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Jardines del Real (Viveros), Valencia

Jardines del Real — Los Viveros de Valencia

Valencia's oldest public gardens, rooted in eight centuries of royal history on the banks of the Turia.
Locatie Valencia

The Jardines del Real — universally known in Valencia as Los Viveros — occupy more than 35,000 square metres along the northern bank of the old Turia riverbed, making them the city's oldest and largest historic public gardens. Their origins trace back to the 13th century, when Jaume I of Aragon established a royal estate on this site following his conquest of Valencia in 1238. Over the following centuries the grounds were expanded into a full palatial complex, the Palau del Real, which served as the principal residence of the kings of Valencia and later the viceroys of the Crown of Aragon. The palace hosted figures as consequential as Ferdinand and Isabella, who signed documents here during their Valencian sojourns in the late 15th century.

The palace itself was demolished in 1810 on the orders of the Duc de Mahon during the French occupation of Valencia, ostensibly to deny cover to enemy forces during the Peninsular War — though the decision was widely condemned as an act of cultural vandalism. What remained were the grounds, which the city of Valencia subsequently converted into public gardens. The name Viveros ("nurseries") dates from the 19th century, when the municipality used the space to cultivate trees and plants for the city's broader greening programme. That botanical legacy is still visible today in the extraordinary variety of species — centuries-old cypress and orange trees, formal rose beds, lily ponds, and exotic palms — that give the gardens their lush, layered density.

Visitors enter through ornate wrought-iron gates and move through a landscape that layers formal French-style parterres with more relaxed shaded promenades. Key features include a series of classical marble fountains, allegorical statues distributed along the main avenues, and a small but well-maintained zoo that has been a fixture of the gardens since the late 19th century. A bronze equestrian statue of El Cid, the medieval Castilian warrior lord, stands as one of the garden's most photographed landmarks. Each spring the rose garden erupts into colour during Valencia's annual rose competitions, and the grounds regularly host open-air concerts and the city's celebrated book fair, the Fira del Llibre, which has taken place here every spring since 1982.

The gardens are open daily from 7:30 am to 9:30 pm and admission is free, making them one of Valencia's most rewarding no-cost experiences. The site is located in the La Saïdia district at Carrer del General Elio, directly adjacent to the Museum of Fine Arts (Museu de Belles Arts), which together form a natural cultural itinerary for a half-day visit. Morning visits reward early risers with birdsong, cool air, and near-solitude beneath the orange trees; late afternoons bring local families, joggers, and the golden light that filters through the cypress alleys. Comfortable shoes are advisable, as the full perimeter walk covers well over a kilometre of paths.

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