When visiting Barcelona, so many people rush off to explore the Gothic Quarter or get swept up in the colours of Park Güell. But one of my favourite ways to experience the city, especially for first-time visitors, is with a slow, curious wander through the Eixample. This elegant 19th-century district is Barcelona’s grand expansion, laid out in a perfect grid of wide boulevards and chamfered corners. And best of all, it’s also home to some of the city’s most jaw-dropping Modernista architecture. Walking here feels like stepping into a lucid dream. Mansions line the sidewalks like something half-grown, half-built, stone facades twisting and blooming as if the buildings themselves were plants pushing up through the pavement.
This self-guided walking tour follows that mosaic trail, from whimsical townhouses to noble palaces, from ornate lampposts to tiled storefronts still open for business. Some of these buildings are famous, postcard-familiar. Others are quietly tucked away, waiting for someone curious enough to notice. As you walk and explore, be sure to pop your head into the myriad peaceful coffee shops and tapas bars that catch your eye, it’s worth a look-see!

- History of the Eixample
- Design & Layout of Eixample
- Catalan Modernisme
- Map of Walking Tour
- Palau Macaya
- Casa Manuel Llopis Bofill
- Casa Jeroni Francesc Granell
- Casa Lamadrid
- Casa Josefa Villanueva
- Casa Jaume Forn
- Queviures Múrria
- Palau Ramon Montaner
- Casa Thomas
- Casa de les Punxes
- Casa Comalat
- Palau del Baró de Quadras
- Hotel Casa Fuster
- Block of Discord
- Casa Ramon Casas
- La Pedrera (Casa Milà)
- Casa Vídua Marfà
- Casa Batlló
- Casa Amatller
- Casa Lleó Morera
- Bancs-Fanals
- Casa Fargas
- Casa Dolors Calm
- Fundació Antoni Tàpies
- Farmàcia Jordi Bolòs Giralt
- Casa Queraltó


History of the Eixample
Back in the mid-1800s, Barcelona was suffocating. The whole city was still trapped inside its medieval stone walls, and by 1850, nearly 200,000 people were crammed into that tight space. That meant extreme overcrowding, worse than Paris or London at the time. With barely any air or sanitation, disease spread quickly and life expectancy dropped hard: down to just 36 years for the wealthy, and only 23 for workers! People were desperate for space to breathe, and in 1854, the government finally tore down the old fortifications.
That decision opened the door, literally, for the city to stretch out onto the empty plains beyond. A few years later, in 1859, a Catalan engineer named Ildefons Cerdà stepped in with a bold new vision. He proposed a completely different kind of city: open, geometric, and grounded in ideas about hygiene, equality, and sunlight. Not everyone loved his plan, especially since it was pushed through by the Spanish state, overruling a more decorative design that locals had voted for. But Cerdà’s vision stuck. He called it “urbanization,” and it laid the groundwork for the modern Barcelona we know today. Gridded streets, airy courtyards, big leafy boulevards, it all began with this radical idea to reform the city, one square block at a time.

Design & Layout of Eixample
What made Cerdà’s Eixample so distinctive is its signature grid, clean, rational, and almost obsessively thought-out. The blocks were originally designed as perfect squares, each about 113 meters on each side, separated by broad streets that were 20, 30, or even 60 meters wide. But the real twist? Cerdà shaved off the corners. Every block has a 45-degree chamfer, turning intersections into soft octagons. It wasn’t just for looks. These angled corners let more light and air flow through the city, made it easier for horse-drawn carriages (and later cars) to turn, and opened up visibility at crossings.

At the heart of his plan were two simple but radical ideas: equality and hygiene. He imagined each block as its own little ecosystem, where homes, shops, workshops, and green space all coexisted. No towering elites on one end and cramped slums on the other. Every block would have a central garden or courtyard open to the sky, bringing in fresh air, natural light, and a place for residents to gather. He even got specific about the trees, one every 8 meters, and preferably the hardy plane tree, which could handle the dusty city air. Buildings were originally capped at just 3 or 4 stories, and only meant to line two sides of each block. The rest was meant to breathe. Wide boulevards, open courtyards, and plenty of daylight, his dream was a city that felt equal, spacious, and full of life.

