
Hotel Pulitzer Barcelona
When you book Hotel Pulitzer Barcelona in Barcelona, Spain through our Tablet Plus partnership, your stay includes room upgrades and flexible check-in and check-out.
Exclusive Booking Perks
- Upgrade to next room category, based upon availability at check-in
- Guaranteed 4pm late check-out
- Guaranteed 12pm early check-in
- Complimentary glass of wine per guest, per stay
- Please note: Complimentary upgrades are not provided to suites
Location
La Dreta de l'Eixample places you in the heart of Barcelona's 19th-century urban expansion, where Ildefons Cerdà's visionary grid of chamfered corners and wide boulevards unfolds in every direction. The neighbourhood hums with a particular cosmopolitan energy: designer boutiques occupy ground-floor galleries, pavement cafés spill onto tree-lined streets, and the angular light of the Mediterranean slants across balconies heavy with wrought iron. This is Barcelona at its most refined, far enough from the Ramblas to escape the tourist press but close enough to walk to the Gothic Quarter in fifteen minutes.
Modernist gems punctuate nearly every block. The Palau de la Música Catalana, Lluís Domènech i Montaner's exuberant steel-framed concert hall with its stained-glass skylight, sits one kilometre northwest, a UNESCO-listed monument to Catalan art nouveau. Three kilometres out, Gaudí's Sagrada Família breaks the skyline, while his Casa Batlló and La Pedrera anchor Passeig de Gràcia, the neighbourhood's grand axis.
The city traces its origins to Phoenician or Carthaginian traders; by the Middle Ages it had become the capital of the County of Barcelona and later the Crown of Aragon's economic heart. Barcelona-El Prat Airport lies twelve kilometres southwest, a quick train or taxi ride into the city.
Lasarte, one kilometre away, holds three Michelin stars for its creative Mediterranean cuisine, a spin-off that honours Martín Berasategui's Basque legacy without replicating it. Equally inventive, Disfrutar (three stars, 1.3 kilometres) showcases the playful, technically audacious cooking of three former El Bulli chefs; expect a waiting list and a meal that feels like theatre. For a more secluded encounter, Cocina Hermanos Torres (three stars, 2.4 kilometres) delivers delicate Mediterranean dishes in a setting that suspends ordinary time. Walk seven hundred metres to the Mercat de Santa Caterina, where Enric Miralles' undulating mosaic roof shelters stalls piled with jamón ibérico, percebes, and seasonal mushrooms. The Col.lectiu d'Artesans de l'Alimentació de la Plaça del Pi offers artisan cheeses and honey in the shadow of Santa Maria del Pi.
Book a table at one of the starred restaurants weeks ahead; availability is scarce. For a break from stone and glass, the beaches at Somorrostro lie 2.4 kilometres east, their sand flanked by seafood chiringuitos where you can order arròs negre straight from the pan.
Summer in Barcelona means relentless sun and pavements that hold the heat well into the evening. July and August push past 28°C, the city emptying as locals head to the Costa Brava, leaving the Eixample's boulevards quieter than usual. Spring and autumn bring the best conditions: April through June and September through October offer warm afternoons (17°C to 25°C) without the crush, ideal for long walks through the Gothic Quarter or mornings at the market.
October can be wet, the rain arriving in sudden downpours that clear as quickly as they start. Winter is mild, rarely dipping below 5°C, but the light turns thin and the Tramuntana wind can bite.
Visit in May or late September for perfect walking weather and fewer queues at Gaudí's monuments.
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