Barcelona Event
Neighbourhood Map

A district-by-district guide to Barcelona’s event geography — where the conferences are, where the delegates stay, and which neighbourhoods suit which format.

Diego Hinojosa — Experience Manager Barcelona, CH3 Agency

Diego Hinojosa

Experience Manager · Barcelona, CH3 Agency

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Barcelona has ten official districts and one municipality immediately adjacent — L’Hospitalet de Llobregat, home to Fira Gran Via. Each has a different character, a different venue ecosystem and a different relationship to the conference complex. Understanding which district suits your brief before you start shortlisting venues is how you avoid booking a great space in the wrong part of the city.

Barcelona — All Districts

All 10 official Barcelona districts + L’Hospitalet de Llobregat. Click any district for breakdown and venue intel.

Geographic layout north to south — click any active district to jump to the full breakdown. Hover residential districts for notes.

★ = Full breakdown below  ·  Dashed border = outside Barcelona city boundary  ·  Hover greyed districts for notes

District Breakdown

Each district rated for event type, conference proximity and delegate logistics.

Fira Gran Via Barcelona — ICE and MWC conference complex, L'Hospitalet de Llobregat
ICE & MWC District

L’Hospitalet — Fira Gran Via

Best for

Conference satellite events, ICE week, MWC week receptions

Fira Gran Via

On the doorstep — walking distance from the show floor

The municipality of L’Hospitalet de Llobregat borders Barcelona to the west and is home to Fira Gran Via — the 200,000 sqm exhibition complex that hosts ICE World Gaming Week (January), MWC (March), ISE (February) and several other major shows each year. As a residential and industrial district with no meaningful tourist footprint, it transforms entirely during conference weeks: 60,000+ professionals converge in a zone built around the show floor.

The strategic logic for event planners is simple: being within walking distance of the show floor means delegates actually turn up. Every step away from Fira costs you attendance. The two best private event venues in this zone are Skyfall — Richard Rogers’ 360° glass dome on the 29th floor of the adjacent Hyatt Regency Barcelona Tower — and Cúpula Las Arenas, the converted bullring on Plaça Espanya directly between Fira and Montjuïc. Both deliver the proximity that matters most during ICE and MWC week, when 20,000 people are trying to get across the city at the same time. CH3 produced the Betfred networking reception at Skyfall during ICE week.

Municipality

L’Hospitalet de Llobregat — separate municipality, not a Barcelona barri
Local intel Purely functional, which is the point — 60,000 professionals converge here and don’t leave. The entire side event brief in this district is: be within walking distance, be on a high floor, and be nothing like the show floor.
Montjuïc Barcelona — Poble Espanyol event venue, gala dinners and large-scale brand activations
Landmark & Gala District

Montjuïc

Best for

Large galas, conference closings, brand launches, incentive programmes

Fira Gran Via

10–15 min by car via Plaça Espanya

The hill of Montjuïc rises above Plaça Espanya at the southwestern edge of the city — a 184-metre park containing the highest concentration of prestigious event venues in Barcelona. The 1929 International Exhibition left behind Poble Espanyol and the Palau Nacional (now MNAC); the 1992 Olympics added Palau Sant Jordi. Between them sits Fundació Joan Miró, Pavillon Mies van der Rohe and Terrassa Miramar — all within a single hillside that you can programme as a multi-venue cluster for large delegations.

Montjuïc is the natural home of programme-closing galas and large conference receptions. The scale of Poble Espanyol (7,700 pax across 40,000 sqm), the grandeur of MNAC’s Oval Room and the arena capacity of Palau Sant Jordi make this the only part of Barcelona where you can accommodate truly large-format events in a non-tradeshow setting. Accessible from the Fira Gran Via complex via Plaça Espanya in 10–15 minutes, making it the default evening destination during ICE and MWC weeks. CH3 has produced multiple large-scale events at Poble Espanyol, including Avalanche Summit I (3,000 guests) and Avalanche Summit II (3,800 guests).

