The Gothic Quarter is, simultaneously, one of the most atmospheric medieval neighbourhoods in Europe and one of the easiest places to waste an entire afternoon eating bad paella and getting your phone stolen. The trick is knowing what to do that won’t be a waste of time. If you’ve already taken in the main sights and finished our complete walking tour, this next section is for those ready to look past the surface and explore what makes this neighbourhood truly distinct.

The main issue with the Gothic Quarter is its location. The Gothic Quarter sits right behind Las Ramblas. That proximity has done serious damage, the worst tourist-trap economics on that boulevard have crept in through every side street, and a lot of what looks like a charming local bar is, on closer inspection, serving €14 sangria and frozen, microwaved paella. But the bones of the neighbourhood are genuinely old, and the city that existed before the tourists arrived is still very much there, if you know where to look.

A quick geography note: A few places in this guide are technically in El Born or on the edge of El Raval. Purists might object, but they’re all within a five-minute walk of the Gothic Quarter’s centre, and for anyone navigating the city on foot, that distinction is largely academic.


Practical Notes on Pickpockets
Sadly, one of the worst places in Barcelona to be pickpocketed is in and around the Gothic Quarter. The highest-risk zones are Las Ramblas and its immediate side streets, packed squares like Plaça Reial on busy weekend afternoons, and anywhere near a tourist attraction where foot traffic slows, and people are looking up at buildings. The operators are professional and work in teams, one to distract, one to lift, and the most common methods are the bump near a landmark, the map-and-point approach, and the staged argument that pulls your attention for just long enough. So what can you do to prevent it? Get yourself a front-pocket spot for your phone, use a zip-close bag, and pay attention when someone bumps into you or approaches uninvited. You don’t need a money belt or a hidden wallet, just enough awareness not to be an obvious target. I am always on alert here, even after living here for months. Attention to your surroundings is key!

Map of the Gothic Quarter Hidden Gems
Go Before the City Wakes Up
If you do one thing differently in the Gothic Quarter, make it this: get up early and walk it before 8 am. The neighbourhood at dawn is a different place entirely. The streets are narrow enough that the rising sun only hits them at certain angles, low light cutting through gaps between buildings, catching the stone in a way that looks nothing like the flat midday glare. The cobblestones are still damp from the overnight street cleaning. The main squares are empty, and you can sometimes find streets so quiet you can hear your own footsteps.

The Gothic Quarter is also genuinely old, over 2,000 years of continuous occupation on some of these streets, and that age is easier to feel when it isn’t buried under noise and bodies. The Romans founded Barcino here around 10 BC as a modest administrative colony on a low hill between two rivers, and the city has been continuously inhabited ever since, through Visigoth rule in the fifth century, Moorish occupation in the eighth, and eventual incorporation into the Crown of Aragon that would make medieval Barcelona one of the most powerful trading cities in the Mediterranean. What makes the early morning walk remarkable is how much of that accumulated history is physically visible once the crowds clear. Sections of the original fourth-century Roman walls still rise to their full height on Carrer del Paradís and Plaça de Ramon Berenguer el Gran, their enormous stone blocks unmistakable beneath the medieval towers built directly on top of them.


Plaça de Sant Felip Neri
One of my favourite places to come early in the morning is Plaça de Sant Felip Neri. There is something about it at that hour, the tipuana trees still dark, the fountain audible from the alleyway before you even turn the corner, the cobblestones empty and faintly damp, that makes it one of the few places in Barcelona where you can actually be still.

The square has earned its quiet. In the medieval era, this isolated pocket of land sat just outside the Roman walls. It served as the burial ground for the city’s executioners, later becoming a place of devotion when its baroque church was built in 1752. Its defining tragedy came on January 30, 1938, during the Spanish Civil War, when an Italian bomb tore through the church basement, which was operating as a makeshift air raid shelter, killing forty-two people, the vast majority of them young children who had fled there as refugees. The physical evidence is still written into the stone; the entire lower facade of the church remains violently pitted and pockmarked by shrapnel, left unrepaired as a permanent, wordless record of what happened here.

If you’re like me and love a morning coffee, it’s best to grab one from the metro station to take with you, as most of the quarter is still closed this early in the morning. But by 9 am, the delivery trucks start arriving, and the spell starts to break. You’ll be glad to have come when you did!

