Add 12 wonders of Spain to your family holiday wish list and consider them the best excuse to plan a Spanish adventure with kids this February half term or Easter. Don’t miss the fabulous Maspolomas runway video.
12/12 Castellfollit de la Roca, wonders of Spain near Girona
The famous village of Ronda in Andalusia is awash with tour buses all summer long. But equally remarkable Castellfollit de la Roca is its Catalan counterpart and barely ever busy at all.
This tiny medieval town clings to the edge of sheer basalt cliffs above La Garrotxa. It’s an unforgettable first sight. But prepare to linger and just go with the time-stood-still pace of slow-ticking church clocks, sleepy cobbled streets and higgledy-piggledy houses.
Castellfollit de la Roca is 40 minutes drive from historic Girona, known for its haunting historic quarter and the Roman ruins of Forҫa Vella.
Take a look at family friendly hotels in Girona we recommend for breaks with kids
11/12 The windmills of Consuegra, 12 wonders of Castilla-La Mancha
If you want wonders of Spain themed round Don Quixote and iconic Moorish cities head for mystical Castilla-La Mancha. This is the region for romantic windmills, magnificent Toledo, and Manchego cheese, produced from spindly sheep that are treated like royalty.
Back in the day, dumpy little windmills sailed the wind right across La Mancha’s dry and dusty plains. Today, only a handful remain and the 12 Consuegra mills are loveliest of all.
They’re handily lined up along the road. So pick a sunny day, pack plenty of water and take a drive for one of those magical ‘only in Spain’ experiences.
The windmills of Consuegra are an hour’s drive south of Toledo, which you should see for the awe-inspiring Alcázar: another of the wonders of Spain.
Find unusual places to stay with kids in spectacular Toledo this spring and summer
10/12 Las Lagunas de Ruidera, a park packed with wonders of Spain
The lagoons, dams, waterfalls and pools of Las Lagunas de Ruidera Natural Park are one of Spain’s best kept secrets and the Spanish wouldn’t mind if they stayed that way.
This watery world of green parkland and mysterious wetlands, pretty towns and villages and protected nature reserves, blooms riotously in spring. Come summer, it’s lush, warm and if you can’t find a spot for splashing around, you aren’t looking.
Some of the lagoons are conservation areas, but most are up for everything from sailing and kayaking to wild swimming or simply sitting on the beach and breathing in the serenity. The park covers a total of 4000 hectares and cute family hotels and eco-lodges are another reason to pop these wonders of Spain on to your family wish list.
Las Lagunas de Ruidera is just over an hour south of Consuegra and not far from Toledo, so you can tick quite a few wonders of on this family holiday.
Take a look at lakeside eco lodges and hotels for family breaks in Ruidera this year
9/12 Casa Milà, Barcelona: Gaudi’s Modernist masterpiece on Passeig Gracia
By the time Antoni Gaudi came to design Casa Milà in Barcelona, he was already the most celebrated of all Catalan Modernists and, basically, could pretty much get away with anything.
But the building nicknamed, ‘La Pedrera’ (the quarry) isn’t a work of whimsy and self-indulgence. The curiously organic façade, fantastical chimneys and intricately wrought decoration are all meticulously engineered. And, like most of Gaudi’s ethereal designs, it doesn’t look as if it should stand, yet it has, for over a century.
See Casa Milà on Passeig Gracia or take a tour of the interior and floodlit roof after dark: another of Barcelona’s incredibly atmospheric experiences.
Casa Milà sits on Passeig Gracia, the legendary Modernist boulevard linking Barcelona’s medieval old town to 19th century L’Eixample.
Find great value family hotels in Barcelona for February half term and Easter breaks
8/12 Tower of Hercules, A Coruña: one of Galicia’s many wonders of Spain
The oldest lighthouse in Europe lords it over a stretch of the Atlantic known as Costa da Morte or the Death Coast. A name coined by the ancient Romans who built Hercules in the second century in the vain hope it would reduce the mortality rate along this wild, windswept stretch of Galicia in northern Spain.
There isn’t too much left of the tower’s original structure, so what you see today is mainly 18th century. But that doesn’t make 57m tall Hercules any less impressive.
The lighthouse is open year round and if you’ve a head for heights you can climb up and out on to the top terrace. The views are astonishing and it’s easy to see why the Romans believed they were building at the ends of the earth.
The Tower of Hercules is in A Coruña on the coast of Galicia about 30 minutes by train from the stunning city of Santiago de Compostela.
Find easy to book family hotels in A Coruña for beachy breaks on the Galician coast
7/12 Las Médulas, Castilla y León: wonders of Spain from 74AD
In the far north west of Spain sits a landscape so incredible it could only be the work of nature. Or could it be something else entirely?
The enormous stone hewn ravines, ridges, caverns, bridges and aqueducts of Las Médulas are in fact another of the wonders of Spain which owe their existence to the ancient Romans. In the first century, this was one of the most important gold mines in the world and it was created using a hydraulic technique known as ruina montium “destroying the mountain”. The process was just as eco-unfriendly as it sounds and carefully documented at the time by Pliny the Elder, who was Castilla y León’s procurator in 74AD.
The gold is long gone, but it’s estimated that more than one million kilograms was mined here over a period of 250 years – and almost as many miners lost their lives in its pursuit. Try to put your distaste of the means of Las Médulas aside and simply admire the strange, otherworldly beauty left behind.
Las Medulas lies between two of Spain’s great cathedral cities: Santiago de Compostela and Léon.