***Valencia: From Oranges to Operas
Legacy signals
Legacy popularity: 2,235 legacy views
Legacy rating: 4/5 from 3 archived votes
written by Bob Schulman
Is a Martian spaceport? A movie set from Star Wars? An outdoor museum of modern art? Whatever it is, you’d hardly expect to run across a place like this in a two-thousand-year-old Spanish seaport on the Mediterranean.
Visitors to Valencia usually expect to find a town packed with remnants of the days when it was ruled by Roman emperors, Visigoth princes, Moorish caliphs and Christian kings. And that’s exactly what you’ll see, including a cathedral displaying a chalice some believe to be the Holy Grail.
The big surprise in Spain’s third largest city (population: 800,000) is just a short cab ride from the old-time plazas and palaces, down in a dried up riverbed. That’s where a mile-long wonderland called the City of the Arts and Sciences pops into view.
Talk about strange bedfellows. The old riverbed winds through the center of Valencia for seven miles of lush parks, gardens, ballfields, bike paths, nature walks and even a zoo. So how did this Spanish Shangri-La get a next door neighbor looking like the set of a science fiction movie?
About 20 years ago, the story goes, Valencia got serious about getting known for more than its namesake oranges, its love song and its tasty paella (traditional Spanish rice dishes). The big bucks came from tourism, and the town – which at the time barely showed up in the country’s visitor count – set out to snag its share.
To get in on the action, Valencians shelled out billions of euros on big-time tourism magnets such as a new super-port for cruise ships, a new convention center, a new airport terminal and – the town’s crown jewel – the City of the Arts and Sciences, or CAS for short.
The job of designing the CAS was given to Valencia’s world famous home-town architect Santiago Calatrava. Told to come up with a showstopper, Calatrava is said to have “reached to another world” for a solution. He beamed the CAS down in four main sections.
Headlines across Europe trumpeted the 1998 debut of the eye-shaped L’Hemisferic, a theater in a five-story-high sphere under an oval roof as long as a football field. Inside, IMAX movies are shown on an immense screen that’s also used in turning the sphere into a planetarium with a sky full of 9,000 twinkling stars.
Two years later came another eye-popper: the Science Museum Principe Felipe. Resembling a giant ribcage, it’s loaded with interactive high-tech exhibits – everything from jet fighters to a DNA molecule twice as high as the nearby theater – aimed at giving visitors a fun way to experience the workings of life, science and technology. The museum’s motto is, “Touching is always permitted.”
The project went to the fishes in 2003 with the opening of Oceanografico, Europe’s largest aquarium. Here, visitors journey through the world’s seas and oceans on paths taking them through 20 acres of pod-like viewing structures, underwater tunnels made of glass and a sphere as high as an eight-story building.
The fourth section opened for business in 2007 when the Palau de les Arts Reina Sofia debuted to the tune of a half-billion dollars. Shaped like a spaceship on a launch pad – some say it looks more like a bike helmet – the structure houses four auditoriums including a state-of-the-art opera house seating 1,700.
So did Valencia’s multi-billion-dollar investment in the travel business pay off? Here’s how city tour guide Josep Alberola answers that question: “It used to be, no one came here…then tourism hit like an explosion.” Today, the city is one of Europe’s hottest travel destinations.
Getting there: Transatlantic airlines such as Iberia typically leave major U.S. gateway terminals in the late afte
oon and arrive at Spain’s air hub at Madrid the next morning. From there, it’s a 55-minute jet hop to Valencia.
Staying there: Valencia has some 35 tourist-class hotels including several propeties catering to U.S. tourists, among them the 135-room Westin (www.starwoodhotels.com/westin).
More info: Visit the CAS at www.CAC.es; Santiago Calatrava’s site at www.Calatrava.com; the Valencia Tourism & Convention Bureau at www.turisvalencia.es; and the Tourist Office of Spain at www.spain.info.
Leave a Comment for Bob below or email him at traveleditor@watchboom.com
Tags: bike paths, lush parks, museum of modern art, nature walks
Article author
About the Author
Further reading
Further Reading
Article
THE ART OF LIVING IN COMFORT
When we think of art, we think of pictures, or images of life. We can use this as a metaphor for creating a style of how we want to live as we age. For me style is not about a type of furniture, it’s design, or a colour in the material. It is simply a way of life that has practical purpose, through comfort and safety. This type of art describes the fundamental source of how we perceive comfort and how it is woven into our daily activity, through the products we choose to use that meet our needs for comfort and safety.
Related piece
Article
A New Approach to Active Living
“Active Living” is about how we choose to ‘live’ our lives every day. It includes all the movements that we create to accomplish tasks that we do for ourselves & others in our family, our work, our sports & recreation, plus are all other aspects of our daily lives. It embraces everything that we “perform” to make “living” the content of our daily life. We live in a constantly changing world, where movement and adaptation are all part of the daily living process. We are constantly challenged by the way we move around and how receptive we are to our environment.
Related piece
Article
Protect Your Joints - Preserve Your Energy - Promote Your Safety
What do these three words mean for our human body? When we PROTECT our body, it means that we are protecting it against injury; like protecting our head with a helmet when we cycle. We protect our back from injury, by bending our knees instead of our backs when lifting a heavy box. We protect our ankles by wearing hiking boots, when we go hiking; so that we do not stumble over uneven surfaces and strain our ankles. We wear waterproof clothing when it rains, so that we are protected from getting wet; the wetness can cause a chill, with a potential chill that can threaten our health.
Related piece
Article
Holding Daily Life in Comfort
HOLDING DAILY LIFE IN COMFORT using a “RELAXED HOLD” Gail McGonigal B.Sc.O.T., M.Sc.Health Is living life comfortable for you? Or does performing routine daily tasks result in pain or discomfort in your hands? It happened to me several years ago, when I began feeling pain in the base of my thumb joints when performing normal everyday tasks. I have always been a very fit and active person, riding my bicycle everywhere and just getting on with my daily life.
Related piece