What to See in the Gothic Quarter?
Ateneu Barcelonès
Behind an unremarkable stone facade on Carrer de la Canuda sits the Ateneu Barcelonès, a private cultural institution housed in a late eighteenth-century aristocratic mansion that has served as the intellectual engine of Catalonia since 1860. The building was extensively remodelled in 1906 by Modernista architect Josep Maria Jujol, a close collaborator of Antoni Gaudí, who injected a whimsical modernist sensibility into the severe neoclassical structure through an undulating glass-and-iron elevator shaft and delicate ironwork along the main staircase. The heart of the Ateneu is its magnificent library, which holds over 300,000 volumes, making it the largest private collection in Spain. This space features majestic, dark-wood galleries and ceiling frescoes painted by Francesc Pla, all looking out onto a silent, walled courtyard garden filled with orange trees, creeping ivy, and a central pond populated by a small family of tortoises.
Because the Ateneu operates as a private club for dues-paying members, you cannot simply walk past the front desk to wander the stacks. The most reliable method to visit yourself is booking an official guided architectural tour through their website ahead of time, usually offered on weekend mornings for around €10, which grants access to the restricted historic library and private halls. Slipping into this heavy, book-lined silence from the chaotic shopping frenzy of the adjacent Portal de l’Àngel is a jarring transition, revealing a rare space where the conversational culture of Barcelona’s nineteenth-century intelligentsia remains entirely intact.
Basílica de Santa Maria del Mar
If you want to understand medieval Barcelona, and you don’t want to wait in the long ticket lines at the Cathedral of the Holy Cross and Saint Eulàlia, just walk fifteen minutes just into El Born where you’ll find the Basílica de Santa Maria del Mar. Built between 1329 and 1383, the Basílica de Santa Maria del Mar stands as the world’s only surviving example of pure, unadulterated Catalan Gothic. Because it was completed in an astonishingly short fifty-five years, a blink of an eye by medieval standards, the architecture was never muddied by shifting centuries or competing artistic trends.
While the Barcelona Cathedral was the grand project of the monarchy and high clergy, Santa Maria del Mar belonged entirely to the neighborhood. It was funded and physically constructed by local shipbuilders, merchants, and dockworkers, known as bastaixos, who hauled massive stone blocks on their backs from the royal quarries on Montjuïc to the building site, a labor commemorated in the small bronze reliefs engraved on the main entrance doors. This democratic origin reflects heavily in the design; where the Cathedral features a traditional, dark layout with screened-off choir stalls blocking the center of the nave, Santa Maria del Mar opts for a radical spatial unity.
The interior consists of three naves supported by just four pairs of incredibly slender, octagonal stone pillars spaced forty-three feet apart, the widest spacing of any Gothic church in Europe, creating a space that feels less like a heavy stone fortress and more like a soaring hall of light. The starkness of the basilica’s interior today is actually the result of a historical accident. In July 1936, at the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War, anti-clerical rioters set the church on fire, burning it for eleven consecutive days and destroying the baroque main altar, the choir stalls, and decades of accumulated ornamentation. What remains is a building stripped down to its engineering bones, where faint black soot marks still stain the walls. This tragic emptying ultimately worked to the building’s advantage, amplifying the geometric perfection of the vaulting and allowing the soft, colored light filtering through the fourteenth-century stained glass to fill the room without obstruction. It remains a quiet, architecturally honest sanctuary that completely lacks the commercial hustle of the Cathedral, making it the definitive place to feel the true weight of Barcelona’s maritime past.
Casa de l’Ardiaca
Tucked directly adjacent to the bustling plaza of the Barcelona Cathedral, the Casa de l’Ardiaca (Archdeacon’s House) is one of the best-kept architectural secrets in the Gothic Quarter, offering completely free entry to its stunning ground-floor courtyard. Today the building houses the Historical Archive of the City, allowing visitors to walk right past the crowds and into a quiet, cloistered oasis where 12th-century Roman defensive walls merge seamlessly with 15th-century Gothic masonry and a Renaissance central fountain shaded by a single, tall palm tree. Before stepping inside, look closely at the exterior wall next to the main entrance on Carrer de Santa Llúcia to find the famous Modernista marble letterbox designed by Lluís Domènech i Montaner in 1902. It features a brilliant piece of carved architectural satire: three swallows representing the independent speed of justice, paired with a turtle representing the agonizingly slow reality of legal bureaucracy. It is a quick, culturally rich stop that delivers genuine medieval history without the ticket lines or commercial friction of the major monuments nearby.
Palau de la Música Catalana
Designed by Lluís Domènech i Montaner, one of the founding architects of Catalan Modernisme, and completed in 1908, the Palau de la Música Catalana has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1997. The concert hall is lit entirely by natural light, an inverted stained-glass dome pours colour across the hall in shifting tones depending on the time of day, every column is covered in mosaics, and every surface has been considered. By most reasonable measures, it’s one of the most extraordinary interiors in Europe, and it’s a working concert hall, not a roped-off monument.

