Travel back in time on an e-bike trip through the barrio of Arganzuela and the Madrid River Park, both of which are dotted with renewed industrial treasures and urban regeneration projects.
You'll get the sense of how cultural heritage can be given a new dimension and sense of life.
Impact of this experience
Your visit to various cultural centers along the route will help support their important work in urban regeneration and community building!
You'll support responsible tourism.
You'll help boost local economy.
Thanks to this experience it has been possible to achieve:
Connect people through this experience
Invest in the local economy
Discover beauty
Share cultural heritage stories
Support guides and their tour organizer
Support local art and artists
Includes
• Time: 3h bike tour
• Guide: Private guide
• Languages: Spanish & English
• Frequency: Monday- Sunday at 11:00 and 16:00 on request.
• Good for: Adults, families, students, groups and professionals
• Participants: 2-15 Our basic fare is based on the price for 5 people. The rate for groups smaller than 5 people is the same as the rate for 5 people.
• It includes a rental e-bike & helmet, professional monitor
• A drink along the way.
On this e-bike tour you'll discover the creativity of the city of Madrid by exploring the redevelopment of its urban spaces. We lead you back in time on a trip through the ‘barrio’ dotted with renewed industrial treasures that connects the two.
Transforming old industrial buildings into new cultural areas and reducing the CO2 emissions of a former ring road (highway), through a new recreational and green park have created an appealing and dynamic area south of the city center.
Madrid is rich in a series of buildings that testify to the industrial history of the city. Some of them have already been reborn with a new use often cultural.One example is Caixa Forum an old electrical plant where the foundation with the same name develops cultural activities. Another example is Matadero Madrid, the former municipal slaughterhouse that now shelters a cultural center.