Feria

Seville, beautiful and diverse

This old hacienda is accessed through an elegant 17th century Baroque doorway with side pilasters and a pediment representing the Immaculate Conception.

This estate is located on a hill near the Cañada Real. It is arranged around a square courtyard with a central well, arcades with semi-circular arches and whitewashed walls with red ochre adornments.

This 18th-century estate is located inside the town, close to the Nuestra Señora de la Asunción Church. It belongs to the Marquis de la Motilla, a title of nobility granted to Alonso Fernández de Santillán y Quesada in 1679.

This 18th-century palace, located in the historic centre of Huévar del Aljarafe, has a façade that combines rendered and whitewashed walls with brick. The impressive main entrance and the circular corner tower, with horseshoe-arched windows, are made in brick. The rest of the building is whitewashed and crowned with decorative merlons.

The olive mill and its emblematic counterweight tower are one of the most characteristic architectural features of Seville’s rural landscape, particularly in the Aljarafe region with its long olive-growing history. The region’s centuries-old tradition of olive oil production has led to a widespread presence of these typical mills.

This estate sits on a low hill, next to a stream that flows into the River Pudio, on the edge of the town of Bormujos. The stately house on the estate is reached via the road that connects Bormujos with Mairena del Aljarafe, which passes through the La Peregrina residential development.

(Also known as Hacienda de Liendo or Hacienda de Torrenueva) 

The Hacienda del Marqués de Torrenueva, also known as Hacienda de Liendo and Hacienda de Torrenueva, was the stately house of the Count of Gines.

For decades, the street on which this emblematic building had the same name as the Hacienda. However, its original name, Calle Real, was reinstated in 2009.