There are two ways to experience it. The first is a guided or self-guided daytime tour running every morning, about 50 minutes, book online in advance, go on a sunny morning if you can, the light through the dome at that hour is the point. The second option is better: attend an actual concert. The acoustics are exceptional, the programme ranges from classical to jazz to Catalan folk, and seeing the hall full and lit for a performance is a different experience entirely from a daytime tour. Tickets start reasonably. Check the programme before you go and book something if anything looks interesting. Either way, don’t just admire the facade from the street and move on.

There is also a third option, which is to visit the public café and bar just inside. The space was originally designed as a gathering area for concertgoers and a rehearsal room for the local choir, and Domènech i Montaner did not scale back his architectural ambition for the lower level. You are still sitting beneath heavy, sweeping brick arches, exposed ironwork, and intricate floral ceramics. You can simply walk in, order an espresso or a glass of cava, and occupy a table in one of the most significant architectural spaces in the city.
The prices for food and drinks carry a slight premium for the location (which is standard for any major architectural site in Barcelona), but it remains a fraction of the cost of a formal tour. More importantly, it allows you to absorb the space at your own pace without a guide telling you exactly where to look.


Museu Frederic Marès
Most visitors who go to the Gothic Quarter, to see the famous Barcelona Cathedral, glance at the square, and move on, walking straight past the entrance to the Museu Frederic Marès in the courtyard of the former Royal Palace of the Counts of Barcelona, and that’s their loss, but it won’t be yours! Frederic Marès was a Catalan sculptor who lived from 1893 to 1991, ninety-nine years, almost all of them spent collecting. He donated everything to the city, and the result is one of the strangest and most absorbing museums in the old city.
The lower floors are serious: over a thousand years of Hispanic sculpture, heavy on medieval religious polychrome work, carved wooden Christs, painted Madonnas, saints in various states of suffering, and it rewards slow looking. But the real reason to go is upstairs, in what the museum calls the Collector’s Cabinet, where Marès kept everything else: fans, pipes, watches, scissors, clocks, toys, bicycles, old photographs, jewellery, combs, tens of thousands of objects from nineteenth-century daily life packed into room after room. It’s somewhere between a museum and the contents of an extremely organized attic, and it’s genuinely fascinating.
Palau Güell
The Sagrada Família and Casa Batlló are the Gaudi locations that tend to pull the crowds, which means Palau Güell, two minutes from the dreaded Las Ramblas, gets a fraction of the foot traffic it deserves. Built between 1886 and 1890 for the industrialist Eusebi Güell, it was Gaudí’s first major residential commission, and the place where you can watch him figure out the architectural language he’d spend the rest of his career refining. For a complete guide to the palau, read out post here!


The facade gives little away, dark stone, deliberate restraint. Inside is a different story: mushroom-shaped columns in the basement stables, stained glass in the dining rooms, and a central hall that climbs into a dome perforated with small openings that scatter light across the room. The roof is the thing people remember longest, chimneys covered in ceramic mosaic that Gaudí turned into sculpture, an idea he’d return to on both Casa Batlló and La Pedrera.



Where to Drink
Finding a decent drink in the Gothic Quarter requires active avoidance of the main squares. The neighborhood is notoriously crowded with overpriced sangria and manufactured nightlife, but it still supports a tight network of historic vermouth bars and serious cocktail rooms. You just have to be willing to walk down the narrowest alleys and push open the right heavy wooden doors to find them.
Els 4 Gats
Built in 1897 and housed inside Casa Martí, a building by modernist architect Josep Puig i Cadafalch, Els 4 Gats was the meeting place for Barcelona’s turn-of-the-century artistic and intellectual scene. Picasso held his first public exhibition here; Gaudí, Rusiñol, and Casas were regulars. Come for a drink rather than a meal. The interior is genuinely beautiful, with high ceilings, stained glass, dark wood, and reproduction murals by Ramon Casas, and that’s what the space is actually for.

