shrinking the globe…..

Barcelona

After three days in Valencia, we boarded the train north to Barcelona — Spain’s second city and the capital of Catalonia. If you know anything about Catalonia, you know they consider themselves a bit separate from the rest of Spain. The food is different, the language has its own flavor, and the locals have a pride that’s distinctly their own.

Barcelona Sants station sign
Barcelona Sants — the main train station and our entry point into the city.

We checked into Le Méridien on Las Ramblas — perfectly situated in the middle of everything. Right across the street was Bar Lobo, which quickly became our regular spot. And just down the street was a breakfast place where a certain famous hot chocolate drink was invented — the kind of place you stumble into and then can’t stop going back to.

Las Ramblas tree-lined boulevard
Las Ramblas — the iconic tree-lined boulevard that runs from Plaça de Catalunya to the waterfront.

Las Ramblas is everything you’ve heard — a wide, tree-lined pedestrian boulevard packed with street performers, flower stands, cafés, and tourists. It runs from Plaça de Catalunya all the way down to the Columbus Monument at the harbor. Walking it at different times of day gives you completely different experiences.

La Boqueria market
La Boqueria — one of Europe’s most famous food markets, right off Las Ramblas.

La Boqueria market is a must. Fresh juices, jamón, seafood, pastries, and flavors from every corner of Spain. It’s touristy, sure, but the food is real and the energy is infectious.

Gothic Quarter narrow alley with bunting
The Gothic Quarter — narrow medieval streets, hidden plazas, and centuries of history around every corner.

The Gothic Quarter is where Barcelona shows its age — in the best way. Narrow medieval alleys open up to hidden plazas, and you can wander for hours without seeing the same street twice. The Barcelona Cathedral anchors the neighborhood with its towering Gothic facade.

Barcelona Cathedral in the Gothic Quarter
The Barcelona Cathedral — not to be confused with the Sagrada Familia, this Gothic masterpiece anchors the old city.

But the real showstopper — the reason most people come to Barcelona — is La Sagrada Familia. Gaudí’s unfinished masterpiece has been under construction since 1882, and it is unlike anything else on Earth.

La Sagrada Familia exterior, Nativity Facade
La Sagrada Familia — Gaudí’s unfinished masterpiece. After 140+ years of construction, it still takes your breath away.
Curt selfie at La Sagrada Familia
Had to get the selfie. You can see the Nativity Facade towering behind me.

The interior is where it really gets you. Gaudí designed the columns to branch like trees, and the stained glass throws color across the nave in a way that makes the whole space feel alive. Photos don’t do it justice. We took a prepaid taxi to get there — and I’m fairly sure we got overcharged, since the flat rate would have been much less than the running meter. Lesson learned.

Stained glass inside La Sagrada Familia
The stained glass inside the Sagrada Familia — warm tones on one side, cool blues on the other. Absolutely stunning.
Forest-like columns inside La Sagrada Familia
The interior columns branch like a forest canopy. Gaudí drew inspiration from nature, and it shows.
Port view from Montjuïc
The view from Montjuïc — Barcelona’s port, the city, and the Mediterranean all in one frame.
Barcelona skyline panoramic
Barcelona stretching out to the sea — a panoramic view that never gets old.

On our second day, our friends Stephanie and Jennifer arrived from San Francisco and joined us for the rest of the trip. They helped guide our culinary adventures through Barcelona — and believe me, having California foodies leading the charge through a city like this made a real difference. One standout was El Nacional on Passeig de Gràcia — a stunning restored 1889 building that houses four different restaurants and four bars under one grand roof. Seafood, meat, tapas, cocktails — all in this beautiful open space. It’s not one restaurant, it’s a curated collection of them, and the building itself is worth the visit.

Friends dining together in Barcelona
Dinner with Steph and Jenn — our San Francisco friends who made the food even better.
Group selfie in Barcelona
The four of us out on the town. Barcelona is better with friends.

I’m a soccer fan and a soccer coach, so FC Barcelona was non-negotiable. The museum at Camp Nou is impressive — decades of trophies, history, and the passion of a city that lives and breathes this sport.

FC Barcelona museum display
The FC Barcelona museum — a shrine to one of the greatest football clubs in the world.
Curt with FCB crest at Camp Nou
As a soccer fan and coach, this was a pilgrimage. Força Barça.

For those of you who watched Friends — yes, Mount Tibidabo is real. And it’s pretty cool. The views of Barcelona from up there are incredible, and there’s an old amusement park at the top that feels frozen in time.

Barcelona was everything I expected and more. A week was just enough to scratch the surface. After seven days of Gaudí, Gothic alleys, Boqueria juices, and FC Barcelona, we packed up and boarded the AVE for Madrid.