Areas — Sants-Montjuïc (hill & port side)

la Font de la Guatlla la Marina del Prat Vermell la Marina de Port
Local intel “how do I get down again” — logistics genuinely matter here. Solve the transit and you have the most spectacular evening event district in Barcelona. Leave it to chance and you lose 20% of your guests at the cable car.
Eixample Barcelona — Passeig de Gràcia hotel belt and corporate event district
Hotel Belt & Intimate Venues

Eixample

Best for

Executive dinners, VIP receptions, delegate evening programmes

Fira Gran Via

15–20 min by car — the delegate hotel cluster

The Eixample — Ildefons Cerdà’s 19th-century grid expansion of Barcelona — is where most conference delegates stay. The major Passeig de Gràcia and Gran Via hotels, boutique properties like the EDITION and Casa Bonay, and Modernista landmarks including Casa Batlló are all concentrated within a walkable radius. This makes Eixample the path of least resistance for evening events during MWC and ICE week: delegates walk out of their hotel and into the event rather than queuing for an Uber.

The venue ecosystem is equally diverse: Antiga Fàbrica Damm offers industrial character at 300 pax; Blanc Royale and Brooklyn Loft suit media activations and branded networking; Casa Batlló and Casa de les Punxes provide Modernista prestige at scale; and the EDITION Roof, Casa Bonay Libertine and Universitat de Barcelona offer intimate executive formats for 20–150 guests. With a 15–20 minute transit to Fira Gran Via, Eixample programmes are accessible without feeling adjacent to the show floor — the right distance for an exclusive evening that feels like a different world.

Areas — L’Eixample

la Dreta de l’Eixample l’Antiga Esquerra de l’Eixample la Nova Esquerra de l’Eixample la Sagrada Família el Fort Pienc Sant Antoni
Local intel “too many fearless pigeons” and “expensive shops”. Both accurate. The Eixample is where the conference lives — events here need to feel like an upgrade from the hotel lobby bar, not an extension of it.
El Born Barcelona — Gothic Quarter medieval streets and cultural event venues
Cultural & Historic District

El Born & Gothic Quarter

Best for

VIP dinners, cultural brand events, crypto & Web3 receptions

Fira Gran Via

25–30 min by car — best reached by taxi or on foot from Barceloneta hotels

El Born — the medieval district between the Gothic Quarter and Barceloneta — is Barcelona’s most concentrated zone for cultural event venues. The neighbourhood’s narrow stone streets, medieval palaces and 19th-century iron markets create an atmosphere no hotel ballroom can replicate. Carrer Montcada alone contains the Museu Picasso, once home to Picasso’s formative years. La Llotja de Mar, on the waterfront edge of the district, was built in 1392 and still commands the seafront where Catalan maritime power once centred.

El Born is particularly strong during EBC (European Blockchain Convention) week in September, when the district fills with crypto and Web3 founders who gravitate towards its creative, non-corporate character. The Gothic Quarter’s La Llotja de Mar delivered Celo Connect Conference in April 2022 — the Celo Foundation’s first-ever physical global conference. For events that want cultural credibility and historic atmosphere over conference-centre functionality, El Born is the correct district.

Areas — Ciutat Vella (east)

el Gòtic Sant Pere, Santa Caterina i la Ribera
Local intel “trendy, creative” — which undersells it. El Born is Barcelona’s most credible evening district for crypto, Web3 and creative industry crowds. Narrow medieval streets, good natural wine bars, no conference lanyards in sight by 9pm.
El Raval Barcelona — MACBA cultural district, creative and alternative event venues
Creative & Alternative District

Raval

Best for

Creative industry events, art-adjacent launches, gaming & esports gatherings

Fira Gran Via

20–25 min by car

The Raval sits west of the Gothic Quarter and borders El Born — historically one of Barcelona’s most working-class and multicultural districts, now anchored by the MACBA contemporary art museum and the CCCB cultural centre on Plaça dels Àngels. The district has a creative, alternative character that attracts a younger, design and tech-adjacent crowd and has gentrified significantly around the museum plaza while retaining a rawer energy away from it.

For event planners, the Raval’s most relevant venue is Convent dels Àngels — a 16th-century former convent directly adjacent to the MACBA, available for exclusive hire. The combination of bare stone Gothic architecture and contemporary minimalism makes it a strong choice for gaming, esports and creative tech brands that want Barcelona’s cultural credibility without the formality of a heritage gala venue. The Raval location signals an editorial sensibility that resonates with creative and tech industry audiences.