Catalan Modernisme
Cerdà gave Barcelona the bones. But it was the artists and architects of Catalan Modernisme who gave the city its unmistakable flair. Emerging in the late 19th century, right around the time Barcelona’s factories were booming and its bourgeoisie was growing bolder, Modernisme was Catalonia’s answer to Art Nouveau.These architects weren’t interested in following the old academic rulebooks. They wanted to create something original, a new art for a modern Catalonia. Their designs were alive with nature: twisted iron vines, stone flowers frozen mid-bloom, colourful tiles shimmering like butterfly wings. Curves replaced corners. Symmetry gave way to flow. And materials, iron, glass, ceramic, brick, were used not just structurally, but joyfully.



Map of Walking Tour
Palau Macaya
We start our tour at the far eastern quarter of the Exiample, at the Palau Macaya. At first glance, Palau Macaya‘s façade greets you with quiet elegance, soft Montjuïc limestone draped in delicately carved sgraffito, arabesques, and allegorical figures that seem to dance above the windows. It’s a palace wrapped in medieval reverie, yet there’s something so modern about its symmetry and crisp lines. You’ll probably notice the whimsical knight on a bicycle, a small delight hidden in plain sight that somehow captures both nostalgia and a forward-thinking spirit. The façade gently curves with the street, almost bowing to pedestrians, while elegant pilasters and balustrades guide your gaze upward to that graceful roofline.
As you stroll around the block, you start to appreciate how the building plays with light and shadow, the shallow reliefs catching the sunshine just so, creating a tapestry of texture that moves with the day. The wrought-iron balconies peek out like delicate balconies of lace, offering glimpses of the private world within. Even without going inside, you feel the building’s warmth and intelligence: a blend of refinement and innovation, anchored in Catalan identity but open and inviting to the world.
Casa Manuel Llopis Bofill
Make your way west along the Avenue Diagonal, but make a quick turn down the quiet Carrer de Bailèn towards #113, where you’ll see Casa Manuel Llopis Bofill. One of the most quietly striking aspects of Casa Manuel Llopis Bofill is how it leans, gracefully and unmistakably, into an aesthetic that feels almost distinctly Arabic. Moorish, even. You see it in the arches above the windows, the tiled turrets that crown the corner towers, and the way the whole structure seems more like something from Granada or Córdoba than the heart of Barcelona’s Eixample. There’s something softer, more ornamental at play here. Designed in 1902 by Antoni Maria Gallissà, he was drawing on Islamic art and architecture, not copying, but weaving those influences into the local fabric in a way that feels respectful and original. Despite being damaged during the Spanish Civil War, much of the original detail has been carefully restored.
Casa Jeroni Francesc Granell
Head over one street, to the Carrer de Girona, where you’ll find two of the most fabulous homes in the Eixample, the first being the Casa Jeroni Francesc Granell. This is the home of architect and stained-glass artist Jeroni Granell and it’s every bit as theatrical as you’d expect. Passing by you might not even notice the details right away, but take a moment to look closely and you’ll be amazed at what you see. A wide central bay window that gently bows out toward the street, draped in floral stucco, framed by soft green sgraffito, and topped with glasswork that seems to glow even on overcast days. Sgraffito is a decorative technique that’s all about revealing beauty through layers, literally. The name comes from the Italian “sgraffiare”, meaning to scratch.

The overall effect is delicate, romantic, almost a little wistful. The curved iron balconies feel like jewelry against the soft exterior, while the vines and blossoms carved into the plaster give it a kind of tender movement, as if the whole building is mid-exhale.

