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Tas-Sliema
Sliema coast road Malta 🇲🇹
Sliema, Malta

Sliema coast road Malta 🇲🇹

Length2.7 mi
Elev. Gain131.2 ft
Est. Steps6000
Scenic views
Beach
Wading
Created by Diane

Sliema coast road Malta 🇲🇹 Introduction

Sliema coast road Malta 🇲🇹 is a 2.7 mile (6,000-step) route located near Sliema, Malta. This route has an elevation gain of about 131.2 ft and is rated as easy. Find the best walking trails near you in Pacer App.
This is a walk that can be easy to medium. You can walk/stroller/wheelchair on the paved coast road or go down to the rocky beach area all around the coast from flat to very steep rocks were no children or wheelchairs will be able to do. Sunrises are the best from this coast walk.

Attractions Near Sliema coast road Malta 🇲🇹

© Wikipedia © OpenStreetMap

Balluta Bay

Water
Balluta Bay is a bay on the northeast coast of Malta within St. Julian's. It is a popular recreation spot used for swimming, diving, and water sports, with a triangular pjazza surrounded by cafés and shaded by Judas trees. Its skyline is dominated by the neo-gothic Carmelite Parish Church and the art nouveau Balluta Buildings, which are apartment buildings on the eastern shore, as well as a cluster of terraced townhouses in the local variant of Georgian-style architecture.

Balluta Buildings

Place
Balluta Buildings is an Art Nouveau apartment block overlooking Balluta Bay in St Julian's, Malta. It was built in 1928 for the Marquis John Scicluna, and it was constructed to designs of Giuseppe Psaila. The building is considered to be among the finest of the few surviving examples of Art Nouveau architecture in Malta, and one of the most iconic buildings on the island.

Carmelite Church, Balluta

Place
The Parish Church of Our Lady of Mount Carmel, or simply known as the Carmelite Church or Balluta Parish Church, is a neo-gothic Roman Catholic parish church located in Balluta Bay in the town of St Julian's, Malta.

Fatima House

Place
Fatima House (Maltese: Id-Dar ta' Fatima), formerly Villa Bétharram, is a late nineteenth century villa at 65 High Street, Sliema, Malta. It was purposely built as a family residence for the Galea family, on request of Maltese Senator Alfonso Maria Galea. It is now a residence for females in social needs, sometimes known as Fatima Hostel or Fatima Working Girls' House.

Our Lady of the Sacred Heart Parish Church

Building
The Sanctuary of Our Lady of the Sacred Heart in Sliema, Malta was founded in 1877, and has been a parish church since 1918.

Villa St Ignatius

Place
Villa St Ignatius (Maltese: Villa Sant'Injazju) is a historic villa located in the Balluta area of St Julian's, Malta. It was built in the early 19th century for the English merchant John Watson, and it might be the earliest example of Gothic Revival architecture in the country.The house was converted into a Protestant college in 1846, and it later housed a Jesuit college, which closed down in 1907.

Stella Maris Church, Sliema

Place
The Stella Maris Parish Church is a Roman Catholic parish located in Sliema, Malta. It is the matrice of the other parish churches in Sliema and Gżira being the oldest parish church dating from 1878.

Sliema

Place
Sliema (Maltese: "Tas-Sliema") is a town located on the northeast coast of Malta in the Northern Harbour District. It is a major residential and commercial area and a centre for shopping, bars, dining, and café life. Lining the coastline is a promenade known as the Sliema Front, that has become the ideal spot for joggers and walkers as well as a prolific meeting place for locals during the summer season.

St James Capua Hospital

Place
St James Capua Hospital, or Saint James Hospital Sliema, started out in 1996 as the Capua Palace Hospital. In 2002 it was taken over by the Saint James Hospital Group, which owns other hospitals in Malta, Libya and Hungary. It is an 80 bed unit in Sliema, Malta. The hospital occupies part of the former "Capua Palace" building (Palazzo Capua),[1] built over 200 years ago.

Palazzo Capua

Place
Palazzo Capua, also known as Capua Palace, is an early 19th-century Neoclassic palace in Sliema, Malta. It was built by a Russian banker who named it Selma Hall. It later came into the possession of the Prince of Capua Carlo de Borbon, and his wife Penelope Caroline Smyth, for whom it is still named today.

Comments

Ray 🇲🇹
2024/08/25
Last updated: Jan 1, 2025

Route Details

Length

2.7 mi

Elev. Gain

131.2 ft

Est. Steps

6000
Created by
Diane
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