Feria

Seville, beautiful and diverse

The building from the early 18th century has a Latin cross plan divided into five sections and chapels between the inner buttresses. The Sacristy is located at the apse next to the Epistle side. The three-level tower and spire are situated at the west end of this same side.

A medium-sized alley next to the Santa Ana Parish Church. Its charm lies in its traditional structure, which consists of a series of brick arches against whitewashed walls. It is usually decorated with plants and pots cared for by the neighbours. 

This late 15th-century Mudejar building features some Romanesque elements, such as thick walls.

The transversal arches and side entrance were added in the mid-16th century.

The tower’s bell chamber was built in the Baroque period. The entrance has a modern lintelled porch covered by a groin vault supported by columns.

The La Prusiana Arch is all that remains of the former Hacienda La Prusiana, an 18th-century estate whose buildings were demolished years ago.

The Town Hall was built in 1533 over the Puerta de Teba arch.

The whitewashed walls are graced by a double row of balconies. Worthy of note is an arcade supported on embedded double columns. Next to arcade are the remains of a former mirador overlooking the Plaza. Two, long and wide balconies with pink carved stipites support the screws that go into the wall.

This building was built in 1307 and was originally the supply house of the Master of the Order of Santiago.

Architecturally, it is a slightly trapezoid-shaped ashlar construction. It consists of two floors, each of them formed by a nave roofed with a wooden framework.

The strategic location Utrera, where multiple roads converge, and its fertile lands have attracted different peoples over the centuries who decided to settle here.