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  • Sant Medir Festival

    Sant Medir Festival

    Every March, the children of Barcelona enjoy one of the "sweetest" festivals of the city. The streets and squares of the charming district of Gràcia become a festival of sweets, bands and horse carriages. This is the Sant Medir Festival and according to tradition originates from the Saint who lived in the year 303 in Barcelona under the Roman rule of Diocletian, who intensely persecuted Christians. According to legend, Sant Medir's beans grew immediately after they were planted and for this he was taken prisoner. A hermitage was built where the Saint lived to mark the starting point of the pilgrimage. In 1830, a baker from the district of Gràcia made a pilgrimage to the hermitage on his Saint's Day to thank the Saint for a honoured promise. Today, this pilgrimage has become a popular tradition with the participation of "colles" from the districts of Gràcia, Sarrià and Sants. Each year,

  • Santa Eulàlia Festival

    Santa Eulàlia Festival

    The Santa Eulàlia Festival, the winter festival of Barcelona, is for all the family. During these magical days, tribute is paid to the brave Laia, the girl who rebelled to defend her aims. For the city of Barcelona, this girl was a symbol of solidarity, in defence of justice and commitment to young people. Santa Eulàlia and la Mare de Déu de la Mercè are co-patron saints of Barcelona. To celebrate this festival, different activities are organized for all the family. You can't miss the giants, the processions or the firework street run, human towers, sardanas dancing and musical bands throughout different routes of the city, apart from other activities for both young and old.
    On 12th February, the Santa Eulàlia feast day, several events are held, such as raising the Penó de Santa Eulàlia (reproduction of an old banner of the city) on the balcony of City Hall, sardanas dancing, giants...

  • Jamboree

    Jamboree

    It dates back to over half a century and can boast that it offers live music 356 days a year. The Sala Jamboree is the Barcelona temple of jazz par excellence, where great legends and young promises of jazz have played. Figures like Bill Coleman, Kenny Drew, Chet Baker, Ponny Poindexter, Art Farmer, Lou Bennet, Stéphan Grappelli, Kenny Clarke, Cecil Taylor, Elvin Jones, Steve Grossman and Al FosGordon have all been on stage.

    All styles are represented, from vanguard to Dixieland passing through bop, fusion, vocal jazz, mainstream, nu-jazz, tango-jazz, flamenco jazz and Latin jazz, without forgetting other Afroamerican styles such as blues and gospel.

    This venue is a cultural benchmark of Barcelona, which won the Gold Medal of the city.

  • Pantalla Pavelló Film Series

    Pantalla Pavelló Film Series

    These summer nights in Barcelona fill once again with cinema through Pantalla Pavelló, a cycle projecting films directly onto the travertine of the Mies van der Rohe Pavilion. The built environment and its boundaries become a stage for reflection on architecture, the city, and its inhabitants. An experience inviting contemplation of the cities we desire and the society we wish to build.

    6/7 - Los Tarantos by Francesc Rovira-Beleta
    3/8 - Costa Brava (Family Album) by Marta Balletbò-Coll
    7/9 - Sis dies corrents by Bong Joon-ho

  • BCNegra 2026

    BCNegra 2026

    Barcelona will once again become the literary crime capital of Europe with a new edition of BCNegra. La Paloma, the Library Jaume Fuster and Mooby Bosque cinema will be this year the main stages venues. There, a select number of leading crime writers such as Anna Ballbona, Adolfo García Ortega, Claudia Piñeiro and Dominique Manotti, will take part in round tables and discussions that will enable the general public to get to know their favorite authors.

  • Carnival

    Carnival

    Carnival, a festivity based on the lunar calendar and eagerly anticipated by Catalans, always begins on a Thursday (Fat Thursday) and ends on the following Wednesday (Ash Wednesday). Carnival is synonymous with partying, bustling crowds, costumes, parades and so on. In short, it is a week given over to hedonism and having a good time being the forerunner to the period of fasting and deprivation represented by the Christian tradition of Lent.

