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Historic Gardens

Barcelona - The Horta Gardens & Maze

Laberint d'Horta Temple of Diana Photo © Alice Joyce

Laberint d’Horta – The Horta Gardens and Maze – Barcelona’s hidden garden:  A historic garden-museum located in the city’s Green Zone, a quiet neighborhood far removed from the Barri Gotic and La Rambla. The 18th century Horta Gardens are perhaps most often associated with the highly photogenic, living architecture of the gardens’ centerpiece – an elaborate cypress maze.

Laberint d’Horta  © Alice Joyce

There is much more to experience within the romantic confines of Parc del Laberint d’Horta, a property owned by the city. Joan Antoni Desvalls i d’Ardena conceived the plan of the Horta’s harmonious landscape in 1791, when the area was mainly pastoral countryside. There are many pleasurable scenes, from intimate to monumental, that await visitors to the beautifully preserved neoclassical landscape.

Laberint d'Horta Porta Xinesa Photo © Alice Joyce

Near the main thoroughfare of Germans Desvalls is the entrance to the gardens. Here, the property’s semi-restored mansion reflects an interesting pastiche of styles influenced by Moorish and Gothic architecture. The exterior is said to have been covered at one time with frescoes, while the presence of a 12th century watchtower, the Torre Sabiana, reflects the structure’s antiquity. Currently used as offices for the city’s Parks and Gardens department, the building stands adjacent to a more contemporary gardenscape, built and enjoyed early-on by the estate’s owners. Delineated by boxwood topiary, the setting is now lush with flower beds, mature palm trees and camellias.

Generally one enters the gardens – known as Parc del Laberint d’Horta – along the walkway opposite the mansion’s gardens. Looking at a plan of the grounds reveals a complex layout, encompassing romantic grottoes, canals, and a bevy of secreted spaces encountered along dense paths through the woods.

Barcelona Laberint d'Horta Pavilion Photo © Alice Joyce

If you choose not to approach the maze directly, but take a side path instead, you’ll pass through the Porta Xinesa or Chinese Gate, and come upon a secluded spot. The gateway, with its delightful openwork design and peaked roof, sets the tone for a perfectly composed, intimate space embraced by the surrounding woodland. Low, trimmed hedging articulates the geometry of the garden. A space open to the sky, and centered upon a circular pool, and the plashing of a simple waterspout fountain.

Statue of Eros … emerging in the center of the Maze:

Barcelona Laberint d'Horta Maze Detail Photo © Alice Joyce

 

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