Feria

Seville, beautiful and diverse

The House of Los Pinelos was built in the first third of the 16th century by the canon of the cathedral, Diego Pinelo, a descendant of rich Genoese merchants living in Seville. 

Located in Seville, the construction of the Chapel of San José was promoted by the corporation of carpenters who, after meeting in the town hall, decided in 1746 to extend the old temple by building a new, much deeper, main chapel, providing it with a front transept, a dressing room and a storeroom.

This neo-Mudejar-style building was built in 1889 by engineers José Santos Silva and Nicolás Suárez y Albizu to house the Seville Pavilion during the 1929 Ibero-American Exhibition.

This is an ancient Christian chapel that may have originally been an Arab mosque of which the mihrab would have been preserved. It has undergone restoration work since it ceased to be used as a prison. 

The Mudejar-style Church, named after the town’s patron saint, also has Gothic and Renaissance art elements. It was built over an ancient mosque destroyed by an earthquake in the fourteenth century. The old presbytery has been preserved from its initial construction. 

This large rectangular square is an example of popular 16th century Andalusian architecture. In this square you can find the church of Nuestra Señora de Consolación, with its red brick Mudejar tower, the court building of the judicial district of Cazalla de la Sierra, with its beautiful baroque façade, and the tourist office  of the Cazalla Town Council. 

The construction of the building took place in three different periods. The first was between the 14th and 15th centuries, when a Mudejar church was built with three naves, a polygonal apse and a façade-tower. The second stage began in 1538, when part of the previous work was demolished and the construction of a new Renaissance-type temple began, but this was never completed.