Areas — Ciutat Vella (west)

el Raval
Local intel “Anarchist Barrio” and “CUIDADO Zona Chunga”. The edge is the point — brands that choose the Raval are making a statement about which audience they’re after. A brand activation in a 16th-century convent adjacent to the MACBA is considered, not corporate.
Poblenou 22@ Barcelona — industrial warehouse event venues and tech innovation district
Innovation & Industrial District

Poblenou / 22@

Best for

Brand activations, large networking parties, tech conferences

Fira Gran Via

20–25 min by car — CCIB is directly on the Poblenou waterfront

Poblenou — Barcelona’s former industrial waterfront — has undergone the most significant urban transformation of any Barcelona district in the past two decades. The 22@ innovation district designation in 2000 began converting former textile factories and printing works into tech offices, studios and creative spaces. Today it houses the CCIB congress centre on the waterfront, Torre Glòries (Jean Nouvel’s landmark bullet tower) at the district entrance, and the highest concentration of large-format warehouse event spaces in Barcelona.

For event planners, Poblenou’s value is raw square footage and production flexibility — ceiling heights, floor plates and loading access that Eixample and El Born simply cannot provide. The warehouse circuit fills with conference satellite events during MWC week particularly. CCIB hosts major congresses year-round (Gartner IT Symposium in November, Gartner Supply Chain in May) and functions as a fully professional conference centre alternative to Fira Gran Via. Torre Glòries hosts tech events regularly during MWC week. CH3 has established venue relationships in the district for priority access during peak periods.

Poblenou Warehouses CCIB Torre Glòries

Areas — Sant Martí

Poblenou el Parc i la Llacuna del Poblenou la Vila Olímpica del Poblenou Diagonal Mar i el Front Marítim del Poblenou el Camp de l’Arpa del Clot el Clot Provençals del Poblenou el Besòs i el Maresme Sant Martí de Provençals la Verneda i la Pau
Local intel “Razzmatazz” and “Tech companies”. Both true — the famous club and the 22@ innovation district coexist in the same postcode. The warehouse aesthetic here is earned, not designed. Still smells faintly of industrial past, which is exactly the appeal.
Barceloneta Barcelona — Port Vell marina and waterfront event venues
Waterfront & Marine District

Barceloneta & Port Vell

Best for

Summer receptions, client entertainment, marine-setting events

Fira Gran Via

25–30 min by car — some delegates stay in Barceloneta hotels

Barceloneta is Barcelona’s beach neighbourhood — a dense 18th-century grid of narrow streets that extends onto a peninsula between Port Vell (the old port) and the sea. The neighbourhood is tourist-heavy in summer but has a genuine residential character year-round, with a strong seafood restaurant culture and a maritime identity distinct from the rest of the city. Marina Port Vell — the superyacht marina at the edge of the old port — hosted the 37th America’s Cup and is one of the most prestigious nautical settings in the Mediterranean.

For event planners, Barceloneta and Port Vell offer waterfront venues that deliver a distinctly Mediterranean experience — impossible to replicate in any inland Barcelona district. Sea Garden at Marina Port Vell accommodates 485 guests across 490 sqm of garden and terrace with marina views. Museu Marítim — the 13th-century Royal Shipyards at Drassanes, at the edge of the Gothic Quarter — is one of the most architecturally extraordinary venues in the city. Both work best for summer and shoulder-season events (May–October) where outdoor programming can be relied upon.

Areas — Ciutat Vella (coast)

la Barceloneta
Local intel “cerveza beer water agua” — which is precisely the vibe. Best in summer, best casual, best when the brief is genuinely relaxed client entertainment. If you’re considering outdoor here in January for ICE week, have a covered backup plan.
Sarrià Barcelona — upper city residential district, private villa event venues
Retreat & Residential District

Sarrià & Upper City

Best for

Executive retreats, off-conference dinners, exclusive private gatherings

Fira Gran Via

25–35 min by car — deliberate distance from the tradeshow

Sarrià is one of Barcelona’s most distinguished upper-city neighbourhoods — a former independent municipality absorbed into Barcelona in 1921 that retains its own village square, local market and quiet residential character. Situated in the foothills below Tibidabo on the northwest edge of the city, it is genuinely removed from the conference-week energy of Eixample and the waterfront. The wealthier areas of Sarrià-Sant Gervasi are among the most expensive residential zones in the city.

For event planners, Sarrià offers something most Barcelona districts cannot: the feeling of being somewhere entirely private. Torre Amat — a 19th-century Modernista country house declared a Historic Heritage Site — accommodates up to 300 guests across interior and manicured gardens. IMO provides an intimate residential-scale venue for executive dinners and brand experiences where discretion and calm are the brief. Both venues suit events where the objective is to make a senior audience feel like guests in a private home rather than attendees at a corporate event.

