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News
from: Tourist Office of Spain (New York)
www.okspain.org
Source: Pilar Vico, Meredith Pillon
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LEFT:
Pelicans in Valencia wait for America's Cup yachts to arrive. |
Valencia, Spain will host America's Cup this summer
Sailing Race Returns to Europe after 156 Years
Valencia, SPAIN – To welcome the competitors for the America’s Cup in 2007,
Valencia is opening itself to the sea. For the first time in more than 150 years
– from June 23 to July 7, 2007 – Europe will host sailing’s most prestigious
event. Aficionados from around the world – some 6 million are expected – will
flock to this sunny city on Spain’s Mediterranean to watch the world’s best
yachtsmen from 10 countries battle it out as the Swiss Alinghi team defends its
title against 11 other teams. Officials are predicting the America’s Cup will
create 10,000 jobs and generate $1.5 billion for the Spanish region’s economy.
In 1851 Queen Victoria watched the last competition in Europe as the yacht
America representing the New York Yacht Club beat 15 British vessels racing
around the Isle of Wight. Since then, America’s Cup races have only been held in
Britain, the U.S., Australia and New Zealand. Reliable wind conditions,
year-round temperate weather and the promise of a race that will bring
spectators closer to the sailing action were key factors in convincing officials
that Valencia would be the best venue. Preceding the America’s Cup April 3 to 7
is the Louis Vuitton Act 13 Fleet Race and the Louis Vuitton Cup, April 16 to
June 12. The winner of the final Act goes up against the Alinghi team.
Three years ago, Valencia began an ambitious urban planning program with a
view to creating one of the top ports in the Mediterranean. One of the major
projects has been the creation of a new urban area, the Balcón al Mar, which
integrates the city with the port, marina and beach areas. Valencia has spent
$637.5 million revitalizing the waterfront alone, and by next year the inner
harbor and commercial port will be transformed into a state-of-the-art marina –
or several of them.
In the center of the inner harbor will be the mega yacht marina for vessels
larger than 98 feet. A 1,968-foot channel has been opened to allow the racers
and their boats direct access from their bases to the sea. A new breakwater
provides marinas on either side of the channel with mooring for 700 sailing
vessels.
At the entrance to the canal sits the emblematic Sails and Winds building,
the Foredeck & Owner’s Club designed by David Chipperfield and Fermín Vázquez.
Offering panoramic views of the inner harbor, the $45.9 million building will
have six restaurants, 20 clubs, bars and other entertainment venues – all
providing privileged bird’s eye views of the races.
Lying alongside the channel is the 34-acre America’s Cup Park, where 600,000
sailing enthusiasts will follow the competition on giant TV screens. Here, more
restaurants and entertainment venues will be joined to the lower seafront
promenade by ramps leading down to Malvarrosa Beach and the mile-long,
palm-lined Paseo Maritimo.
By the start of the America’s Cup, the city will have a new metro line
connecting the port with the airport. About US $58 million is being spent on the
airport including a new terminal and an extension of the runway. The new Central
Station will eventually accommodate the AVE, the high-speed train connecting
Valencia to all the major cities in Spain. Part of the city’s two main arteries
that lead to the station are being buried underground while above, a 74-acre
park – the largest green area in the city – is being created. Cabecera Park will
have: a Mediterranean river forest with a huge five-acre lake; Bioparc, a
zoological park, and an amusement park with a botanical theme.
In its old quarter, Valencia’s first “golden age” of the 14th and 15th
centuries is reflected in the beautiful late Gothic Silk Exchange, the
Gothic-Romanesque-Baroque cathedral and the 15th century Gothic palace, that now
houses the regional government. Other architectural gems include: the 18th
century Baroque mansion of the Marqués de Dos Aguas, fancifully decorated with
ceramic fruits and vegetables and home to the Ceramics Museum, a 17th century
seminary, now home to the Fine Arts Museum, the Museo de Bellas Artes containing
some 2,000 paintings and sculptures and the Mercado Central, one of Europe’s
largest food markets, located in a huge Art Nouveau building of iron, glass and
tile.
These architectural gems complement some of the city’s stunning contemporary
structures. After disastrous floods in 1957, the Turia River bed was transformed
into a six-mile ribbon of green parks and gardens. In the late 1990s the city
began expanding out along the river banks. There, in 1998 native son Santiago
Calatrava began creating his futuristic City of Arts and Sciences,
www.cac.es. Measuring 1,000 feet long and 60
feet high, the dramatic white Umbracle serves as the entrance and shields a
promenade of tropical plants and palm trees.
Opened in 1998, the Hemispheric is a dramatic eye-shaped planetarium
and IMAX theatre surrounded by a huge rectangle of turquoise water. The Museo
de las Ciencias Príncipe Felipe (Prince Felipe Museum of the Sciences)
debuted in 2000 and features interactive displays and exhibits of “Life and the
Genome” and “Towards the Cosmos.”
In 2003, Europe’s largest aquarium – virtually an underwater city – the
Oceanographic, was unveiled. A series of parabolic buildings by Spanish
architect Félix Candela provide a hi-tech tour of the marine habitats of the
world’s oceans. A striking subterranean restaurant – the walls are
floor-to-ceiling aquariums – serves fresh fish and the region’s signature dish,
paella.
Down the river bank and closer to the old quarter, the Instituto
Valenciano de Arte Moderno (IVAM) houses the world’s largest collection of
works by acclaimed sculptor Julio González. Kazuyo Sejima + Ryue Nishizawa of
SANAA are designing the expansion for IVAM, enclosing the contemporary art
museum in a large white shell.
To meet increased demand, new hotels have been opening since 2004 including
the eye-catching 157-room Puerta Valencia by native son Javier Mariscal
near the City of Arts & Sciences
www.hoteles-silken.com; the 48-room South Beach-style Hotel Neptuno
on Malvarrosa Beach,
www.hotelneptunovalencia.com; the 66-room boutique property Palau de la
Mar that joined two 19th century palaces in the city center,
www.epoquehotels.com; and the
luxurious, five-star 254-room Hotel Balneario Las Arenas,
www.hotel-lasarenas.com, that has
become the centrepiece of Valencia’s increasingly sophisticated seafront.
In 2006, three more five-star properties debuted: the 306-room Valencia
Hilton www.hilton.com; the 271-room Hotel
Sorolla Palace and the 136-room Westin Alameda, a new luxury hotel
carved out of a 1917 wool factory with a distinctive Modernist facade.
www.starwoodhotels.com/westin.
A four-star boutique hotel, the 100-room Vincci Lys, opened on a quiet
pedestrian street in the old quarter:
www.vinccihoteles.com.
For more information about
Valencia go to www.turisvalencia.es. For
further information about Spain, contact your travel provider or the Tourist
Office of Spain in New York (212-265-8822); Miami (305-358-1992); Chicago
(312-642-1992) or Los Angeles (323-658-7188) or go to
www.spain.info.
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Photo copyright © Pedro Moreno.
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