What to see?
A place of tapas par excellence, Calle Laurel (Laurel Street) is an essential visit for those who want to enjoy the gastronomic essence of the region. Tapas, pinchos and ‘raciones’ accompanied with good riojas make La Laurel stand out as an unforgettable experience.
The capital of La Rioja is more than just a setting for wine tastings, it is not just a place where you can enjoy one of the most renowned Spanish designations of origin: it is an Oenopolis, a city that lives by and for wine. To see for yourself, just visit the Bodegas de Logroño association member establishments.
The building of the Town Hall of Logroño is the work of Rafael Moneo, one of the best known and most valued current Spanish architects.
Good winegrowers bring the landscapes of their vineyards to the bottle and make us dream of those lands.
The Old Town of Logroño treasures the history of the birth and the memory of the development of the city.
The history of the Stone Bridge of Logroño is closely linked to the history of the city.
The current building of Bodegas Campo Viejo was designed in 2001 to celebrate the harmonious balance between oenology, architecture and sustainability.
The IES Práxedes Mateo Sagasta building or Sagasta High School, as it is known familiarly by the people of Logroño, islocated near to ESDIR (School of Arts and Design Superior of La Rioja), the first in the Glorieta del Doctor Zubía and the second in Avenida de la Paz, before reaching the City Hall.
Talking about restaurants in Logroño is something as spontaneous as the act of eating. Thanks to the number of good quality restaurants offered by the capital of La Rioja. The word culture has many meanings in the city of Logroño, and one of the most clearly recognisable is centred precisely on its cuisine.
The gradual transformation of Calle Portales probably started in the 15th century.
The Palace of the Marquis of Monesterio, which currently houses the main headquarters of the Social Security in Logroño, is an extraordinary example of Renaissance civil architecture in the central Plaza de San Bartolomé.
ESDIR, Higher School of Art and Design La Rioja is an official design teaching center with 130 years of experience.
The Casa de la Danza is located in the Old Quarter of Logroño, on Calle Ruavieja, with access from Calle de San Gregorio.
Bodegas y Viñedos Marqués de Vargas is the product of the work of four generations devoted to the production and commercialization of excellent La Rioja wines.
Bodegas Valoria is located just five kilometers from the center of Logroño, on the Camino de Santiago and very close to the La Grajera Natural Park and the Institutional Winery of the Autonomous Community of La Rioja.
The old La Beneficencia building, popularly known as “La Bene”, was built in 1887 in a neo-medieval style by the architect Jacinto Arregui.
Known as Paseo de las Cien Tiendas (Walk of the Hundred Shops) It is a pedestrian zone adjacent to the Espolón of Logroño.
Santa María de Palacio is one of the four churches in the Old Town of Logroño.
The Camino de Santiago enters the city of Logroño through Ruavieja street, where you can find the hermitage or chapel of San Gregorio, practically rebuilt in the same place where the previous one was.
The Ebro Park is the ‘green lung’ of the city. It runs along the right bank of the river with eight kilometers of gardens and an uninterrupted pedestrian route from the El Cubo park to the Iregua park.
The Provincial Historical Archive of La Rioja (AHPLR) has the mission of collecting, conserving, organizing, disseminating the centenary notarial and registry documents of the province, as well as those generated by the Delegated Administration of the State in the Autonomous Community in its phase intermediate and historical.
Ruavieja Street was important for wine production from the Middle Ages to the 19th century.
The Práxedes Mateo Sagasta bridge, popularly known as Puente de Sagasta or Logroño’s fourth bridge, is the most recent of the constructions over the Ebro river as it passes through the capital of La Rioja.
The calados are the old underground cellars that, together with wine presses and other wine infrastructures, were common in old town Logroño since the 16th century.
The origin of Bodegas Marqués de Murrieta is linked to the origin of Rioja wines.