Madrid
became
Spain's
capital
simply
through
its
geographical
position
at the
centre
of
Iberia.
When
Felipe
II moved
the seat
of
government
here in
1561 his
aim was
to
create a
symbol
of the
unification
and
centralization
of the
country,
and a
capital
from
which he
could
receive
the
fastest
post and
communications
from
each
corner
of the
nation.
The site
itself
had few
natural
advantages
- it is
300km
from the
sea on a
650-metre-high
plateau,
freezing
in
winter,
burning
in
summer -
and it
was only
the
determination
of
successive
rulers
to
promote
a strong
central
capital
that
ensured
Madrid's
survival
and
development.
Nonetheless,
it was a
success,
and
today
Madrid
is a
vast,
predominantly
modern
city,
with a
population
of some
three
million
and
growing.
The
journey
in -
through
a stream
of
concrete-block
suburbs
- isn't
pretty,
but the
streets
at the
heart of
the city
are a
pleasant
surprise,
with
pockets
of
medieval
buildings
and
narrow,
atmospheric
alleys,
dotted
with the
oddest
of shops
and
bars,
and
interspersed
with
eighteenth-century
Bourbon
squares.
By
comparison
with the
historic
cities
of Spain
-
Toledo,
Salamanca,
Sevilla,
Granada
- there
may be
few
sights
of great
architectural
interest,
but the
monarchs
did
acquire
outstanding
picture
collections,
which
formed
the
basis of
the
Prado
museum.
This has
long
ensured
Madrid a
place on
the
European
art
tour,
and the
more so
since
the
1990s
arrival
-
literally
down the
street -
of the
Reina
Sofía
and
Thyssen-Bornemisza
galleries,
state-of-the-art
homes to
fabulous
arrays
of
modern
Spanish
painting
(including
Picasso's
Guernica
) and
European
and
American
masters.
As
you get
to grips
with the
place
you soon
realize
that
it's the
inhabitants
- the
madrileños
- that
are the
capital's
key
attraction:
hanging
out in
the
traditional
cafés or
the
summer
terrazas,
packing
the
lanes of
the
Sunday
Rastro
flea
market,
or
playing
hard and
very,
very
late in
a
thousand
bars
, clubs,
discos
and
tascas
.
Whatever
Barcelona
or San
Sebastián
might
claim,
the
Madrid
scene,
immortalized
in the
movies
of Pedro
Almodóvar,
remains
the most
vibrant
and fun
in the
country.
The city
is also
in
better
shape
than for
many
years
past,
after a
£500-million
refurbishment
for its
role as
1992
European
Capital
of
Culture
and the
ongoing
impact
of a
series
of urban
rehabilitation
schemes
- funded
jointly
by the
European
Union
and
local
government
- in the
older
barrios
(districts)
of the
city.
Improvements
are also
being
made to
the
transport
network,
with
extensions
to the
metro,
the
construction
of new
ring
roads
and the
excavation
of a
series
of road
tunnels
designed
to bring
relief
to the
city's
overcrowded
streets.
The
authorities
are even
preparing
a bid
for the
2012
Olympics.