Casa Lamadrid
Just a few doors down, you’ll find the Casa Lamadrid. Casa Lamadrid, built in 1902 by Lluís Domènech i Montaner, is a perfect example of how a building doesn’t need to shout to be heard. Compared to some of Domènech’s more theatrical works, like the Palau de la Música or the Hospital de Sant Pau, this house might seem modest at first. But spend a little time with it, and it begins to reveal its layers. The façade, while relatively restrained, brings together many of the elements that defined the architect’s signature style: sculpted stonework, floral symbolism, and a deep sense of proportion and rhythm.

What makes this building truly sing is the ornamental crown that rises above it al, a sculptural flourish that seems to grow from the structure like ivy from a garden wall. It’s decorated with plant motifs that soften the building’s silhouette and connect it back to the organic inspiration that defines so much of Catalan Modernisme. Right in the center, nestled among the curling foliage, is a Gothic-style coat of arms, adding a heraldic, almost medieval touch. It’s a detail that speaks volumes, not just about the architect’s style, but about the era’s fascination with history, nature, and identity.
Casa Josefa Villanueva
Take a walk along the Carrer de Valencia, towards Casa Josefa Villanueva, designed by Juli M. Fossas and constructed between 1904 and 1909. A bay window, elegant and slightly theatrical, curves around the chamfered edge of the building like a balcony wrapped in stone lace. It’s one of those features that feels both sculptural and structural at once, like it grew out of the façade rather than being placed on it. What’s especially striking is the way the slender columns beneath the bay seem to echo organic forms. They don’t read like classical pillars. They’re more sinuous, more anatomical. There’s something vaguely skeletal about them, as if they were ribs or bones holding up a delicate skin of glass and stone. It’s subtle, but it gives the whole corner a slightly surreal edge, like nature and architecture are quietly negotiating with each other. In a neighbourhood known for its florid façades and showpiece balconies, this one stands apart, more introspective, more tactile.

Casa Jaume Forn
Tucked into a sunny corner between Carrer de València and Carrer de Roger de Llúria, Casa Jaume Forn is one of those buildings that stops you mid-step, less for its size (though it’s a big one) and more for its presence. Designed originally by Jeroni F. Granell i Manresa and completed later by Domènech i Boada when Jaume Forn became the owner, it stands today as a quiet icon of the Quadrat d’Or, the Eixample’s golden grid of Modernista marvels.

What draws the eye instantly are the stained glass bay windows that wrap around the building’s chamfered corners. They glow with colour and fine detail, even on overcast days, catching the light like jewelry strung across the façade. The leaded panels, most likely crafted by the legendary Taller Rigalt i Granell, are intricate and organic, full of floral flourishes and delicate patterning. They don’t just decorate the building; they transform it. From the street, the glass gives off the feeling of a living canvas, as if the building is watching the city through a lens tinted by art.

Queviures Múrria
Tucked into a busy corner of Carrer de Roger de Llúria, Queviures Múrria looks more like a perfectly preserved film set than a functioning shop. But step inside, and you’ll discover that it’s both. Originally opened in 1898 as a coffee roaster and rolled-wafer maker, this gem of a colmado (traditional grocery) still holds fast to its Modernista soul. The exterior is a feast for the eyes, fire-glazed stained glass signs from the 1920s shimmer above the windows, proudly advertising Anís del Mono and Codorníu in bold, romantic fonts. They’re reproductions of original poster designs by Ramon Casas, and they lend the storefront a theatrical quality, as if time stopped mid-scene.

Inside, the time-travel sensation deepens. The original mahogany cabinetry, old mechanical clock, marble counters, and delicate glass shelving all remain intact, lovingly preserved through generations. Even more special? You might still find Joan Múrria himself behind the counter, offering curated selections of cheeses, smoked fish, conserves, and wine with the kind of pride and care you rarely see in modern retail.

