The landmark building in the heart of Seville contrasts with the surrounding medieval architecture and highlights the character of Seville, a Spanish cultural city. This futuristic building in the ancient city of Seville, with a nearly 5,000-square-meter honeycomb-like wooden roof, makes it the world's largest timber-framed building, supporting a small parasol for small town residents. During the day, people can hold various trade fairs and cultural activities under the protection of the magical "big umbrella". At night, the building will emit beautiful lights and become a gorgeous stage for the city nightlife. The city parasol has four floors, the underground is Antiquarium, exhibiting the Roman and Moorish sites found here, and the first floor is the central market.
Museo Antiquarium, antique museum: Tickets are 2 Euros, 11:1-14 and 15:00-20, and the second floor of the museum can spend 1.4 Euros along the panoramic passage to enjoy the city view.
Address: Plaza de la Encarnacin
a beautiful wooden structure that has become a Sevilla landmark. It has shops below.
Built by Jurgen Meyer, it is a five-story wooden building completed in 2011, and is located in Encarnision Square in the old town of Sevia, Spain. The charm of this space is that the sunset is awesome! ㅎㅎ
The urban parasol has four floors. The underground displays the Roman and Moor sites found here. The first floor is the central market. You can also climb to the top with a ticket of three euros. The urban parasol is very huge and cannot be photographed in full.
The view was stunning but a bit crowded. I still think it is overpriced
The City umbrella is a famous building in Villa. It's all-wood structure. Like the city spirit, it's more beautiful in the night. The local people also call it the big mushroom, which can climb up and overlook the city scenery. It's also a famous commercial street around here. It's very busy and you can take a look around.
This umbrella is really gone, and it's still a bike ride.