing down La Rambla, is not advised. Instead, take your cue from the locals, who have aperitifs at 9pm, eat at 10pm, go for cocktails and cava until midnight, hit the clubs until 3am, then seek out an after-hours bar – before breakfast at a sun-drenched café. For Barcelona TV field producer and fixer Lucy Garcia – who I meet over a carafe of wine at a gorgeous bar/restaurant in Ribera named Candela 20 – the relaxed vibe, food and wine is what makes Barcelona after dark great.

For an impressive start to your night, stroll down to Vila Olimpica and the Champagne Bar at Hotel Arts (www.hotelartsbarcelona.com 21), and sip on some superb Catalan cava before heading back into town.

But in truth, it’s some of the smaller and sometimes rowdier bars that really make Barcelona special – people here are even friendlier than I’d expected and nights can go anywhere as a result. In Gracia, my bar of choice is Chatelet 22, totally bohemian with excellent Mojitos. In Barri Gotic, Ginger 23 is a favourite in a tiny street behind the

cathedral – a 1970s-style whisky and cocktail bar that’s always buzzing. On Placa Reial, long a hangout for the city’s youth, try Pipa Club (www.bpipaclub.com 24), on the second floor of an old house. Buzz to be let in, find a spot, have a beer and check out the fascinating pipe collection. Move on to the newest club in the area, Marula Café (www.marulacafe.com 25), with its super-laid-back crowd up for dancing to the funk and groove tunes on offer nightly.

Across La Rambla in Raval, Zentraus (www.zentraus.com 26) is a bump-n-grind drum-n-bass-heavy little place, while further along in Poble Sec is the exceptional Mau Mau (www.maumaunderground.com 27) in an old warehouse, where clubbers come to hear soul DJs mix it up, and dance on the big red sofas. For live Catalan rock bands and top DJs playing everything from funky house to techno, walk up from Paral.lel metro to Sala Apolo (www.sala-apolo.com 28), once an old ballroom and now an excellent place to dance the night away.

AFTER- HOURS BARS

Those in the know in Barcelona will tell you that come 4am, your next stop will probably be one of the after-hours bars – usually hidden down out-of-the-way alleys – that are free to get in, but only if the doorman gives you the nod. These half-secret spots are regular spaces that just open late, and where you must first knock on a door, then either be with someone who knows someone or hope that the bouncer favours you. I found myself at Kiriki (11 C/ Banys Vells) in El Born on a Friday morning at about 3am for some laid-back cocktails and cava – it was one of those “why not?” situations before eventually hitting my bed. Other after-hours bars include Caribbean Club (5 C/ Sitges) in Raval and Papillon somewhere in Born. To find most of them, the best thing to do is ask around – you’re bound to see a group of locals on their way, so just tag along. For the really adventurous among you, head to swingers’ club Seis y Nueve (www.6y9.com), where I’ll say no more but anything goes!

IN THE BAG…

HIP BOUTIQUES AND VINTAGE TREATS

Barcelona is one of those cities people travel to shop in, especially during the sales, when prices at every store – whether big brands or independents, fashion or furniture – are slashed by 70%. And the rest of the year, if the likes of Zara, Mango, Camper, Dior and Armani are your sort of thing, then head to Passeig de Gracia, Barcelona’s Champs- Elysées, leading from Placa de Catalunya all the way through Eixample to Gracia.

You’ll find every high- end brand you could imagine, and more.

If you can’t be bothered with the madness on this beautiful wide avenue, one shop you should not miss is household design emporium Vincon (www.vincon.com 29), with its breadth of Spanish and internationally designed homewares in a huge, gorgeous modernist block that was once the home of artist Ramon Casas. For any budding industrial designers out there, Vincon’s founder and director Fernando Amat holds walk-in sessions for anyone with new products and interesting ideas to show off.

Barcelona is also about small independent bookstores, design boutiques, wine and olive oil outlets, and clothes stores – from vintage to new cool. And it’s a town that does it better than most, thanks to the high number of creative people living and working here.