Palau Ramon Montaner
Just off Passeig de Gràcia, where Carrer de Mallorca meets Roger de Llúria, you’ll find one of the few surviving mansions from the Eixample’s early golden age: Palau Ramon de Montaner. It’s a grand, eclectic building with Modernista bones and a distinctly Italianate flair, a rare hybrid that sets it apart from the more organic, nature-drunk facades found elsewhere in the district. Construction began in 1889, shortly after the Universal Exhibition, under the architect Josep Domènech i Estapà, who was originally tasked with designing twin homes for the founders of the Montaner i Simón publishing house. But due to creative disagreements, Estapà left the project midway, and the commission was handed off to his nephew, none other than Lluís Domènech i Montaner, a rising star in the world of Catalan Modernisme. Rather than demolish what his uncle had started, Domènech i Montaner kept the structure intact and turned his attention to reimagining the decoration, both inside and out.

From the outside, it’s the richly adorned ceramic frieze that first catches the eye: a tapestry of glazed tiles, heraldic symbols, and botanical motifs, all shimmering in metallic tones under the deep eaves. The upper façade also bears a mosaic date, 1895, the year the work was completed, surrounded by sculpted flourishes that hint at the sumptuousness waiting behind the doors.



Casa Thomas
Casa Thomas, tucked along Carrer de Mallorca, is one of those buildings that catches your eye slowly, then refuses to let go. Designed in 1895 by Lluís Domènech i Montaner for the printer Josep Thomas, the house originally had just two storeys: a printing workshop on the ground floor and the Thomas family’s residence above. The façade is a symphony of detail. Cool, bluish tones ripple through floral stonework, neo-Gothic arches lift the windows, and if you look closely at the entrance, you’ll find carved reptilian figures crawling through the stone, one of Domènech i Montaner’s signature eccentric touches. His language of architecture is never just form, it’s narrative. Here, nature coils and blooms across the façade like it’s part of a larger, slower story unfolding in stone. Even after Francesc Guàrdia (his son-in-law) added three upper floors in 1912, raising the towers, extending balconies, and threading a gallery across the top, the overall composition holds together in a way that feels balanced, intentional, and still very much in tune with its original soul.

Casa Thomas is often called a compendium of Modernisme, and for good reason: sculpted stone galleries, wrought-iron balconies, delicate floral motifs, neo-Gothic flourishes, it’s all here, coexisting in quiet harmony. Though altered and restored over time (most notably in 1980 by architect Cristian Cirici, who won a National Restoration Award for his work), the spirit of the original design remains. It’s not just a pretty façade. It’s a record of ambition, imagination, and the lasting power of beauty.

Casa de les Punxes
Casa de les Punxes (also known as Casa Terradas) looks like it was plucked from a medieval storybook and dropped right onto Avinguda Diagonal, where it meets Carrer Rosselló and Carrer Bruc. Six sharp towers rise from the brick façade, giving it the nickname “House of Spikes”, and it lives up to the drama. In 1905, Josep Puig i Cadafalch, one of Catalan Modernisme’s greats, was commissioned to build a home for the three Terradas sisters: Àngela, Josefa, and Rosa. Rather than design three separate houses, he created a single structure with a unified façade and individual wings. The result is a Neo-Gothic fortress full of symbolism, invention, and flair.

Look closely and you’ll find more than beauty. Ceramic panels show Saint George slaying the dragon beneath the words, “Patron Saint of Catalonia, give us back our freedom.” Anagrams of the sisters’ initials circle the towers, and zodiac signs appear alongside floral carvings, pomegranates, and grapes. Every detail feels deliberate. Puig i Cadafalch didn’t work alone. He enlisted master artisans, Enric Monserdà, Ballarín, Amigó, and more, to bring the sculpted stone, stained glass, and wrought iron to life. Structurally, it was ahead of its time too: he replaced load-bearing walls with iron columns, creating wide open interiors, a radical move for 1905.


