Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Spanien
Aktueller City Guide mit Kurzinfos, Reisen, Business und Kultur.
Überblick
Beach & Water Sports
History & Culture
Volcanic Landscapes
Long Stays & Digital Nomads
Geschichte
Kultur
Praktisches
Las Palmas de Gran Canaria is the kind of city that blurs the line between urban break and beach holiday. Playa de Las Canteras — a 3 km crescent of golden sand protected by a natural reef (La Barra) — sits right in the city, walkable from restaurants, shops and hotels. The reef creates calm, warm water on one side and a surf break on the other. Behind the beach, the Santa Catalina and Mesa y López districts offer the city's commercial life, while the Vegueta quarter — the original 15th-century colonial settlement — preserves cobblestone streets, the Cathedral of Santa Ana (begun 1497), the Casa de Colón museum (Christopher Columbus stayed here en route to the Americas), and the Canarian Museum. Between Vegueta and the beach, the Triana district serves as the shopping and cultural spine, with the art nouveau Pérez Galdós Theatre and Calle Mayor de Triana's pedestrianised boulevard. Las Palmas punches above its weight culturally: the CAAM contemporary art centre, the annual carnival (one of the largest in the world after Rio and Tenerife), and a live music scene influenced by Latin America, Africa and mainland Spain. Outside the city, Gran Canaria earns its nickname 'miniature continent' — the Maspalomas dunes resemble the Sahara, the mountainous interior around Roque Nublo is dramatically volcanic, the villages of Teror and Arucas preserve colonial architecture, and the west coast hides wild, undeveloped beaches. The climate is the real draw: average temperatures range from 18°C in winter to 26°C in summer, making Las Palmas one of Europe's premier winter-escape destinations, particularly popular with German, Scandinavian and British long-stay visitors and digital nomads.
Las Palmas de Gran Canaria entdecken
2 Vertretungen in dieser Stadt, nach Region gruppiert.