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    Free Architectural Tour

    Posted by LJSmith 13 July 2009

    Valencia is perfect for budget travellers - most of the best sights and most impressive buildings are free to poke around, so you can conduct your own architectural tour, with plenty left over for some paella!

    Start at Valencia Cathedral, a mix of Romanesque and Gothic styles (with the 'Holy Grail' tucked inside!), and then head to the Palau de la Generalitat, a Gothic palace used by the local government, with elaborately tiled floors and frescoed walls.

    Other must-see sights include La Lonja, a grand Late Gothic hall filled with grisly gargoyles and other grotesqueries, and the Colegio del Patriarca, a 16th century seminary adorned with religious frescoes.

    Valencia Cathedral, Plaza de la Reina,
    Palau de la Generalitat, www.gencat.cat/generalitat/eng/guia/palau/index.htm
    La Lonja, Plaza de la Virgen, Valencia
    Colegio del Patriarca, Nave 1, Valencia 46002

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    Valencia's Glorious Gardens

    Posted by Sissi 13 July 2009

    Looking for something free to do? Valencia has several large public parks and gardens which are great places for a quiet stroll or a scenic picnic.

    The pretty Jardin Botanico is home to 7,000 species of shrubs and trees, and the Italian-style Monforte Gardens are filled with marble statues and beautiful flowerbeds. The Jardines de Rio Turia was once a river, but is now a strip of gardens, sports fields and playground, with a world-class concert hall smack bang in the middle.

    Monforte Gardens, Plaza de la Legión Española, Valencia, V 46010 Spain
    Botanic Gardens, Calle Quart 80, Valencia 46008
    Jardines de Rio Turia, Antiguo cauce del Turia

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    If you enjoy street art, then take a walk around the area of the old town known as Barrio del Carmen.

    The area is a well lived in and slightly scruffy old quarter of the city and the centre of the nightlife in Valencia. There is a lot of development going on and round each building plot you find cement walls, usually covered by some great street art. Take your time to wander round the area in the day, you'll find some nice street art round every corner.

    You can see my review and photos on my blog;
    heatheronhertravels.blogspot.com/2008/04/old-town-valencia-and-street-art.html

    There are lots of photos of Valencia street art on the Flickr Valencia graffiti pool.
    www.flickr.com/groups/graffisvalencia/pool/

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    Rio Túria

    Posted by ECVitoria 19 March 2007

    What makes Valencia unique is its river, or rather the lack of it. After a disastrous flood in 1957, the Túria was diverted to the edge of the city, leaving an empty riverbed that now forms a green ribbon twisting 9km through the city, with a lagoon, trees, gardens, playing fields and cycle paths. At the park’s heart is the breathtakingly ambitious City of Arts and Sciences designed by local architect Santiago Calatrava. You'll need to hire a bike to see it all.

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    Torres de Serranos

    Posted by SallyBolton 5 September 2005

    Finally getting wise to Valencia’s burgeoning tourist potential, the city council has recently imposed charges on all of the formerly free monuments in the town centre. However, there are still no charges on Sundays. Take advantage of this and take your pick from IVAM (the modern art museum), the Botanical Gardens, the cathedral and more. But my favourite is the Torres de Serranos (Serrano Towers). Formerly a prison for noblemen, these squat, crenellated towers form one of the gates in the old city walls (the only other surviving portal is the Torres de Quart) and are one of Valencia’s most emblematic symbols. A short climb to the top of the battlements gives refreshing views of the snaking green river park in one direction, and the rooftops, tiled domes and spires of the old town in the other.

    Calle Serranos / Calle Conde de Trenor

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