Casa Comalat
Further down the Avenue Diagonal, you’ll come upon the Casa Comalat. A building that feels like a hidden love letter to Gaudí. Designed by Salvador Valeri i Pupurull between 1909 and 1911, it’s one of the most original and playful examples of late Catalan Modernisme. While Gaudí himself had no hand in it, his influence is all over this place, from the flowing lines to the floral motifs to the fantastical surfaces that make the building feel alive. There are two façades, and they couldn’t be more different. The main face, on Avinguda Diagonal, is elegant and symmetrical. Sculpted stone, floral garlands, and a grand wrought iron doorway hint at Valeri’s careful eye for detail. At the top, a green-glazed ceramic turret shaped like a harlequin’s hat peeks out over a crown of sculpted balconies.

But swing around to Carrer de Còrsega, and the building suddenly lets loose. The back façade bulges outward like it’s exhaling, wrapped in undulating wooden galleries and covered in vibrant ceramic mosaics by Lluís Bru i Salelles. The curves here feel less refined and more rebellious, wild parabolic arches, warped lines, and organic forms that call to mind Gaudí’s Casa Batlló or La Pedrera, but with a slightly surreal twist. Commissioned by financier Joan Comalat Aleñà as a private residence, this was Valeri’s attempt to create a home where straight lines barely existed.


Palau del Baró de Quadras
Architect Josep Puig i Cadafalch was commissioned in 1900 to transform a simple residential block on Carrer Rosselló into something spectacular for the Baron of Quadras, now dubbed Palau Baró de Quadras. And wow, did he deliver. He reoriented the entrance toward Avinguda Diagonal, which was quickly becoming one of the city’s most prestigious boulevards. The façade here is a love letter to Northern European palaces: intricately carved stonework, sculpted busts of medieval figures, heraldic shields, and balconies that practically whisper of nobility. Sculptors Eusebi Arnau and Alfons Juyol brought the stone to life.

Since 2013, the palace has housed the Institut Ramon Llull, an organization dedicated to promoting the Catalan language and culture around the world. A point made clear by the large Catalan flag fluttering outside the windows, a bold, unmistakable marker of identity, pride, and purpose in the heart of the Eixample.

Hotel Casa Fuster
At the very top of Passeig de Gràcia, where the avenue opens into the Jardinets de Gràcia, stands a building that whispers instead of shouts. Casa Fuster, built between 1908 and 1911 by the celebrated Lluís Domènech i Montaner, is a masterclass in elegance and restraint. A more subtle take on modernisme. Pale. Poised. And profoundly detailed. It was commissioned by Mariano Fuster, a Mallorcan lawyer, as a gift for his wife, Consol Fabra i Puig. Her initials still appear carved into one of the facades. But this wasn’t some modest love letter. At the time, it was the most expensive private residence in Barcelona, thanks in large part to the lavish use of white marble and other rare materials.

Domènech i Montaner’s trademark elements are easy to spot: nature-inspired floral motifs, trilobed arches, robust columns set on red stone bases, and a central tower-like oriel window that anchors both façades. At the top, a line of French-style garrets adds a surprising and somewhat whimsical finish, something rarely seen in Catalan modernista buildings. For years, the building served a more practical purpose, housing the offices of ENHER, the city’s electric company. Poet Salvador Espriu once lived here too, and today the garden across the street bears his name. In the 1960s, the building nearly disappeared, slated for demolition to make way for a skyscraper. It was only after public outcry that Casa Fuster was saved, restored instead of erased. Today, Hotel Casa Fuster blends modern luxury with the soul of its historic design.

One of its most iconic spaces, the Café Vienès, has been brought back to life, formerly a gathering place for artists and thinkers, now hosting atmospheric jazz nights under original stained glass and carved ceilings.
Block of Discord
As we make our way down along Passasge de Gràcia, we are entering the Block of Discord (Illa de la Discòrdia in Catalan). It’s one of the most famous and eccentric stretches of architecture in the city. Why the name “Block of Discord”? It’s not about arguments. It’s about artistic rivalry. The name is a playful jab at the visual discord between the wildly different styles of three side-by-side Modernista masterpieces, each designed by a different prominent architect. Think of it like a flamboyant architectural face-off.