Areas — Sarrià-Sant Gervasi

Sarrià les Tres Torres Sant Gervasi-la Bonanova Sant Gervasi-Galvany el Putxet i el Farró Vallvidrera, el Tibidabo i les Planes
Local intel “Secretly rich” — which is exactly the point. No tourists, no conference lanyards, no noise. The people you most want to impress already know this district exists and are quietly pleased you chose it.
Gràcia Barcelona — bohemian village neighbourhood, creative industry event dinners
Bohemian Village District

Gràcia

Best for

Creative industry dinners, off-conference gatherings, small brand events with local character

Fira Gran Via

25–30 min by car — deliberately removed from the tradeshow

Gràcia was an independent municipality until 1897 and still behaves like one — its own village squares (Plaça del Sol, Plaça de la Vila de Gràcia), its own festival week in August, its own rhythm. Sandwiched between the upper Eixample and the Sarrià hills, it is Barcelona’s most genuinely local neighbourhood at the edge of the tourist belt: bohemian without being affected, residential without being quiet. Increasingly popular with the digital nomad and creative tech crowd that has moved up from El Born as rents have risen.

For event planners, Gràcia suits creative industry gatherings and off-conference dinners for audiences who specifically want to feel somewhere real. It has no landmark event venues comparable to El Born or Eixample, but its restaurant buyouts, private terrace bars and charming plazas work well for informal networking dinners of 20–80 guests where local character matters more than production scale.

Restaurant buyouts Private terrace bars Plaça del Sol area

Areas — Gràcia

Vila de Gràcia el Camp d’en Grassot i Gràcia Nova Vallcarca i els Penitents el Coll la Salut
Local intel “GentrificationHood” and “full of rich fake hippies” — both partially fair. The neighbourhood still has actual locals in it, which is precisely what makes it feel alive in a way the tourist-heavy Gothic Quarter does not. Good for audiences who will notice the difference.
Poble Sec Barcelona — Montjuïc slope district, Carrer de Blai and Sala Apolo events
Montjuïc Slope District

Poble Sec

Best for

Post-event wind-downs, informal delegate dinners, pintxos receptions after Montjuïc events

Fira Gran Via

15–20 min by car — natural bridge between Fira and Montjuïc

Poble Sec sits on the lower slopes of Montjuïc between the Eixample and the hill — a working-class neighbourhood that has gentrified steadily without losing its local identity. Carrer de Blai, its main pedestrian street, is Barcelona’s best-known pintxos row: a dense strip of Basque-style bars that come alive in the early evening. The neighbourhood is within walking distance of Montjuïc’s event cluster and sits directly below Poble Espanyol, making it a natural informal continuation of any large hillside production.

For event planners, Poble Sec works primarily as a pre- or post-event dining zone rather than a primary event district. It is excellent as the relaxed continuation of a large Montjuïc gala — a short downhill walk from Poble Espanyol to Carrer de Blai where delegates decompress over pintxos and txakoli after a formal production. Its position between Fira Gran Via and Montjuïc also makes it useful for informal pre-ICE or pre-MWC gatherings before the show floor opens.

Carrer de Blai pintxos bars Restaurant buyouts

Areas — Sants-Montjuïc (residential)

el Poble-sec Hostafrancs la Bordeta Sants-Badal Sants
Local intel “Don’t disturb local people” — understated but fair. Poble Sec has resisted full tourist capture and is genuinely better for it. Underused by event planners, quietly appreciated by those who discover it. Best kept that way.
Les Corts Barcelona — Camp Nou stadium and Pedralbes private event venues
Stadium & Residential District

Les Corts

Best for

Stadium-scale events, major concerts, brand activations, exclusive Pedralbes private hire

Fira Gran Via

15–20 min by car via Avinguda Diagonal

Les Corts is an upper-middle-class residential district on the western edge of the city, bordered by Sarrià-Sant Gervasi to the north and Sants-Montjuïc to the south. Its defining asset for event planners is Camp Nou — the FC Barcelona stadium and the largest venue in Spain at 79,354 capacity, complemented by Palau Blaugrana at 7,585 capacity for smaller arena-format productions. Between them, the Spotify Camp Nou complex represents a concentration of event infrastructure unavailable anywhere else in the city.

Beyond the stadium zone, Les Corts contains Pedralbes — one of Barcelona’s wealthiest residential areas — with a small number of private villa and garden venues suited to exclusive executive events that want the calm of the upper city without the distance of Sarrià. For large-format corporate events, product launches or concert-scale activations that need stadium architecture, Les Corts is the only answer in Barcelona. For brands associated with FC Barcelona — sponsorship activations, media launches, partner events — access to the stadium complex can be secured through club commercial channels, which CH3 navigates as part of the production scope.