Bar del Pi
Bar del Pi is one of those old institutions where you can sit outside without paying through the nose for the privilege. The square it sits on is one of the more pleasant open spaces in the quarter on a weekend, when local artists set up stalls around the edges. Order vermouth and watch the square.

Can Cisa/Bar Brutal
Can Cisa is a meticulously restored century-old bodega that still sells bulk vermouth from the barrel. But if you push through to the back (or enter via the alley on Carrer de Barra de Ferro) and you emerge into Bar Brutal, a loud, neon-lit tavern where the energy is raw and unapologetic. The wine list is massive, boasting over 300 strictly organic and biodynamic bottles from global producers, and because the kitchen leans into seasonal availability, the menu shifts too rapidly for printed pages.
La Vinya del Senyor
Sitting on the tiny outdoor terrace of La Vinya del Senyor feels like holding a front-row ticket to the daily theater of Barcelona. Positioned directly in the shadow of Santa Maria del Mar’s towering stone façade, this diminutive wine bar has very little indoor seating, meaning the real draw is the cluster of small tables spilled out onto the cobblestones of the Plaça de Santa Maria. The wine list is remarkably serious for such a high-traffic spot, offering a rotating roster of over three hundred labels that highlights independent Spanish winemakers, deep-cut sherries, and exceptional regional Priorats.
Because the terrace looks directly out at the church’s main entrance, you can nurse a glass of dry, mineral-forward white wine from Penedès while watching a steady stream of wedding processions, locals walking their dogs, and travelers pausing to look up at the fourteenth-century masonry. It is a slow-paced, slightly cramped vantage point that rewards patience, making it the ideal spot to finish an afternoon of walking just as the stone of the basilica begins to catch the late afternoon sun.
Where to Get Your Coffee
All over the Gothic Quarter, you’ll find places called granjas. Granja translates as ‘farm,’ which makes no sense until you know the history: these were urban dairies, originally built around cattle milked in the basements of city-centre buildings. While the cattle moved out, the shops remained and turned into traditional, typically no frills breakfast cafes serving thick hot chocolate, hand-whipped cream, and best of all, fresh churros. Granja M. Viader is the oldest of them, open since 1870 and now in its fourth generation of family ownership. The walls still carry old Cacaolat memorabilia, the hot chocolate milk drink invented here in 1931 by Marc Viader Bas, who’d tasted something similar at a wedding in Budapest and came home and made his own version.

Order the thick hot chocolate with churros, or the suïs, hot chocolate topped with whipped cream. The crema catalana uses a recipe over a hundred years old, and the mel i mató, fresh curd cheese with honey, is the kind of thing that reminds you Catalan food has its own identity entirely separate from the rest of Spain. Go in the morning or mid-afternoon. Avoid the post-lunch rush, and don’t arrive close to closing time; they’ll turn you away at the door.


