Madrid – Meetings, Majesty and Museums
Madrid’s accessibility is one of its many advantages. It is served by highly developed communication and transport infrastructures, making it the leading logistics hub for both Spain and all of southern Europe. It has an abundance of highly-qualified employees, which along with its excellent location, has made Madrid the financial centre of Spain, with many international companies and banks having their Spanish headquarters there. It has approximately 80,000 bed spaces and some of the Spain’s top convention hotels, congress centres and tradeshow halls.
Madrid experienced a 140% increase in the number of conventions held in 2012 and a 58% increase in national and international congresses
The Madrid Visitors & Convention Bureau is the entity responsible for promoting Madrid around the world for business tourism. According to the bureau, some recent highlights among the events staged in Madrid were Sapphire TechED (10,000 delegates), the IPSA World Congress of Political Science (4,000 delegates), the National Environmental Congress (4,000 delegates) and the Congress of the Spanish Society for Pneumology and Thoracic Surgery (2,500 delegates). The future International Convention Centre, located in the new financial and business area in the north of Madrid, will provide Madrid with the largest and most avant-garde convention centre in Spain.
Whether it be a congress, business incentive or meeting, everything is possible in Madrid. With a broad and eclectic range of cutting-edge facilities, the city caters to all tastes. In addition to its conference facilities, the city has world-class museums – the Prado, Thyssen-Bornemisza and Reina Sofia. The Reina Sofía is currently presenting a great retrospective exhibition on Salvador Dalí featuring 200 artworks. Meanwhile, the Thyssen-Bornemisza is showing the first monographic exhibition in Spain on Impressionist painter Camille Pissarro. With more than 70 works, the museum aims to restore his reputation by presenting him as one of the great pioneers of modern art.
Madrid has an incredibly large selection of restaurants for all budgets, from famous eateries serving the best in Spanish signature cuisine to fast-food outlets. No visit to the city is complete without a tour of the centre’s traditional bars and taverns for tapas accompanied by draught lager or vermouth. The Madrid Visitors & Convention Bureau organises a tapas tour of some of the most emblematic restaurants and taverns in Madrid, including the Museo del Champiñón, Museo de la Tortilla, Las Cuevas de Luis Candelas and Taberna de Alabardero.
The Aranjuez cultural landscape is located to the south of the Region of Madrid. The city of Aranjuez is a wonderful fusion of architecture and nature where the Royal Palace and the historical gardens are combined with tree-lined avenues, orchards and thickets. Alcalá de Henares was Miguel de Cervantes’ birth place – travellers can visit his museum House in the city – and it boasts a university that was constructed over 500 years ago. The city also displays other important monuments like the Catedral Magistral (Magisterial Cathedral), the Colegio Mayor (Halls of Residence) and the Chapel of San Ildefonso.