Madrid
Madrid is a city of grand gestures and unhurried pleasures. Wide, tree-lined boulevards open into sun-drenched plazas, Baroque façades give way to contemporary galleries, and the Royal Palace looks out over a skyline that feels both imperial and lived-in. The Prado houses centuries of European masterworks. A short walk away, Picasso's Guernica fills an entire wall of the Reina Sofía with a force that stops people mid-step.
The character of the city shifts from neighbourhood to neighbourhood. A morning in the medieval lanes of La Latina feels nothing like an afternoon in the leafy calm of Retiro, which feels nothing like an evening drifting through the lit-up terraces of Malasaña. Each neighbourhood reframes the city entirely.
Away from the monuments, life moves at its own particular pace. Long lunches extend into late evenings, neighbourhood bars fill well past midnight, and plazas function as social extensions of private space. Madrid’s warmth feels natural rather than staged — embedded in its markets, terraces, and everyday conversation.