City of Arts and Sciences, Valencia

The city of "Valentia", meaning "valour", was founded in 138 BC by the Romans on the site of an old Iberian settlement on the banks of the river Turia. It was, and still is, the largest port on the western Mediterranean. It was under Muslim control for about five centuries until medieval times, which probably explains why the old quarter in the city centre (casco viejo) is the easiest place I've ever known to get lost in, with its mazes of narrow winding streets.
Torres de Serrano
A 4 mile (7km) stretch of the old river bed has been turned into parkland
There's plenty of history in this ancient city, including the 13th century Cathedral which houses the Santo Caliz, a 1st-century Middle-Eastern stone cup believed by many to be the Holy Grail. This chalice was used in a mass here by Pope Benedict XVI on the World Day of Families in 2006. Valencia was a great trading city as signified by the magnificent gothic 15th century trading house, La Lonja,
One of the merchants trading here helped finance the trip to discover the Americas by Cristóbal Colón (Christopher Columbus). Columbus actually thought he was going to find a faster trade route to Asia, but had vastly miscalculated the circumference of the earth, believing that the distance from the Canary Islands west to Japan was a mere 2,300 statute miles of just ocean.
The second building in the sequence is the Hemisfèric, "the eye of wisdom", which looks like a huge eyeball floating above a pool of water. It even has a steel and glass eyelid which can blink using hydraulics. This houses the planetarium and huge Imax theatre of the complex.
Calatrava is currently constructing, amongst other projects, the new World Trade Center Transportation Hub in New York City and the Chicago Spire which at 2,000 ft (610 metres) will be the highest building in North America upon completion.
The next building in the complex is the Museo de las Ciencias Príncipe Felipe, which some say resembles the skeleton of a prehistoric fish.
The top floor contains the "Chromosome Forest", 23 pairs of enormous chromosomes representing human DNA. It is devoted to the fascinating science of the human species and how our bodies work.
On the first floor there is also a 15 metre sculpture representing DNA.
Check out some of Calatrava's other buildings around the world on his official web site.
To get to the next part of this futuristic "city" it was necessary to leave the Turia river bed due to a construction site for Calatrava's next masterpiece, the Puente de l'Assut de l'Or (bridge), which would become the tallest construction in Valencia when complete at 125 metres, and the Ágora tennis centre. Unfortunately these had not been built when I was there, so I don't have any pictures.
He then did hundreds of projects there, including many public builldings and played a key role in the development of Mexican architecture. His major contribution to structural engineering was the development of thin shells made out of reinforced concrete, as can be seen here on the roof of the underwater restaurant.
Anemone or Muppet?
They even have sleepovers for children in the tunnels, which is pretty cool. Photographs with flash were not permitted inside the aquarium areas (although some unfeeling woman busily took them when I was there, despite constant reminders over the tannoy system in her language, Spanish, and in English). The pictures you see here had to be dramatically enhanced using image software. The best way for me to capture the grace and splendour of the marine life was to take video clips, which I have edited into a film presentation.I'm not really a fan of animals in cages or fish in tanks as they are not in their natural environment.
Having said that, in the natural environment the mortality rate of first born belugas is over 50 percent. I felt most sad for the walruses, constantly circling in their tank, with their tusks, normally at least a metre long, cut short and capped with metal, as you can see in the film.
Make up your own mind while watching my YouTube video below. It's like having a giant fish tank or aquarium on your desktop! There are also many more pictures from my extensive travels in Spain after Valencia, which I have yet to write about in this blog, including Murcia, Andalucia, Extremadura, Galicia, Asturias and the stunning Picos de Europa mountains. It's accompanied by a fine soundtrack by Leftfield, "Release The Pressure".
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