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TURO DE LA ROVIRA
SpainCatalunyaBarcelona
ENSANCHE - TURO DE LA ROVIRA
Dreta de l'Eixample, Barcelona, Spain

ENSANCHE - TURO DE LA ROVIRA

Length9 mi
Elev. Gain967.6 ft
Est. Steps21000
Scenic views
Steep slope
Created by Juanrra

ENSANCHE - TURO DE LA ROVIRA Introduction

ENSANCHE - TURO DE LA ROVIRA is a 9 mile (21,000-step) route located near Dreta de l'Eixample, Barcelona, Spain. This route has an elevation gain of about 967.6 ft and is rated as hard. Find the best walking trails near you in Pacer App.
Se empieza desde el ensanche derecho de Barcelona en continua cuesta pasando por el Parque Güell hasta el turó de la Rovira, 293 mt. sobre el nivel del mar, después comienza el descenso hasta llegar a Horta y continúa por el Paseo de Maragall hasta alcanzar de nuevo el punto de partida

Attractions Near ENSANCHE - TURO DE LA ROVIRA

© Wikipedia © OpenStreetMap

Barcelona Metro line 5

Place
Line 5, currently known as Cornellà Centre - Vall d'Hebron, its termini, and often called "Línia Blava" (Blue line), is line belonging to the Barcelona Metro network operated by TMB, and part of the ATM fare-integrated transport network.

Alfons X (Barcelona Metro)

Place
Alfons X (Catalan pronunciation: [əlˈfonz ˈðɛw]) is a Barcelona metro station, located under Ronda Guinardó and Plaça d'Alfons el Savi, named after Alfonso X of Castile, in the Horta-Guinardó district of Barcelona.Opened in 1974, the station is currently served by L4. It has three entrances, one on the square itself, a second one next to Parc de les Aigües and another one on Carrer Lepant.

Carrer del Consell de Cent, Barcelona

Place
Carrer del Consell de Cent (official Catalan name; Spanish: Calle del Consejo de Ciento) is a long avenue in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. It's one of the horizontal streets of the urban grid that makes up Eixample district, spanning the Esquerra de l'Eixample and the Dreta de l'Eixample quarters, starting at the Parc de Joan Miró by carrer de Vilamarí and ending in the neighbourhood of El Clot, by Avinguda Meridiana, in the Sant Martí district.

Can Baró

Place
Can Baró is a neighborhood in the Horta-Guinardó district of Barcelona, Catalonia (Spain).

Camp de l'Arpa (Barcelona Metro)

Place
Camp de l'Arpa is a station on line 5 of the Barcelona Metro. It is named after the neighbourhood of the same name in the Sant Martí district.The station is located underneath Carrer Indústria, between Passeig Maragall and Carrer Guinardó. It was opened in 1970.The side-platform station has a ticket hall on either end, each with one access, on Carrer Indústria and Passeig Maragall.

Horta (Barcelona Metro)

Place
Horta (Catalan pronunciation: [ˈɔɾtə]) is a station in the Barcelona metro network, served by L5, located under carrer de Lisboa, in the Horta-Guinardó district of Barcelona. It was opened in 1967, when an extension of the line into the neighbourhood of the same name from Vilapicina was opened. The partially curved island-platform station has a ticket hall at either end, one with two accesses, the other with one.

El Guinardó

Place
El Guinardó is a neighborhood in the Horta-Guinardó district of Barcelona, Catalonia (Spain).

Sagrada Família (Barcelona Metro)

Place
Sagrada Família is a metro station in Barcelona Metro network. It is named after the famous, and adjacent, Basílica i Temple Expiatori de la Sagrada Família, a church first designed by architect Antoni Gaudí and still under construction. It is served by TMB-operated Barcelona Metro lines L2 and L5.The station takes the form of two separate sections linked by a corridor within the paid area of the station complex.

Siege of Barcelona (1705)

Place
The Siege of Barcelona took place between 14 September and 19 October 1705 during the War of the Spanish Succession when a multinational Grand Alliance army led by Lord Peterborough, supporting the Habsburg pretender to the Spanish throne, captured the city of Barcelona from its Spanish Bourbonic defenders,most of whom then joined the Habsburg army.

Hungarian raid in Spain (942)

Place
A Hungarian raid in Spain took place in July 942. This was the furthest west the Hungarians raided during the period of their migration into central Europe; although, in a great raid of 924–25, the Hungarians sacked Nîmes and may have got as far as the Pyrenees.The only contemporary reference to the Hungarians crossing the Pyrenees into Spain is in al-Maʿsūdī, who wrote that "their raids extend to the lands of Rome and almost as far as Spain".
Last updated: Dec 1, 2024

Route Details

Length

9 mi

Elev. Gain

967.6 ft

Est. Steps

21000
Created by
Juanrra
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