What to see?
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.