The arrival of spring, albeit slightly delayed this year due to storms, has unleashed its full splendor in one of Almería's most attractive and tranquil areas. In Ciudad Jardín, nature manifests without restrictions, flooding the surroundings with blossoms that paint every corner with color and vitality, offering a unique sensory experience to those who stroll through its streets.
This neighborhood, whose name takes on special meaning in May, was designed in the early 1940s by local architect Guillermo Langle. Despite climatic challenges and, at times, inadequate pruning, flowers conquer the walls of homes, scattering petals that, with the wind, create natural 'confetti'. With over 75 years of history, Ciudad Jardín has managed to maintain its essence as a haven of peace.
Originally, after its construction, which included 245 single-family homes and the Church of San Antonio, the predominant colors were the white of its facades and the red of the mineral dust arriving from Alquife (Granada). However, over time, the neighborhood has evolved into a true springtime chromatic palette.
Bougainvillea, jacaranda trees, roses, and lilies, among many other species, adorn the walls with their blue, yellow, reddish, and violet hues. This explosion of color precedes the summer months, when its streets become the setting for romantic strolls, where the nocturnal scent of jasmine perfumes the air.
“"Colors are the smile of nature."
The streets of Ciudad Jardín, distinguished by names of cities, regions, or countries, display a diversity of shades in spring that turn it into a vast natural canvas, worthy of great impressionists like Pierre-Auguste Renoir or Claude Monet. It could be considered the 'Giverny' of Almería, in reference to the famous garden that Monet immortalized in the French town, home to the artist and the Museum of Impressionisms. As a 19th-century British poet and journalist once stated, colors are the smile of nature, and Ciudad Jardín displays it with splendor at every turn.