Areas — Les Corts

Les Corts la Maternitat i Sant Ramon Pedralbes
Local intel “Football obsessed” and “expensive apartments”. Both accurate. Outside match days and stadium events, Les Corts is a quiet, affluent neighbourhood with no conference infrastructure. The stadium is the only reason to come here from an event production perspective — but it is a very good reason.
Horta-Guinardó Barcelona — Parc Güell area, northeastern residential district
Residential Hill District

Horta-Guinardó

Best for

Outdoor activations with strong transport planning — no established corporate event infrastructure

Fira Gran Via

30–40 min by car

Eleven areas across Barcelona’s northeastern hills between Gràcia and Sant Andreu. Primarily residential and working-class, with no conference or corporate event venue stock of note. The district is bounded by the Collserola hills to the north and drops down toward Gràcia and Sant Martí.

The exception is Parc del Laberint d’Horta — Barcelona’s oldest garden, dating to 1791, with a neoclassical labyrinth and formal grounds available for private outdoor events on specific dates. It is a genuinely rare and distinctive setting for daytime activations of up to 100 guests, but requires dedicated transport logistics from the city centre and significant advance planning with the city parks authority.

Parc del Laberint d’Horta

Areas — Horta-Guinardó

el Baix Guinardó Can Baró el Guinardó la Font d’en Fargues el Carmel la Teixonera Sant Genís dels Agudells Montbau la Vall d’Hebron la Clota Horta
Local intel Predominantly residential — no event ecosystem here. Parc del Laberint d’Horta is genuinely worth knowing about for the right brief: a small, private, distinctly Barcelonan outdoor setting that most event planners have never considered. The logistics ask is real but manageable.
Nou Barris Barcelona — northern residential district
Residential North District

Nou Barris

Best for

No current event production use — included for geographic completeness

Fira Gran Via

35–45 min by car

Thirteen areas in the far north of the city — the most working-class district in Barcelona, bounded by Horta-Guinardó to the east, Sant Andreu to the south and the Collserola hills to the north. The district developed rapidly in the 1950s and 60s to house industrial workers migrating from southern Spain, and retains a strong local identity distinct from the tourist-facing city.

There are no event venues in Nou Barris with relevance to corporate or brand productions. The district is logistically accessible via the ring roads but has no audience pull, no hospitality infrastructure and no venue stock that would bring delegates here from the city centre or Fira Gran Via.

Areas — Nou Barris

Vilapicina i la Torre Llobeta Porta el Turó de la Peira Can Peguera la Guineueta Canyelles les Roquetes Verdum la Prosperitat la Trinitat Nova Torre Baró Ciutat Meridiana Vallbona
Local intel No reason to bring a corporate event here — and no venue that would justify it. Included because complete coverage of the city means complete coverage.
Sant Andreu Barcelona — heritage and industrial district, La Sagrera regeneration zone
Industrial Transition District

Sant Andreu

Best for

Emerging — limited event infrastructure now, watch this district over 5–7 years

Fira Gran Via

30–40 min by car

Seven areas in the northeast — an industrial and residential mix that is quietly undergoing its most significant transformation since the district was formally incorporated into Barcelona. The La Sagrera high-speed rail hub and associated urban regeneration is the driver: a new neighbourhood growing around the AVE interchange, bringing residential, commercial and eventually cultural infrastructure to a part of the city long overlooked by the event industry.

For event planners operating today, Sant Andreu has no established venue stock worth routing a production toward. The regeneration story is real and the district will matter in a decade — it does not matter yet. Check back in 2028.

Areas — Sant Andreu

La Trinitat Vella Baró de Viver Bon Pastor Sant Andreu de Palomar la Sagrera el Congrés i els Indians Navas
Local intel The La Sagrera project is one of the largest urban regeneration schemes in Southern Europe. When it completes, this district will have a completely different character. The question is when — and for event planners, when is not yet.

Frequently Asked Questions

District selection, logistics and venue planning — answered for corporate event planners coming to Barcelona.

