Bilbao doesn’t fit the usual tourist images of Spain: flamenco dancers, hilltop castles, Moorish palaces. In fact, until 20 years ago, this gritty industrial port on Spain’s north coast was hardly known to tourists at all.
Now more than a million visit each year, and the city’s name is synonymous with the travel trend it created: architourism. As if that were not enough, the city also gave its name to an economic phenomenon known as the Bilbao Effect.
How did Bilbao transform itself from an ugly, run-down industrial wasteland to a glittering city where tourists come just to stand and marvel at its buildings and bridges? It’s a story of foresight and vision, and one that elevates risk-taking to a fine art.

Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain. Photo: Steve Allen | Dreamstime
The ambitious redevelopment program began in the late 1980s with a new airport and a stunning footbridge, both designed by acclaimed architect Santiago Calatrava. Then a performance and convention center, the Palacio Euskalduna, was erected on the river-side site of the former shipyard. Following discussions with the Guggenheim Foundation, work started in 1993 on Frank O. Gehry’s design for a building that would knock the socks off the architectural world. The reaction to the opening of Guggenheim Museum Bilbao in 1997 surpassed the city’s wildest dreams; within only three years, revenue generated by Gehry’s masterpiece more than exceeded its cost.
The result is a city not just beautiful but fun to visit, and a perfect choice for a group of friends with different interests. It’s not so big that the choice of activities is overwhelming or the attractions hard to get to, but it’s diverse enough to please a variety of tastes. Because Bilbao is relatively small and manageable, it’s easy for art lovers, modern architecture fans, history buffs and fashionistas to go their own ways and meet for a typically late Spanish lunch before regrouping for afternoon explorations.
Whether or not your traveling companions like art or architecture, they will certainly want to begin at the Guggenheim, walking around its undulating walls to watch the curving golden panels shimmer in the sunlight as the building itself seems to move and drift above the river. Inside, soaring galleries showcase changing exhibits and dramatic installations of non-traditional art. An outdoor gallery of sculpture surrounds the building. Sitting in front as though waiting to be scratched behind the ears is a 40-foot Highland terrier, completely covered in live flowering plants. Jeff Koons’ Puppy, whose colorful floral skin changes with the seasons, arrived as a temporary exhibit but proved so popular with locals the city purchased it as part of the Guggenheim’s permanent collection.
The Guggenheim may be the star, but it’s certainly not Bilbao’s only architectural blockbuster. Along with Calatrava’s striking Zubizuri Footbridge and metro station canopies by Norman Foster, look for historic architectural landmarks. A couple of blocks from the Guggenheim, the leafy Jardines de Albia fill a square surrounded by Art Nouveau buildings. And two blocks away, along the Alameda Recalde, find a more over-the-top Art Nouveau example, the Montero House.
Named a UNESCO World Heritage site for its historical architecture and engineering, the Vizcaya Bridge was the world’s first to carry people and vehicles on a high, suspended car. This outstanding invention of the Industrial Revolution, more than 150 feet tall, remains in use today.
Nor is the Guggenheim the city’s only art museum. The outstanding Museo de Bellas Artes bursts with priceless art — medieval woodcarvings; paintings by Spanish masters El Greco and Goya; and works by Cézanne, Gauguin and Mary Cassatt, as well as by 20th-century Basque and Spanish artists. Its shop makes a good place to find classy gifts and souvenirs.
Bilbao’s preoccupation with art and design extends into the world of fashion — and even shopping. Perhaps the greatest of all couturiers, designer Cristóbal Balenciaga, was born only 15 miles away in the charming little seaside town of Getaria, where the Balenciaga Museum’s collection of 1,200 pieces includes several outfits made for Princess Grace of Monaco. Contemporary Basque designers carry on his tradition, and fashionistas can shop for their works in Bilbao.
Explore Bilbao and the region’s long, colorful past at the Basque Museum in the heart of the oldest part of town, the Casco Viejo. Exhibits on fishing, farming, traditional crafts and Basque culture draw from the 20,000 artifacts that make up the collections, some dating back to Iron Age settlements. The Casco Viejo is Bilbao’s medieval heart, where centuries ago pilgrims followed the legendary Camino de Santiago, the route of St. James to Santiago de Compostela. Look in these narrow old lanes for scallop-shell tiles leading the way beneath overhanging balconies and shuttered porches to the Cathedral of St. James, with its carved stone portal and peaceful cloister.

People eating tapas in Spain. Photo: Martin Hatch | Dreamstime
However they spend their sightseeing time, visitors love the food in Bilbao, where traditional Spanish tapas take on new forms and meaning in hearty little snacks called pintxos. Deep in the Casco Viejo, Plaza Nueva offers a good place to pause and sample some. Café tables sprawl out from the sedate Neoclassical arcades that surround the square, built in 1849. In the afternoon and evening these are lively with locals enjoying their pintxos with a glass of local Txakoli, a slightly effervescent white wine.
There’s a lot to like in Bilbao … after all, you have to love a city that embraces as its own a giant puppy sculpted of flowers.
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