Casa Ramon Casas
Ramon Casas, painter, illustrator, and central figure of Catalan Modernisme, wasn’t just a celebrated artist. He was also part of Barcelona’s upper class, and like many of his contemporaries, he wanted to leave a mark on Passeig de Gràcia. In 1898, he commissioned architect Antoni Rovira i Rabassa, son of the notable urban planner Antoni Rovira i Trias, to design a home that would serve both as a residence and a working studio.

Located at number 96 on the promenade, just one building away from Gaudí’s La Pedrera, the Casa Casas-Carbó is a refined example of early Modernista architecture. With a carved stone façade, elegant sculptural details, and distinctive grandstands on the main floor, the building exudes a quiet sophistication. The iron-and-wood entrance door is particularly remarkable, and the decorative elements, ceramic, wrought iron, and sculpted stone, capture the essence of the movement’s love for craftsmanship and nature.


Today, the space has been transformed into the flagship store of Massimo Dutti, but its artistic legacy hasn’t been erased. The renovation carefully respected the building’s heritage, restoring mosaic floors, coffered ceilings, carved woodwork, and the magnificent marble staircase.

La Pedrera (Casa Milà)
La Pedrera, meaning “The Stone Quarry,” officially known as Casa Milà, sits at the corner of Passeig de Gràcia and Carrer de Provença. From the moment you see it, you realize this isn’t just another building. It’s a wave of undulating stone. A living, breathing sculpture that feels more like a mountain than a home. The facade is made entirely of rough, pale limestone. No flat surfaces. No right angles. It moves like fabric caught in a breeze. Windows are scattered irregularly across the stone, each framed with intricate wrought iron that twists and curls like seaweed or vines. These iron balconies, designed by Josep Maria Jujol, feel like nature gone wild in metal.

At street level, the grand entrance arches are massive and organic, almost like the hollowed trunks of ancient trees. Step back and look up, the building doesn’t rise so much as ripple. It looks alive. Like it was carved by water or grown from the earth rather than designed. On the roof, a forest of surreal chimneys and ventilation towers crowns the structure. They look like warriors or guardians sculpted in stone, frozen mid-step. Even from the sidewalk, you can see their otherworldly silhouettes.


Casa Vídua Marfà
One of the architectural highlights along Passeig de Gràcia is Casa Vídua Marfà, designed by architect Manuel Comas i Thos in 1901 and completed in 1905. This richly layered building stands at the corner of Passeig de Gràcia 66 and Carrer València, making the most of the chamfered intersection. Originally built as a residence, it rises five stories high and blends several historical styles, especially Romanesque and Gothic, while incorporating touches of Modernisme on the ground floor and within the staircase.
The building is now protected as a Cultural Asset of Local Interest. Its most eye-catching features include two decorative towers, balconies with vegetal capital columns, and a graceful Gothic-inspired loggia. On the ground level, arches carved in stone hint at Modernista influence, and inside, a grand staircase with stained glass and ironwork leads to what was once the main living space.

The old carriage entrance, accessed via the chamfered corner, is considered one of the most elegant in the area. Above it, a medieval-style gallery with semicircular arches and stained glass lends further distinction to the upper floor.
Commissioned by Emili Marfà i Martigas and his wife Isabel Palau i Vera, the building remained in the family before being repurposed. Today, it houses the Formatic Barna University School of Public Relations and Marketing, along with the School of Communication, Tourism and Business. Visitors are welcome inside, free of charge.

Casa Batlló
The exterior of Casa Batlló is pure fantasy in stone, glass, and ceramic. Designed by Antoni Gaudí and completed in 1906, it stands out even among the showiest buildings of Passeig de Gràcia. The façade ripples like water, undulating across five floors with a skin of colorful trencadís mosaic that shifts from blues to greens to gold, catching the light at different times of day like a living thing.

Its balconies resemble masks or bones, depending on how you look at them. Some say they look like the jaws of sea creatures or fragments of skulls. Others see Venetian masks, with their hollowed eyes and delicate iron railings. The windows on the main floor are especially striking, massive ovals framed in carved stone that curves like melted wax, supported by bone-like columns that seem more organic than architectural.



