Calle pelayo 68 madrid

luciolé madrid

I want to receive by email 2 tips a week to get me out of the routine. We don’t bomb and you disappear whenever you want. We swear by our mother. I want to receive by email 2 tips a week to get me out of the routine. See terms of use.

Your grandmother doesn’t answer her cell phone at the drop of a hat. She hasn’t been able to pronounce Starbucks in a recognizable way either. But she hides some gadgets in her house that would solve the life of Steve Jobs himself. We discover the surprisingly trendy store that your grandmother could open: González & González.

do design spain

I want to receive by email 2 tips a week to get me out of the routine. We don’t bomb and you disappear whenever you want. We swear by our mother. I want to receive by email 2 tips a week to get me out of the routine. See terms of use.

Your grandmother doesn’t answer her cell phone at the drop of a hat. She hasn’t been able to pronounce Starbucks in a recognizable way either. But she hides some gadgets in her house that would solve the life of Steve Jobs himself. We discover the surprisingly trendy store that your grandmother could open: González & González.

despacio madrid

Not all of them are here, but here is a list of some of the must-see places whose visit is, of course, an experience in itself. Starting the tour on Fernando VI street and going down to San Marco street, Pelayo street awaits us!

Dalia Nahas together with her business partner Rabih Haddad, has created an authentic culinary and sensory experience around this restaurant where the customer is immersed in the most authentic Lebanon without leaving Madrid. A tribute to the cuisine, culture and heritage of this country from which we still have so much to learn.

Mónica García began with this hobby during the confinement of the past 2020 and it was after the end of this with the arrival of summer when she decided to turn fully into this project that she baptized as Lacreme. In it, cakes turned into sophisticakes in the purest style of French pastry shops or the time of Marie Antoinette, where pastel colors and flowers are presented as the ultimate attraction for the sweetest palates in the capital.

tienda mestizo

El Barrio de Chueca es un vibrante barrio del centro de Madrid y en las últimas dos décadas se ha convertido en el distrito más gay-friendly de la capital española. La calle Pelayo se encuentra en el corazón de esta zona, donde se pueden encontrar galerías de arte, tiendas de ropa, decoración de interiores, sex-shops, tratamientos de belleza y muchos más lugares de moda. Como destacó Matilde, la propietaria de la tienda de importaciones indias Aunty B: “Esta zona es como un pequeño Soho madrileño”.

En la esquina con la calle Fernando IV, esta sorprendente estructura construida hace más de un siglo es una joya del Art Nouveau. En la actualidad, el edificio alberga la Sociedad de Escritores y Editores de España. Por ello, lamentablemente, no se permite la entrada al público en general. Aun así, merece la pena ver el exterior. Todos los adornos realizados en hierro forman increíbles curvas que imitan el adorno de la naturaleza.

El menú de este popular lugar del barrio incluye toda la comida más tradicional de España, como tortillas, croquetas y patatas bravas. Perfecto para entrar en el ambiente español. La decoración exterior -no te pierdas los grafitis de Einstein- y el interior proporcionan un ambiente artístico que hace que la comida sea aún más sabrosa. Un buen consejo es que te des un capricho con el menú del día, que consiste en un aperitivo, un plato principal y un postre con bebida, por 12 euros (unos 14 dólares).