Barri Gotic and El Raval have tonnes of hip little shops throughout, but the best areas for individuality are undoubtedly El Born and La Ribera. The little streets around Passeig del Born are home to men’s and women’s fashion brand Custo Barcelona (www.custo-barcelona.com 30); pastry chef Carles Mampel’s Bubo (www.bubo.ws 31), where you can buy delectable desserts and chocolate to take home; and Vila Viniteca (www.vilaviniteca.es 32), which along with La Llavor dels Origens (www.lallavordelsorigens.com 33) further east in Gracia, is the best place for excellent Catalan and international wine. And both have friendly, well-informed staff.

In La Ribera, check out two fantastic hubs of creativity – artist and designer David Cabrera’s Ciclic (www.ciclic.org 34), a graphic design, art and photography bookstore, film club and design space; and Iguapop (www.iguapop.net 35), a whitewashed counterculture art gallery and clothes store, featuring independent designers from Barcelona and their great one-off items of streetwear and clubwear.

One bookstore with a number of branches around town – where I found the best selection of books in all languages about Barcelona and more – is La Central (www.lacentral.com 36). The branches in Barri Gotic and El Raval are the nicest.

Before I forget, for the ladies, local shoe designer Juan Antonio Lopez’s spacious boutique in Eixample (www.juanantoniolopez.com 37) with its minimal decor, is a must if you need some elegant and chic heels – so forget Jimmy Choo! And for the music lovers, although there are a number of small record shops, in the words of James Brown I really “got the feeling” in the King Atupali Reggae Shop (www.kingatupali.com 38) and came out with some old-school roots vinyl I’d been unable to locate even in London.

TOP 3 MARKETS

LA BOQUERIA
The Mercat de Sant Josep, better known as La Boqueria, has some of the best fresh produce, from incredible goat’s cheese to Iberian ham. Local chefs head to this enclosed market on La Rambla to stock up on the day’s ingredients.

MERCAT DE SANT ANTONI
At the eastern end of Raval, Sant Antoni is being revamped at the moment, so all the antiques, arts, books and artisans have been moved into huge tents occupying a nearby avenue. It’s still vibrant and bargain-full as you can get, so enjoy!

MERCAT DE SANTA CATERINA
Rebuilt and redesigned by local architect Enric Miralles on the site of the original 19th-century market, Santa Caterina (www.mercatsantacaterina.net 39) in Ribera is excellent for little lunch outlets and fresh fruit – a serious rival to La Boqueria. Best of all is its undulating, polychrome tiled roof that you can see on postcards hawked nearby, or if you persuade a local to let you up the stairs of their apartment block.

CITY CENTS

1 / BUBO CHOCOLATE

Barcelonans love their chocolate, as proven by the city’s abundance of chocolate and pastry shops. So don’t leave before trying the mouth- watering creations of top pastry chef Carles Mampel at Bubo (10 Caputxes) in El Born district. This dark choc nut bar is fab.

€5, WWW.BUBO.WS

2 / DESIGNER MAP MUG

I always need mugs, so getting one from the design hub that is Barcelona is well worth it. This one, by local design consultancy Studio Astrid Stavro exclusively for La Central bookshop has a city map depicting the streets by name alone. Buy it at the Barri Gotic branch (7 Baixada de la Llibreteria).

€9.50, WWW.LACENTRAL.COM

3 / ONIX FUSIO 2006

Catalonia produces some excellent wines, and we loved this blend of Carignan, Red Garnacha and Syrah grapes from cooperative Vinicola del Priorat (www.vinicoladelpriorat.com). Pick some up at bodega La Llavor dels Origens (12 C/ Ramon i Cajal) in Gracia.

€12.53, WWW.LALLAVORDELSORIGENS.COM

4 / ECO-STATIONERY

This recycled PVC canvas document holder from Demano is colourful, useful and eco-friendly. Demano take all the bright banners used to promote city events and convert them into items like bags and wallets. You can find them at shops like über-cool Galerias Vincon (96 Passeig de Gracia).

