by John Barrass, editor of Barcelona Business
Sant Andreu is far from being Barcelona’s most prosperous
disfrict, but if Heron International has got its formula right, the city’s
newest commercial complex could also turn out to be its most successfuL To
explain why, Heron executives are at pains to point out what Heron City is not:
it’s not a high-risk investment, US-style mega-mall; it’s not a shopping
centre (though it does have a supermarket); it’s not even called a ‘leisure
centre’, as the word ocio is too passive for the developers’ liking
— they prefer entrelenimienlo, with "Always entertaining" as
their English motto.
And Heron City, opened on 20 September, is a very Anglo-Hispanic
- it’s the brainchild of the buccaneering British entrepreneur Gerald Ronson,
whose rehabilitation on the international real estate market over the last five
years has been spectacular. Ronson’s daughter Lisa, who has been living and
breathing the project over the last few months, tells me that Heron City aims to
provide the amenities a good town square would offer, catering to the community’s
need for gathering, playing, dancing, swimming, eating, drinking and yes,
shopping.
Movies for the masses
Centrepiece of the complex is the 16-screen Cinesa cinema, which
thoughtfiully provides ‘business class’ 60cm-wide seats with double-width
armrests, but unfortunately intends to show foreign films in dubbed (not
subtitled) releases. Cinesa’s spokesman justifies the decision as pandering to
"mass market demand", which rather implies that folk are either
illiterate or content to miss out on screenwriters’ and actors’ finest
moments. However, along with the Generalitat’s Filmoteca on Avinguda Sarrià,
Cinesa provides the comfiest couches for Barcelona’s movie lovers.
Coffee and tea bars, an alehouse, ice-cream parlours and
fast-food franchises have all staked their pitches in Heron City, with the more
leisurely diner catered for by several distinctly Italian-style restaurants.
Talk like Robert de Niro at Frankie & Benny’s (actually a UK-based chain,
despite its Little Italy appeal) or sample freshly-prepared dishes at San
Marzano (the upmarket division of PizzaExpress), which, unusually for Barcelona,
serves Italian wine. Their Montepulciano red is excellent value, and the head
waitress speaks fluent English.
Visitors to Barcelona with young children could do worse than
book into the neighbouring Hotel Ibis, as Heron City’s Big Fun centre provides
kids’ games and rides, with bowling alleys and a pool hall for the older
punters. Monday and Thursday afternoons see dance classes, painting workshops,
magicians and circus-skills classes; There’s a ten-metre swimming pool
on-site, and a health and fitness centre planned for December.
Community building
The district’s elderly are invited to Monday and Thursday ‘elevenses’
for coffee, dominoes, chess and chat. Monday is comedy night, Thursday is jazz
night and gospel music rings forth on Sunday afternoons.
Heron City has encouraged local employment and invited nearby
traders, but the community-conscious initiatives can’t disguise the fact that
the OpenCor (El Corte Inglés) supermarket, cashing in until the small hours,
will inevitably take trade from local shops, already dwarfed by the nearby
Hypercor department store, also owned by El Corte Inglés. Reporters from the
local Nou Barris TV team tell me resentfully that the Heron City land was
previously set aside for low-cost starter flats.
It’s easy to grouse at an initiative like Heron City, but in
truth low-cost housing plans have come to nought all over town, and the dominant
presence of El Corte Ingles does at least provide consumers with a guarantee of
reasonable quality and the honouring of refunds for faulty goods, regardless of
the company’s appalling employment practices and its anti-competitive stance
nationwide.
On balance I was impressed by the professionalism of the Heron
City operation — safety considerations and good building standards were
evident, and the scale of the scheme seems better judged than the giant La
Maquinista commercial centre, opened last year and already struggling. My
biggest gripe is with Heron City’s astral logo: a more appropriate symbol be
heart-shaped, the pedestrian heart ot traffic-blighted Sant Andreu which
municipal funds can’t provide, but private capital can.
Heron City Barcelona
Passeig Andreu Nin
Developed in partnership with Leyetana
Parking for 1,600
Metros Fabra i Puig (line 1),
Llucmajor and Roquetes (line 4).
Buses 11, 12, 34, 36, 50, 51, 62, 74, 76, 81, 96, 97, 104
Project |
HERON CITY BARCELONA
Entertainment Centre |
Use |
Use Entertainment centre in
Barcelona. It has a 16-screen cinema and a wide range of leisure facilities
including restaurants, bars, fast-food restaurants, discothèques, fitness,
shops related to leisure, hobbies and so on. |
Address |
Site situated next the Avenida
Meridiana surrounded by la Ronda del Mig and the following streets Andreu Nin
and Pintor Alsamora |
Basic Information |
- Fully integrated urban entertainment centre
- 34.000 m2 development
- 16 screen multiplex cinema by Cinesa, a Paramount/Universal company.
- 150 bedroom 3 star Accor hotel
- Health & fitness
- Family entertainment, restaurants and bars
- 1.600 underground car parking spaces
- Due to open September 2001
|
Planning forecast |
Construction commenced:
February 1999
Opened September 2001 |
Model |


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