
Kimpton Vividora Hotel by IHG
When you book Kimpton Vividora Hotel by IHG in Barcelona, Spain through our IHG Destined partnership, your stay includes daily breakfast, room upgrades and a hotel credit. Plus, for a limited time, a complimentary night is included with your stay.
Special Offer: Free night
+ Receive a complimentary night* on 3, 4, 5, or 7 consecutive night stays at participating hotels *Blackout dates may apply.
Exclusive Booking Perks
- $100 USD (or local currency equivalent) hotel credit per stay
- Daily complimentary breakfast for 2 guests (full or continental, depending on the hotel)
- Complimentary room upgrade (subject to availability)
- Local welcome amenity
- Early check-in / late check-out (subject to availability)
Location
The Kimpton Vividora sits in Barcelona's Barri Gòtic, where medieval lanes open onto sun-flooded plaças and the city's layered history reveals itself at every corner. The neighbourhood takes its name from the 15th-century Gothic church of Santa Maria del Pi, whose rose window casts amber light across the square just steps from the property. These narrow streets, once the heart of the medieval County of Barcelona, still hum with the particular energy of old Catalonia: shutters thrown open to morning light, the scrape of café chairs on cobblestones, conversations in Catalan echoing off honey-toned stone.
The city's founding myth traces back to Phoenician or Carthaginian traders drawn to this Mediterranean coast, though it was under the Crown of Aragon that Barcelona became the region's economic and administrative centre. Walk five minutes in any direction and you'll hit a Gothic archway, a modernista façade, or a plaça where locals gather for vermut.
The Mediterranean glitters at the end of La Rambla. Josep Tarradellas Barcelona-El Prat Airport lies 13 kilometres southwest, connected by the Aerobus or train into Passeig de Gràcia.
The neighbourhood itself is an experience: wander to Mercat de Santa Caterina, half a kilometre north, where a wave-like mosaic roof shelters stalls piled with bacallà, sobrassada, and baskets of piments del padrón. For Michelin-starred dining, Lasarte, 1.3 kilometres away, holds three stars for its precise creative cuisine, a spin-off that matches Martín Berasategui's original standards. Disfrutar, 1.7 kilometres distant, showcases the inventive spirit of three chefs who trained under Ferran Adrià, their playful tasting menus always oversubscribed. Closer to home, the Gothic Quarter's labyrinth conceals wine cellars like Bodega Armando, less than a kilometre away. The Palau de la Música Catalana, a UNESCO-listed art nouveau concert hall by Lluís Domènech i Montaner, sits at the neighbourhood's edge, its steel-framed interior an exuberant tribute to Catalan modernisme.
Gaudí's works, including La Sagrada Família and Park Güell, lie within four kilometres. Book a table at Disfrutar well ahead; the wait list reflects its cult following. Two kilometres southeast, Somorrostro Beach offers sand and Mediterranean sun when the Gothic shadows grow heavy.
Barcelona's Mediterranean climate means mild, damp winters and hot, dry summers. January through March brings cool mornings and temperatures hovering around 12 to 15°C, with occasional rain that leaves the Gothic stones gleaming. Spring blooms in April and May, the light growing warmer, the city shedding its winter layers. By June, temperatures climb into the mid-twenties, and the beach becomes magnetic.
July and August are scorching, often reaching 28°C, with tourists thick on Las Ramblas and locals fleeing to the coast. September remains warm and golden, the best time to visit: fewer crowds, lingering heat, and the city resuming its natural rhythm.
October cools and brings heavier rains. November and December turn crisp, the light slanting low across plaças, ideal for market browsing and vermut in shuttered taverns.
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