Granja Dulcinea
Founded in 1941 by Juan Mach and Elvira Farràs, Granja Dulcinea on Carrer d’en Petritxol stands as a living, unpretentious relic of Barcelona’s mid-century daily life. Long before the surrounding Gothic Quarter alleys were overtaken by global retail chains, local families and artists—including Salvador Dalí, gathered in this dark, wood-paneled room for the afternoon merienda, the traditional post-siesta snack. Operating as a true granja (a dairy shop turned café), the space stubbornly resists modern design trends, keeping its low timber-beamed ceilings, simple wooden tables, and a small army of career servers who move with brisk, no-frills efficiency.
The menu remains anchored to the same dairy-centric staples that made it famous eight decades ago, most notably the suiza, a cup of incredibly thick, bittersweet hot chocolate buried under a massive mountain of unsweetened, house-whipped heavy cream. This dense chocolate coats the back of a spoon and serves as the perfect dipping vehicle for their fresh, slightly salty churros, which arrive hot and ungreasy straight from the fryer.
COTO COFFEE + COLMADO
Positioned on the corner of Baixada de Caçador, just a short step from the historic Plaça de Sant Just, COTO COFFEE + COLMADO serves as a striking intersection of third-wave espresso culture and the traditional Catalan colmado (grocery store). The small, meticulously designed interior strips away the typical cluttered rustic aesthetic of older Gothic Quarter establishments, opting instead for a minimalist, mid-century look with warm wood panelling, clean lines, and large glass windows that flood the tight space with morning light.
The coffee program is handled with precise, scientific care, utilizing beans sourced from independent, small-batch roasters across Spain and Europe to ensure a rotating selection of origins that change with the harvest seasons. Each drink, whether it is a perfectly balanced flat white, a crisp cold brew, or a standard double espresso, is weighed, timed, and pulled with mechanical consistency by a staff of deeply knowledgeable baristas who are genuinely happy to explain the flavour notes of the day’s hopper.
Mesón del Cafè 1909
In a narrow slot on Carrer de la Llibreteria, Mesón del Cafè is a tiny, time-warped sanctuary that has been fueling Barcelona with caffeine since 1909. As one of the oldest continuously operating coffee houses in the city, the space is an architectural miniature of early twentieth-century modernist design, packed with dark, polished woodwork, vintage mirrors, and a heavily patinated zinc counter that has survived generations of local politicians and shopkeepers. The physical footprint is incredibly tight, essentially a narrow hallway where patrons stand elbow-to-elbow along the bar, meaning you do not come here to spread out with a laptop, but rather to participate in a fast-paced, century-old neighbourhood ritual.
Where to Eat in the Gothic Quarter
El Chigre 1769
The name El Chigre 1769 comes from the Asturian word for a cider tavern, a democratic institution, as the menu puts it, where rich and poor meet as equals. The restaurant sits between two culinary traditions, Catalan and Asturian, and takes both seriously. The focus is on fresh seafood and seasonal produce, and the kitchen uses an asador grill that runs through most of the menu. The standout dishes for me are the black rice with red prawns, a smaller version of a typical large paella and the grilled octopus.



El Xampanyet
El Xampanyet is a family-owned cava bar running since the 1930s, and the food is the real reason to go, traditional tapas, simply prepared, but the flavours are noticeably better than the same dishes served two streets over. The house cava comes in litre bottles and pairs well with whatever you order, but don’t treat it as a drinks stop with snacks on the side. Eat properly here. The room is small, tiled, and loud, and it fills fast. They don’t take reservations, so arrive exactly when they open. If you want a table, you’re waiting, which most people do, because it’s worth it. If the queue looks discouraging, it moves faster than it looks.




Bar del Pla
Bar del Pla is a narrow, raucous tapas institution that captures the fast-paced energy of Barcelona’s classic bar culture. The room is tight, loud, and lined with high vaulted ceilings and a zinc bar where bartenders move with brisk efficiency. While the kitchen turns out flawless Catalan staples like properly charred pa amb tomàquet (tomato bread) and rich squid-ink croquettes, the real draws are the clever chalkboard specials, like the crispy beef tail with foie gras, and an exceptional selection of natural wines. It is intensely popular and tightly packed, so booking a table ahead of time is essential if you want to avoid a long wait on the pavement.

