Semana Santa Estepa

Seville enchants

Código INE
41091
Town image
Mapa Sevilla

The Real Alcázar of Seville is a group of palatial buildings located in the city of Seville, the construction of which began in the High Middle Ages, where multiple styles are superimposed, from the Islamic art of its first inhabitants, the Mudejar and Gothic of the period after the conquest of the city by the Castilian troops to the Renaissance and Baroque of later reforms.

The Cartuja Center CITE (Centro Innovación Tecnológica del Espectáculo) is much more than a space. Technology and innovation come together in a chameleon-like, modern and versatile space specially designed to organise, programme and host everything from large events to small local meetings, as well as concerts, theatre, training, musicals... anything you can imagine.

Muelle 21 is a large multidisciplinary space prepared to hold any event, whether institutional, business or private.

The space is able to accommodate large events of up to 1,000 people in cocktail format and 640 people in banquet format or smaller events depending on the client's needs thanks to its panelling system, which can divide the space into three independent panelled rooms. 

The Central Theatre is located next to the banks of the river of Seville: within the site of the 1992 Universal Exhibition, the volume of the theatre rises: a box inside another box.

Since 1998, the cultural managers Rosana de Aza and Olinto de la Obra, forerunners in the promotion and dissemination of the artistic and cultural heritage of Al-Andalus, have been working to encourage the history of the most traditional flamenco and to promote the folkloric tradition of Andalusia, a World Heritage Site.

La Casa de la Guitarra is a Flamenco Cultural Centre located in an 18th century house in the heart of the Barrio de Santa Cruz (former Jewish quarter), a few steps away from the Cathedral. It is run by José Luis Postigo, a famous artist and guitarist who has won two national flamenco guitar awards (Córdoba National Prize and Jerez de la Frontera National Prize of the Chair of Flamencology).

The stained glass windows of the Cathedral of Seville constitute one of the most extensive, homogeneous and best preserved groups of Spanish cathedrals. The one hundred and thirty-eight stained glass windows preserved also represent a magnificent chapter in the history of this technique in the Iberian Peninsula, from the 15th to the 20th century.