Barcelona & the Costa

Journeys

Barcelona & the Costa

Barcelona's Eixample stays, a coastal breeze by train.

At 7 a.m., Eixample’s streets belong to the bakers and the street-sweepers. By noon, they belong to everyone else. Barcelona rewards those who show up early and stay late. This itinerary is built around that idea. You move slowly, eat well, and let the city set the pace. Summer here stretches the day generously. Dinner starts at nine. Afternoons blur pleasantly into early evening. Alp Travel Co. routes you through the neighbourhoods locals actually use. You begin in Eixample, where the grid itself is an architectural argument. Then you board the R2 Sud line south toward the Costa Daurada. The Mediterranean appears between tunnel exits, flat and silver-blue. Your mornings open at the Sagrada Família before the tour groups arrive. Each stop on this route has a reason. Nothing is included just to fill a schedule.

Barcelona's Eixample grid gives you the mornings; the R2 Sud line puts the coast forty minutes south.

How it unfolds

FLY IN
Flight Fly into Barcelona–El Prat (BCN); 35 minutes by taxi or Aerobus to Plaça de Catalunya, ten minutes from the hotel on foot.
DAYS 1–4

Barcelona, Eixample — Casa Fuster

Casa Fuster occupies a 1908 Domènech i Montaner building at the corner of Passeig de Gràcia and Carrer de Gràcia, where the Eixample grid meets the village squares of Gràcia. The Café Vienès on the ground floor is the right place to anchor a morning before the city moves. The hotel’s position makes every walk efficient: south for the Block of Discord, north for local squares, east for El Born and the market.

  • Sagrada Família nave at opening · 2.5h Book the 9am entry slot; the nave light through the stained glass is different before the tour groups arrive. Add tower access for the rooftop view over the Eixample grid.
  • Block of Discord walking survey, Passeig de Gràcia · 1.5h Casa Batlló interior is worth the entry cost. Casa Lleó Morera has the best tile detail at street level and is the least-visited of the three.
  • El Born and Sant Pere neighbourhood walk · 2h Mercat de Santa Caterina opens at 7:30am; arrive early for the market before tourist traffic builds. The Basílica de Santa Maria del Mar is two minutes further and almost always quiet.
  • Vermouth hour in the Gràcia squares · 1.5h Plaça de la Vila de Gràcia and Plaça del Sol are the local anchors. Walk south to Sant Antoni for Bar Calders on Carrer del Parlament if you want a longer afternoon.
  • Nine o'clock dinner in Eixample · 2.5h Kitchens open at 9pm; book for 9:30pm to eat when the room is full and the pace is right. The Esquerra de l'Eixample (left side of the grid) has the less tourist-facing restaurants.
Train · 42m R2 Sud line from Barcelona Passeig de Gràcia or Sants to Sitges; trains run every 30 minutes, the station is a five-minute walk from the hotel.
DAY 5

Sitges — Hotel Platjador

Hotel Platjador sits directly on the Passeig de la Ribera promenade, its sea-facing rooms looking over Platja de la Fragata and the curve of the bay. Sitges is twenty minutes end to end on foot; the old quarter clusters around the church of Sant Bartomeu i Santa Tecla on the headland above the water. Come on a weeknight in shoulder season and the restaurants give you their full attention.

  • Morning swim at Platja de la Fragata · 1.5h
  • Old quarter walk: Sant Bartomeu headland and Carrer de l'Església · 1.5h The church terrace gives the best view back over the beach curve and the town rooftops.
  • Seafood lunch on the promenade · 1.5h
  • Evening wine at a cava bar in the old town · 1.5h Penedès wine country is twenty minutes inland; local restaurants and bars pour it by the glass at sensible prices.
Train · 55m Regional train from Sitges toward Tarragona via Vilanova i la Geltrú; total journey around 55 minutes, the amphitheatre is visible from the platform approach.
DAY 6

Tarragona — Hotel Imperial Tarraco

Hotel Imperial Tarraco stands on the Passeig Palmeres directly above the Roman amphitheatre, the sea spread below the rooms on the Mediterranean-facing side. Tarragona’s old city is UNESCO-listed; the Roman walls date from the second century BC and a section can be walked in the morning before the heat builds. Dinner on the Rambla Nova is unhurried — this is a working Catalan city that does not perform for visitors.

  • Roman amphitheatre (Amfiteatre Romà) at opening · 1.5h Arrive at opening; the light on the stone is best before 11am, and the upper-tier sea view is the reason to be here.
  • Passeig Arqueològic: walk the Roman walls circuit · 1.5h
  • Tarragona Cathedral and cloister · 1.5h The Romanesque-Gothic cloister is less visited than the main nave; give it twenty minutes — the carved capitals are specific and worth examining closely.
  • Dinner on Rambla Nova · 2h Kitchens open at 9pm. The side streets off the Rambla — particularly Carrer de les Coques — have the better-value restaurants that the promenade tables do not.

Destination

Explore the place

Full destination guide →

Europe

Spain

The food alone is a reason to go — the architecture makes it inarguable.

BEST APRIL–JUNE AND SEPTEMBER–OCTOBER ARE THE CORRECT WINDOWS • VISA: SCHENGEN

More journeys

Barcelona & the Costa, designed around you.

This is a starting point. Tell us your dates, who is coming, and what the trip should feel like.

Plan this journey → All journeys