By bus. Palma is a city with a complete public transport network, and buses are the best way to visit the city and other areas of the island. The EMT is the municipal authority responsible for managing the 31 bus lines that make up the network of routes across the city. If you are looking to visit other areas of Mallorca, this is handled by
Start your first day in Palma de Mallorca with a stroll and breakfast in Casco Antiguo of Palma, the historic Old Town. You can grab pastries and coffee from Can Joan de S’Aigo, one of Europe’s earliest ice cream makers and chocolatiers, at its 300-year old patisserie — make sure you order the house speciality, the creamy almond horchata.
Esdeveniments. Mallorca és coneguda com l’illa de la calma i, encara que és la destinació perfecta per relaxar-te i desconnectar del món, també tens l’oportunitat d’assistir als millors concerts, exposicions i esdeveniments relacionats amb l’art, la cultura o el lleure. Tot un ventall d’activitats i esdeveniments els 365 dies de
Pretty coastal village on the west coast of Mallorca. Deia is an idyllic village of green-shuttered, honey-coloured houses that has become a millionaires' hideaway in the shadow of the Teix mountain, part of the Serra de Tramuntana mountain range. Although it could have been just another pretty Mallorcan village in the west of Mallorca had
Sóller offers us its modernist buildings, its spectacular church, its always busy central square, its cobbled streets, its traditional stores and museums. And the tramway invites us to another unique trip to the Port. Traveling on a 1912 train from Palma de Mallorca to Soller is a unique experience in Mallorca: hop on and let yourself go. The
Palma in three days. A delightful getaway. The longer you stay, the more Palma’s essence will enthral you. Three days is enough to lose yourself (and that is what it is all about) in Palma’s old town, taste its traditional dishes and products, go to Palma Beach, lose track of time in the cathedral and the Palace of La Almudaina, discover
9- Discovering the Jewish Quarter of the city. Palma was an important medieval city and, as such, it had its own Jewish Quarter. In fact, the Jewish Quarter of Palma, known as "Call Maior", formed a kind of independent city which was also walled and had its own entrances. 10- Visiting the Arab Bath, one of the most emblematic monuments in Palma
Palma, on the southern tip of the island, is the seat of the autonomous government of the Balearic Islands, as well as the center for most of Majorca's hotels, restaurants, and nightclubs. The Moors constructed Palma in the style of a Casbah, or walled city. Its foundations are still visible, although obscured by the high-rise hotels that have
Saddle-shape Mallorca is more than five times the size of Menorca or Ibiza. The Sierra de Tramuntana, a dramatic mountain range soaring to nearly 5,000 feet, runs the length of its northwest coast
p2nBs.
palma de mallorca tourismus information