At the top, the roofline mimics the spine of a dragon, its arched back covered in iridescent ceramic tiles like scales. A small tower rises near one end, capped with a four-armed cross, perhaps the lance that slayed the dragon in the legend of Sant Jordi. This fairytale symbolism is intentional. The entire façade feels like a living storybook, somewhere between a coral reef and a dream.

Casa Amatller
Casa Amatller is one of the standout Modernisme buildings on Passeig de Gràcia in Barcelona. Designed by Josep Puig i Cadafalch between 1898 and 1900, it was transformed from an earlier 1875 structure into a personal residence for Antoni Amatller, a wealthy chocolatier and collector. Together with Gaudí’s Casa Batlló and Domènech i Montaner’s Casa Lleó Morera, it forms part of the Illa de la Discòrdia, or Block of Discord, named for the clashing styles of these three neighboring façades.


Puig i Cadafalch drew from a mix of architectural traditions to create something deeply personal and symbolic. He reinterpreted Romanesque and Catalan Gothic styles and added a stepped gable that recalls the medieval townhouses of northern Europe. The entire façade is a visual narrative, filled with sculpted details that reference Amatller’s life and passions, from almond branches (a nod to the family name) to figures representing industry, collecting, and the arts.



The building’s uppermost floor, with its unusual and eye-catching gable, was designed to house Amatller’s photography studio. It sits slightly set apart from the rest of the structure due to the chemicals used at the time, but it was also an artistic centerpiece. The staggered cornice, ornate windows, and sculptural frames all reflect Puig i Cadafalch’s attention to asymmetry, texture, and storytelling.

Casa Lleó Morera
Casa Lleó i Morera is one of the great landmarks of Barcelona’s Modernisme movement. Designed by the celebrated architect Lluís Domènech i Montaner, it sits at number 35 on Passeig de Gràcia, right on the corner with Carrer del Consell de Cent. Together with Casa Amatller by Puig i Cadafalch and Casa Batlló by Gaudí, it forms part of the Illa de la Discòrdia, a block known for its clashing architectural styles. Of the three, Casa Lleó i Morera is the only one that received the City of Barcelona’s artistic building award in 1906.

Casa Lleó i Morera represents a collaboration between many of the finest artists and artisans of the era. Sculptor Eusebi Arnau created the expressive stone figures, mosaicists Mario Maragliano and Lluís Brú laid intricate tilework, Antoni Rigalt designed the stained-glass windows, and Gaspar Homar contributed furniture and wood carvings. The result is a unified artistic vision, rich in detail and craftsmanship.
The façade is particularly elaborate. At the corner, a rounded grandstand rises vertically and culminates in a small domed shrine. The ground floor was originally adorned with graceful feminine sculptures that referenced modern technologies of the time, including the telephone and electricity. Some of these elements were lost during mid-century renovations, although a few were salvaged and now appear in the Dalí Theatre-Museum in Figueres.



Bancs-Fanals
Pere Falqués i Urpí, the municipal architect at the time, designed thirty-one of the now-iconic lamp-benches in 1906 to bring both light and artistic flair to the Passeig de Gràcia. Their ornate design was meant to reflect the grandeur and luxury of the surrounding architecture. Made from masonry and decorated in the trencadís mosaic technique so closely tied to Catalan modernism, these benches are topped by elegant wrought iron lampposts crafted by the Ballarín ironworks. With sweeping, whiplike curves, the lamps embody the fluid lines of Art Nouveau.
Though long attributed to Falqués, some still credit Gaudí with their design—likely a reflection of just how seamlessly they blend into the spirit of Modernisme. By the 1980s, many of the original benches had fallen into disrepair and were carefully restored by the city.

Casa Fargas
Casa Fargas, designed by architect Enric Sagnier in 1904, is a refined example of Catalan modernism that stands out for its elegant restraint. Located on Rambla de Catalunya, this residential building was commissioned by Dr. Miquel Fargas, a figure linked to the city’s wood trade, and reflects both the material and cultural richness of the era.