€15, WWW.DEMANO.NET

5 / AMAZING OLIVE OIL

You can’t go to Spain and come back without some of the most exquisite olive oil on the planet. This exclusive bottle from a family estate in Andalusia is so fine, with a fruity almond taste, that to use it for cooking would be blasphemy. Get yours from Inopia (104 Carrer Tamarit) bodega in Eixample.

€21, WWW.CASTILLODECANENA.COM

WHERE IT’S AT…

MAP & CONTACTS

1 Rojo Artspace, 61 C/ Girona, tel: +34 93 467 3598
2 Casa Mila, 261 Provenca, tel: +34 90 240 0973
3 MACBA, 1 Placa dels Angels, tel: +34 93 412 0810
4
CaixaForum, 6–8 Av. Marquès de Comillas, tel: +34 93 476 8612
5
Museu Frederic Marès, 5–6 Placa de Sant Iu, tel: +34 93 256 3500
6
W Hotel, 1 Placa de la Rosa dels Vents, Final Passeig de Joan de Borbo, tel: +34 93 295 2800
7
Casa Camper, 11 C/ Elisabets, tel: +34 93 342 6280
8
Le Méridien, 111 La Rambla, tel: +34 93 318 6200
9
Hotel Neri, 5 C/ Sant Sever, tel: +34 93 304 0655
10
Hotel Omm, 265 Rossello, tel: +34 93 445 4000
11 Alberguest, 17 Ronda Universitat, tel: +34 63 566 9021
12
Mirador del Carmelo, 70 Carretera del Carmelo, tel: +34 93 358 0550
13
Inopia, 104 C/ Tamarit, tel: +34 93 424 5231
14
Agullers, 8 C/ Agullers
15
El Tossal, 12 Tordera, tel: +34 93 457 6382
16
Quimet & Quimet, 25 C/ del Poeta Cabanyes, tel: +34 93 442 3142
17 Monvinic, 249 C/ Diputacio, tel: +34 93 272 6187
18
Tapioles 53, 53 C/ Tapioles, tel: +34 93 329 2238
19 Bar Pastis, 4 C/ de Santa Monica
20 Candela 93 C/ Sant Pere Mitja, tel: +34 93 310 6242
21 Champagne Bar, Hotel Arts, 19–21 Marina, tel: +34 93 221 1000
22 Chatelet, 54 Torrijos
23 Ginger, 1 C/ Palma de Sant Just, tel: +34 93 310 5309
24 Pipa Club, 3 Placa Reial
25 Marula Café, 49 C/ Escudillers
26 Zentraus, 41 Rambla de Raval, tel: +34 93 443 8078
27 Mau Mau, 35 C/ Fontrodona, tel: +34 93 441 8015
28 Sala Apolo, 113 C/ Nou de la Rambla, tel: +34 93 441 4001
29 Vincon, 96 Passeig de Gracia, tel: +34 93 215 6050
30 Custo Barcelona, 36 Ferran, tel: +34 93 342 6698
31 Bubo, 10 Caputxes, tel: +34 93 268 7224
32 Vila Viniteca, 7 Agullers, tel: +34 93 777 7017
33 La Llavor dels Origens, 12 C/ Ramon i Cajal, tel: +34 93 213 6031
34 Ciclic, 5–7 C/ Rec Comtal, tel: +34 93 501 3383
35 Iguapop, 15 C/ Comerc, tel: +34 93 319 6813
36 La Central, 7 Baixada de la Llibreteria, tel: +34 93 269 0804
37 Juan Antonio Lopez, 240 Consell de Cent, tel: +34 93 452 6690
38 King Atupali Reggae Shop, 30 C/ Gignas, tel: +34 64 604 3213
39 Mercat de Santa Caterina, Placa de Santa Caterina.

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