Cascadas del Hueznar

Seville enchants

The Hacienda de Montefuerte, located in Navarro Caro Street, now houses the José María Delgado Buiza Municipal Library. This 17th-century Hacienda was a typical olive-growing estate. The Patio de Caballerizas (Mews) is located in the centre of the estate, around which the original buildings were arranged.

The Sanctuary of Our Lady of Loreto is a highlight in the Andalusian Religious Tourism circuit.

Declared a Site of Cultural Interest, this Monastery-Hacienda has an olive press, a manor house, a fortified tower and a chapel. The olive press is a device to extract oil from olives, while the wine is used for producing wine. There is also a barn and stables.

The Hacienda de Santa Ana, built on the site of a modest farmhouse, has the typical architecture of the Aljarafe Alto estates in the province of Seville. Located in Fuente Street, this is the most significant architectural and heritage building in Tomares. It is now the Town Hall. It also serves as the hub for Tomares’ social and cultural life.

(Also known as Hacienda de Liendo or Hacienda de Torrenueva) 

The Hacienda del Marqués de Torrenueva, also known as Hacienda de Liendo and Hacienda de Torrenueva, was the stately house of the Count of Gines.

For decades, the street on which this emblematic building had the same name as the Hacienda. However, its original name, Calle Real, was reinstated in 2009. 

Hacienda Marchalomar is an estate arranged around a central courtyard and a work yard. It preserves its olive mill with a hydraulic press and two stone rollers. Other features include a hay barn, granary, main residence, overseer’s house, machinery shed, stables, cowshed and pig pens.        

Although the buildings of this small estate date from the 17th century, there is documentary proof that it was built over an 11th-century Moorish farmstead.

This 18th-century estate is located inside the town, close to the Nuestra Señora de la Asunción Church. It belongs to the Marquis de la Motilla, a title of nobility granted to Alonso Fernández de Santillán y Quesada in 1679.