    These days, beyond the excesses, Carnival is a light-hearted popular festival based around the crazy figure named El Rei Carnestoltes (The Carnival King). While carnival is celebrated in almost every town and village throughout Catalonia, the places that historically stand out for their particular traditions are Barcelona, Sitges, Vilanova i la Geltrú and Torelló. However, wherever you may be during the festivities, you will be able to try some of the delicious traditional Carnival dishes: the coca de llardons (flatbread with pancetta) or botifarra d'ou (pork sausage containing egg).

    Main Events:

    February 12th: Fat Thursday - Parade and Arribo.
    February 14th and 15th: Carnival parades in the neighborhoods.
    Fenruary 18th: Ash Wednesday - Burial of the Sardine.

  • Sant Jordi 2026

    Sant Jordi 2026

    This is one of the most keenly anticipated and widely celebrated Catalan public holidays. According to the traditional tale, Sant Jordi (Saint George) killed the dragon that used to live in Montblanc where it terrorized the local population, thus saving the king's daughter from certain death. Legend has it that a beautiful rose bush sprang up in the spot where the dragon's blood was spilled. From the 18th century onward, the Sant Jordi festival became widely identified as a Catalan 'fiesta' which these days arouses great popular, civic and cultural passion. On Sant Jordi's Day, lovers exchange a rose and a book and every town and city in Catalonia is filled with stalls set up to sell both.


  • Grec Festival de Barcelona

    Grec Festival de Barcelona

    The Grec Festival of Barcelona is one of the city's major cultural highlights of the summer, turning Barcelona each year into an open stage for contemporary performing arts. This year, the festival celebrates its 50th edition, marking half a century of consolidating itself as a leading platform for creation, innovation and cultural dialogue. With its epicentre at the Teatre Grec de Montjuïc, the festival presents a diverse programme including theatre, dance, music, circus and hybrid performances, featuring local, national and international creators.

    Grec champions contemporary creation, dialogue between disciplines and the reinterpretation of great classical narratives from a modern perspective. Beyond Montjuïc, the festival spreads across various venues and cultural spaces throughout the city, strengthening the connection between culture and place. With an open, critical and plural outlook, the Grec Festival invites audiences to experience Barcelona's summer nights through culture, reflection and shared emotion.

  • Barcelona Cultural District

    Barcelona Cultural District

    10 districts, 34 venues, five disciplines. The Barcelona Cultural District is a circuit of professional performances but also a program of artistic community project creation. Culture is brought to your doorstep but citizens themselves can also become active cultural agents. Music, theater, dance, circus and audiovisual displays by a wide variety of artists (professionals and amateurs alike) invade city spaces. Other free of charge activities also take place at the same time, such as workshops and talks.

  • Barcelona Obertura Ciutat de Clàssica

    Barcelona Obertura Ciutat de Clàssica

    This March, Barcelona becomes the epicentre of classical music with a new edition of the Ciutat de Clàssica festival. Organised by Barcelona Obertura, in collaboration with the Gran Teatre del Liceu, the Palau de la Música Catalana, and L'Auditori, this event offers unique concerts featuring renowned national and international performers on these prestigious stages.

    This edition will feature 25 large-scale concerts in the city's main auditoriums, alongside 27 free concerts performed by local talent in unique settings. A festival that blends tradition and innovation, bringing classical music to new audiences and transforming Barcelona into a grand musical stage.

    The programme also includes a wide range of free concerts in iconic venues across Barcelona, such as the Antiga Fàbrica Estrella Damm, Casa Batlló, Casa Seat, Biblioteca Jaume Fuster, Fundació Miró, Mirador Torre Glòries, Palau Güell, El Reial Monestir de Santa Maria de Pedralbes, and the Network of Civic Centres of Barcelona City Council, which once again collaborate with the festival.