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Attractions

The Prado

Madrid's world-famous attraction is the 213-year-old Prado Museum, one of the world's greatest art galleries, with more than 7,000 paintings that include masterpieces by Fra Angelico, Botticelli, El Bosco, Titian, Rembrandt and Velazquez. The museum began as a Royal collection, which succeeding dynasties have added to. The collection naturally focuses on the Spanish masters, particularly Goya, whose exhibited works follow the development of his painting from the sun-soaked early scenes of joyful festivities to the grim madness characterising his ‘black period’. The Prado has few equals - whether you are an art lover or not.

Address: Paseo del Prado

Telephone: 91 330 2800

E-mail:museo.nacional@prado.mcu.es

Website:museoprado.mcu.es

Transport: Metro to Banco de España or Atocha; train to Atocha station; bus 9, 10, 14, 19, 27, 34, 37 or 45

Opening time: Tuesday to Sunday 9am to 8pm

Admission: €6; free for under-18s and over-65s; other concessions available. Free for all on Sundays from 9am to 7pm

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Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum

The second gallery in Madrid's 'golden triangle' of art museums is the Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza, housing the former private collection of the Thyssen family, which was bought by the city to enrich its fund of art treasures. The collection, in the restored 18th century Palacio de Villahermosa near the Prado, contains more than 800 paintings, sculptures, carvings and tapestries, ranging from primitive Flemish works to contemporary pieces. Among the highlights are works by Renoir, Durer and Van Eyck. The collection includes some major American works as well.

Address: Villahermosa Palace, Paseo del Prado 8

Telephone: 91 369 0151

Email:mtb@museothyssen.org

Website: www.museothyssen.org

Transport: Metro to Banco de España station. A variety of public buses also provide transport to the museum

Opening time: Tuesday to Sunday 10am to 7pm

Admission: €6 (permanent exhibition); concessions €4. Free for children under 12

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Reina Sofia National Art Centre Museum

The third of Madrid’s famed art galleries, the Reina Sofia, is dedicated to 20th century Spanish art, having been designed to give Spain a museum to equal France’s Pompidou Centre and London’s Tate Gallery. The museum was opened by Queen Sofia in 1986, and is housed in the former Hospital de San Carlos at Calle Santa Isabel 52. The artworks displayed here include those of Juan Gris, Salvador Dali, Joan Miro and Pablo Picasso. The star attraction of the museum is Picasso’s controversial Guernica, depicting the Nazi bombing of the Basque town in 1937 in support of Franco’s cause in the Spanish Civil War. Until 1980 this painting hung in New York’s Museum of Modern Art.

Address: Calle Santa Isabel 52

Telephone: 91 774 1000

Website:www.museoreinasofia.es

Opening time: Monday to Saturday 10am and 9pm, and on Sundays between 10am and 2.30pm. Closed on Tuesdays

Admission: €6; concessions available. Free on Saturdays from 2.30pm to 9pm and Sundays

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Royal Palace

The massive bright-white Royal Palace (Palacio Real) on the Plaza de Oriente in Madrid dates from 1734, when the 3,000-roomed royal residence was commissioned by Philip V. It was last called ‘home’ by the royal family in 1931 - the present king, Juan Carlos, lives in the more subdued Zarzuela Palace outside Madrid. Most of the rooms are now open to the public, and others are used for state business. English tours are run regularly, lasting about two hours, taking visitors to the reception room and state apartments, the impressive armoury and the royal pharmacy. The grandiose state apartments are filled with art treasures, antiques and opulent Roccoco décor that could even rival Versailles.

Address: Calle Bailén

Telephone: 91 454 8800

Website:www.patrimonionacional.es

Transport: Bus 3, 25, 39 and 148. Metro to Opera Station

Opening time: Monday to Saturday 9.30am to 5pm, and Sunday 9am to 2pm (October to March); Monday to Saturday 9am to 6pm, Sunday 9am to 3pm (April to September); Admission: €9, concessions available

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Plaza Mayor

Madrid’s famous central arcaded square dates from 1619; it was built by Philip III whose statue still stands in the centre of the cobbled expanse. In medieval times the Plaza de Arrabal, as it was then known, was the venue for numerous public spectacles, ranging from knights' tournaments and festivals to the burning of heretics at the stake. Today it remains a public gathering place, but the majority of people who congregate in the sidewalk cafes to sip sangria on summer nights are tourists, enjoying impromptu music performances and watching the passing parade.Goya’s Tomb The Panteon de Goya is situated in the Glorieta de San Antonio de la Florida and is known as Goya's Sistine Chapel. The artist decorated the dome and cupola of the little chapel with a fresco depicting the miracles of St Anthony, with the use of sponges, a project that took six weeks to complete. Mirrors have been placed in strategic places to provide better glimpses of the art. The chapel also contains the artist's tomb.

Telephone: 91 542 0722

Opening time: The chapel is open Tuesday to Friday 10am to 2pm, and 4pm to 8pm, and weekends 10am to 2pm;

Admission: €2

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Parque del Buen Retiro

Madrid's lush central park, one of many green spaces in the city, covers 350 acres (142 hectares) and was laid out originally as the private garden of Philip IV. The vast park features formal gardens, statuary, fountains, lakes, exhibition halls, children's playgrounds and outdoor cafes. Visitors can stroll among the trees, admire the rose garden, and take a boat ride on the lake. At weekends the park comes alive with buskers, clowns, fortune-tellers and sidewalk painters.

Opening time: Daily 6.30am to 10.30pm

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Flamenco at Corral de la Moreria

Renowned as the oldest and most famous tablao flamenco (flamenco show restaurant) in the world, the show is also listed as one of Madrid's top ten sights. The establishment draws kings and queens, international presidents, film stars, and well-known artists and writers who come to witness the nightly performances of top flamenco stars while receiving excellent service and dining on exquisite meals prepared by some of the best chefs in Madrid.

Address: Calle Moreria 17;

Telephone: 91 365 8446, 365 1137;

E-mail:web@corraldelamoreria.com

Website:www.corraldelamoreria.com

Transport: EMT 3 or 148, Metro to Opera or Sol stops;

Opening time: Open daily 8.30pm to 2am;

Admission: €29 per show, not including dinner

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