For a standalone conference of 200–2,000 delegates, the answer depends on whether you are co-located with a major tradeshow or operating independently. If co-located with ICE, MWC or a Fira Gran Via show: keep your event in L’Hospitalet or Montjuïc — proximity to the show floor drives attendance more than venue quality. If running independently: Poblenou/22@ gives you the raw production capacity and ceiling heights; Eixample gives you walkable delegate access from hotels; El Born gives you cultural credibility and a setting that reads as considered rather than corporate. For conferences above 5,000 delegates, Fira Gran Via or CCIB are the only realistic options in the city.
The primary hotel cluster is Eixample — Passeig de Gràcia, Gran Via and Avinguda Diagonal concentrate the majority of 4- and 5-star business properties including the Mandarin Oriental, Hotel Arts, the EDITION and Casa Bonay. A secondary cluster sits in Barceloneta and the waterfront zone (W Barcelona). During ICE and MWC, L’Hospitalet itself has limited hotel stock and most delegates commute from Eixample. For event logistics, Eixample is the zero-transit option — guests walk from hotel to event rather than queuing for cars or shuttles.
It depends on guest count and the atmosphere you are trying to create. 20–60 guests, luxury and intimacy: Eixample — EDITION Roof, Casa Bonay Libertine, Casa Batlló (up to 80 seated). 40–150 guests, cultural weight: El Born — La Llotja de Mar, Museu Picasso, Casa de la Seda — settings that signal a considered host. Complete privacy, no conference atmosphere: Sarrià — Torre Amat and IMO put guests in a residential setting where no other event is nearby and the city noise stops. Maximum prestige regardless of size: Pavillon Mies van der Rohe on Montjuïc for up to 50 guests delivers architectural significance that no hotel ballroom can match.
The right district depends on the brand positioning and the audience size. For industrial-scale production (300–2,000 guests, full AV build, loading access): Poblenou — warehouse venues give you the floor plate and ceiling height that Eixample cannot provide. For cultural and editorial positioning: El Raval — Convent dels Àngels adjacent to MACBA signals an intentional, non-corporate brand sensibility. For prestige outdoor settings: Montjuïc — MNAC terrace, Terrassa Miramar or Poble Espanyol depending on scale. For maximum media backdrop: Barceloneta and Port Vell — Marina Port Vell, Museu Marítim, the waterfront strip — all deliver photography that reads as distinctly Mediterranean and distinctive internationally.
Barcelona is a compact city but conference-week traffic extends journey times significantly. Approximate car times from Fira Gran Via: Montjuïc 10–15 min (via Plaça Espanya); Eixample 15–20 min; Les Corts 15–20 min (via Diagonal); Poblenou 20–25 min; El Born / Raval 25–30 min; Barceloneta 25–30 min; Sarrià 25–35 min; Gràcia 25–30 min. Walking between Eixample, El Born and Raval is realistic for small groups. Any venue on Montjuïc requires shuttle planning — the hill has no practical walking access from central hotels.
May through October is the reliable outdoor window — temperatures 20–29°C, low rainfall, Mediterranean evenings that work for any format from standing receptions to seated dinners. Best outdoor settings by type: Waterfront and beachfront (Barceloneta, Port Vell — May to October only, always have a covered backup in January and March); hilltop and garden (Montjuïc — MNAC terrace, Terrassa Miramar, Poble Espanyol courtyards — the most photographically distinctive options in the city); rooftop (Eixample — Skyfall, Punt de Vistes — work year-round with glass shelter); private garden (Sarrià and Les Corts — Torre Amat gardens, Pedralbes villas — intimate, seasonal, requires transport planning).
For offsites that want to be in Barcelona itself rather than outside the city: Sarrià is the correct answer — Torre Amat and IMO provide the residential-scale quiet and privacy that no Eixample venue can match, and the upper-city setting removes teams from the conference-week pulse. For offsites that want proximity to Barcelona but outside the city: Sitges (45 min south) delivers beach resort infrastructure with genuine privacy; Castelldefels (30 min) suits smaller groups wanting sea access without Sitges premium rates; the Maresme coast (30–45 min north) offers a quieter alternative for smaller executive groups. CH3 produces retreats in all these locations and handles transport, accommodation and programming end-to-end.
Multi-district programmes are standard in CH3’s Barcelona portfolio — a conference opening at Fira Gran Via, a gala dinner at Poble Espanyol, a closing brunch at a Barceloneta waterfront venue. CH3 manages all inter-district logistics as part of the production scope: shuttle scheduling and fleet coordination, parking at each venue, timing buffers built around conference-week traffic, and contingency planning if the programme runs late. The critical variable is whether guests move as a single group (manageable with private shuttles) or filter independently (requires staggered transport windows and clear delegate communications). Share your brief and CH3 will map the logistics across the districts involved.

More Barcelona Intel

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