Unlike many of Sagnier’s more ornate creations, Casa Fargas embraces a more subdued style. Its most striking exterior features are the undulating bay windows framed in stone, which evoke a soft French Art Nouveau aesthetic. These windows, especially those on the main floor, are decorated with floral and symbolic carvings that echo the decorative language of Catalan modernism.

Casa Dolors Calm
Located on Rambla de Catalunya, Casa Dolors Calm was originally an existing building that got its full Modernista makeover from the architect Josep Vilaseca i Casanovas, the same mind behind the Arc de Triomf and the vibrant Casa Bruno Cuadros on La Rambla. His redesign gave the building not only its signature façade, but also an artistic flair that once extended to its interiors.
The centerpiece of Casa Dolors Calm is impossible to miss: a dramatic stretch of bay windows framed in exquisite wooden marquetry that dominates the entire main façade. This grandstand runs across five floors and is crafted with intricate cabinetmaking and polychrome stained glass, making it one of the building’s most prized features.

In contrast, the side sections of the façade feel almost secondary, flat in comparison and visually receding behind the vivid central projection. But look again and you’ll notice the scarlet red and sky blue sgraffito work that brightens these surfaces, each floor accented with a wrought iron balcony.


Fundació Antoni Tàpies
The Fundació Antoni Tàpies sits inside one of the earliest Modernista buildings in the Eixample, originally designed by Lluís Domènech i Montaner in the 1880s for the Montaner i Simón publishing house. The façade is a beautiful blend of red brick and iron, marked by graceful arches and narrow windows that stretch vertically across the structure. There’s something both industrial and ornate about it—functional yet undeniably decorative. This balance between practicality and artistic flourish reflects the spirit of Modernisme before Gaudí’s more flamboyant touch took over the city’s architectural scene.



Farmàcia Jordi Bolòs Giralt
The Farmàcia Jordi Bolòs Giralt is a charming example of Catalan Modernisme tucked into a quieter stretch of the Eixample. Its exterior features gracefully curved woodwork, stained glass signage, and a warm, earthy color palette that immediately sets it apart from more utilitarian storefronts. The name of the pharmacy appears not just on a sign but embedded in artistic glass panels above the door, blending beauty with purpose.
Inside, it still functions as a real pharmacy, but it feels more like stepping into a perfectly preserved piece of history. Wooden cabinets with glass-fronted drawers line the walls, filled with classic apothecary jars. A brass-trimmed counter and mirrored shelving reflect soft light, giving the whole space a warm, nostalgic glow. It’s a living museum of everyday life from over a century ago, where the artistry of the past still quietly shapes the present.
Casa Queraltó
Our final stop is Casa Queraltó, and one of those buildings that quietly stops you in your tracks. A grand corner residence, it stretches confidently across the junction of Rambla de Catalunya and Carrer de Mallorca, dressed in a soft pink sgraffito that gives the entire facade a gentle glow. Designed by Josep Plantada Artigas between 1906 and 1907, it channels the spirit of Modernisme with an elegant, restrained hand.
While some of its original flourishes, like the small rooftop temple and decorative pinnacles, have disappeared, the building still holds its own with striking semicircular bay windows framed by delicate arches and slender columns. There’s a lovely rhythm to its facade, a balance of boldness and detail. And for those who enjoy a bit of historical serendipity, this is also the birthplace of Teodoro Moscoso, the future U.S. ambassador and key figure in Puerto Rico’s mid-20th-century economic transformation.

Wandering through the Eixample, it’s easy to get lost in the big names and grand gestures. But it’s buildings like Casa Queraltó that remind you why Modernisme still stirs something in us. The curve of a window, the warmth of pink sgraffito catching the afternoon sun, the way ornament and architecture dance together, none of it shouts, yet all of it lingers. These streets hold more than history; they hold personality, memory, and quiet flair. Keep looking up!
Happy Travels, Adventurers!











Leave a Comment