La Alcoba Azul
Hidden within the narrow stone corridors of the Call, Barcelona’s historic Jewish Quarter, La Alcoba Azul feels like a low-lit medieval tavern, complete with exposed ancient stone walls, heavy timber beams, and antique curiosities. While the atmosphere is distinctly old-world, the draw here is the kitchen’s signature pinchos—interpreted not as tiny toothpick skewers, but as massive, open-faced tostadas built on thick slices of crusty, artisanal bread. Standouts include the rich melted goat cheese with fig jam and walnuts, and the smoked sardine layered over fresh grated tomato. Paired with a glass of house vermouth or a heavy regional red, it is an atmospheric, slow-paced sanctuary perfect for escaping the crowded main thoroughfares of the Gothic Quarter.
Bistrot Levante
Situated on the quiet, stone-walled Plaça de Manuel Ribé deep within the Jewish Quarter, Bistrot Levante offers a distinct culinary pivot from the neighbourhood’s standard circuit of fried tapas. The minimalist space trades traditional Catalan rusticity for a bright, contemporary dining room defined by whitewashed brick, polished concrete floors, and understated mid-century furniture. The kitchen focuses on a clever, modern execution of Levantine and Mediterranean plates, building a sharing menu that relies heavily on seasonal produce and complex spice profiles. The clear standouts include a whole roasted cauliflower charred to a deep bronze over a velvety bed of tahini and pomegranate seeds, a silk-textured hummus topped with deeply savoury spiced lamb, and smoky charred eggplant dressed with rich labneh and molasses. This forward-thinking food pairs naturally with a beverage program focused entirely on low-intervention and natural wines, showcasing small-scale independent producers from across Catalonia and France. Because the indoor dining area contains only a handful of tables, an advance reservation is highly recommended for dinner, though an early afternoon arrival often yields a coveted outdoor table on the quiet plaza to watch the shadows lengthen across the medieval masonry over a plate of flatbread and a glass of chilled orange wine.
Where to Shop
Mercat Gòtic
Every Thursday, the wide stone plaza directly in front of the Barcelona Cathedral sheds its usual tourist transit character and transforms into the Mercat Gòtic, the neighborhood’s long-running open-air antique and flea market. Operating roughly from 9:00 AM until the sun goes down, though rainy days or heavy August heat can thin the stalls early, this market is a specialized hunting ground for collectors rather than a standard souvenir bazaar. The rows of folding tables are packed with items dug from the attics of Catalan estates: silver pocket watches, mid-century fountain pens, vintage cameras, yellowed postcards from the Spanish Civil War, and stacks of old vinyl records. Because it sits in a high-foot-traffic zone, prices skew slightly higher than at the sprawling Encants market near Plaça de les Glòries, but haggling is common practice if you possess the patience and a bit of Spanish. It provides an excellent excuse to slow your pace through the Gothic Quarter, allowing you to sift through the physical fragments of Barcelona’s domestic history while the cathedral bells mark the hours overhead.
Cereria Subirà
Founded in 1761, Cereria Subirà is the oldest shop in Barcelona that sells candles, specifically handmade candles in every shape, size, and colour, made to traditional methods and supplied to places including the Sagrada Família. The reason to go in is the interior: the shop moved to its current space in 1847, originally designed as a luxury clothing store, and the original baroque staircase is still there, flanked by two iron sculptures of women holding gas lamps. The wooden shelves, the cabinets, the balustrade, all original. You’re looking at a room that has been more or less unchanged for 175 years, and you don’t have to buy anything to be glad you went in. That said, the candles are genuinely good and make an unusual souvenir that won’t break in your bag.




Artesanat
Tacky souvenir shops are far too abundant in the Gothic Quarter, but everyone loves to bring something home from their travels, so it’s genuinely good news that Artesanat exists. Yes, it sells souvenirs, and you’ll spot a few things you’ve seen elsewhere, but the selection is broader and more considered than most: magnets, Gaudí-inspired decorative pieces, kitchenware, ceramics, and jewellery, all at reasonable prices.




YUMI
If your afternoon walk down Carrer de Petritxol takes you past the historic chocolate shops, a small pause at number 18 reveals Yümi, a contemporary jewelry boutique that offers a clean, minimalist contrast to the heavy antique shops of the Gothic Quarter. While the store displays an array of delicate, modern metalwork, the true draw here is its signature collection of glass jewelry, handcrafted directly in Barcelona using traditional flame-working and glassblowing techniques. The space trades the imposing velvet trays of older jewellers for a bright, gallery-like interior defined by clean white walls and soft geometric lighting, allowing the vibrant clarity of the glass to take center stage. Each piece, from translucent, organic-shaped rings to drop earrings that catch the light like suspended water, is individual and made without commercial moulds, using lightweight yet highly durable borosilicate glass.



The Gothic Quarter will always have its tourist traps, and it will always have its crowds. That’s not going to change. But the neighbourhood is old enough and layered enough that none of that really touches what’s underneath. The places in this guide won’t appear on the first page of search results, and most of them won’t have a queue outside. What they have instead is the thing that makes a city worth knowing: a sense that you are somewhere specific, with its own history and its own character, rather than somewhere that has been smoothed down for easy consumption. That’s what the Gothic Quarter still offers, if you’re willing to walk past the sangria signs and look for it.













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