Welcome, listeners, to Things to Do in Barcelona with your globetrotting sports nut pal, Oly Bennet. Barcelona is buzzing today: a bright, cool December day perfect for wandering between Christmas lights, sea breeze, and the smell of roasted chestnuts drifting through the streets.
The city’s vibe is pure festive chaos. According to the Barcelona City Council’s Guia BCN agenda, the Christmas Book Fair at the Mercat Dominical de Sant Antoni kicks off today, filling the market with books, comics, music, and holiday goodies through December 20. Over on Gran Via, the classic St. Thomas and Three Kings Fair starts today too, with around 175 stalls of toys, crafts, and gifts turning the avenue into a Christmas arcade. Teatre El Maldà is hosting “Nadales,” an intimate, slightly anti-consumerist Christmas carol show running this week, perfect if you want cozy vibes instead of shopping overload.
If you’re more into nightlife than nativity scenes, Premiumguest lists “Fiesta del Chupe” at D’Rumba Barcelona tonight, starting just before midnight on Carrer de Viladomat. Expect late-night Latin beats and enough energy to power the Sagrada Família cranes. For something family-friendly and brainy, CosmoCaixa’s long-running “Geological Wall” exhibition is open, showcasing huge real rock sections that explain how the Earth has been shaped over time.
Sliding into local news: Barcelona’s cultural engine is in overdrive this month. Bellesguard Tower recently hosted the big La Marató 2025 charity broadcast dedicated to cancer research, showing how these stunning Gaudí spaces double as community hubs. Public event agendas from the city also highlight an especially packed Christmas programme across museums, with exhibitions about water, history, and holiday traditions scattered around town.
So, what should you absolutely do today? Stroll Sant Antoni in the morning for the Christmas Book Fair, grab a coffee and a slice of coca, then swing by Gran Via’s fair for last-minute presents and people-watching. Spend the afternoon at CosmoCaixa, where the “Geological Wall” turns geology into a giant playground of rocks, faults, and fossils. In the evening, duck into “Nadales” at Teatre El Maldà for carols with a twist, then, if you’ve still got energy, power up for Fiesta del Chupe and dance your way into the small hours.
Here’s a fun local tip: keep an eye out for tiny figurines called caganers in nativity scenes and even in special exhibitions around town. Event listings like Eventole highlight full displays of these figures. They’re cheeky little characters squatting in the corner of the scene, symbolising good luck and fertile land. If you can spot the caganer in a shop window or public nativity, you’re officially playing Barcelona’s weirdest unofficial Christmas sport.
Coming up tomorrow and over the weekend, Barcelona’s Christmas calendar just gets denser: more markets, more concerts, and more family activities, plus the countdown to major holiday traditions like the Sant Esteve concert at the Palau de la Música on December 26. Tune in next time and I’ll scout the quirkiest, most unforgettable ways to spend your day in this city that never stops moving.
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