The Alhambra at blue hour
A single photograph of the palace at dusk has come to define the city's image abroad. The photographer who made it never left Granada again.
Culture
Three-day visitors do the Alhambra and leave on day four. What they miss is the Granada that reveals itself to the people who don't. A letter from Sacromonte on patience, wrong turns, and the twenty-four hours that change how you see the city.
Art
Culture
El Bañuelo is older than the Alhambra. Fewer visitors. Lower ceilings. The best-kept Moorish hammam in Spain.
Flamenco
Skip the tourist tablaos. The real peñas are in Sacromonte, and only on certain nights.
Hidden Granada Radio
Broadcasting from a cave house on the old gitano hill, weekdays 10–2.
Headlines from Granada, every two hours. Short, no ads, no filler.
View Full Programme →Art
Eats
Wellness
Culture
What's On
Flower-covered crosses spread across the neighbourhoods for three nights of music, food and open courtyards.
Audio Tour
A guided walk through the quieter upper streets after the day-trippers have gone home. Pocket-sized, no booking.
Eats
The small rooms that fill up before tourist season properly starts. Get in now or wait until September.
Wellness
Three bathhouses that remember what they're for — plus one to avoid, despite the reviews.
Lorca
Flamenco
Sierra Nevada
City Guides
Culture
Drink
Explore
Albaicín
Standing-room-only counter that's been serving fried fish since 1942. Worth the queue.
Realejo
Quiet corner place where the free tapas with every drink actually feel like small meals.
Sacromonte
Off the tourist route, open late, and the regulars here have been drinking at this bar for thirty years.
Centro
One of the oldest bars in the city. Stand with a calicasas and a plate of jamón — the only way.
A single photograph of the palace at dusk has come to define the city's image abroad. The photographer who made it never left Granada again.
The Albaicín's upper streets haven't changed much in fifty years. The residents who stayed — and the ones who left — tell a harder story.
El Bañuelo is one of the oldest intact hammams in Europe. Walking through it is the closest thing Granada offers to time travel.
Members-only flamenco clubs sit behind unmarked doors across Sacromonte. Getting inside one takes patience, luck, and a letter of introduction.