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Area Information

Basic data
Size: 79,10 Km²
Population : Approx. 23.000
Residents known as : Alhaurinos
Monuments : Church of San Sebastián, Casa refugio de Torrijos, Arcos de Zapata, Hermitage of Alamillo, Hermitage of Santo Cristo del Cardón.
Geographical situation : At the entrance to the Guadalhorce valley, 17 kilometres from Malaga.
Tourist information : Town Hall, Punto Industrial, s/n. 29130.
Phone: 952 410 005 Fax : 952 413 336  
On the Internet : www.alhaurin.com/delatorre/ayuntamiento/indice.htm

Alhaurín de la Torre sits at the entrance to the Guadalhorce valley, easy to get to these days by the main National 340 coast road. At only 17 kilometres from Malaga city, one takes the airport road towards Torremolinos and turns off at the signposts to Alhaurín. The traditional and the modern live comfortably side by side in this town, with its old Moorish-style streets and houses in the Barrio Viejo and the modern housing estates and villas on the outskirts. The weather here is perfect, due to its privileged geographical position between the Guadalhorce river and the Sierra de Mijas.
Alhaurín de la Torre has become a prosperous municipality in which agriculture is the main source of income, with citric and sub-tropical fruit plantations and olive groves covering the landscape. The unique climate of the area has also resulted in a large number of nurseries having been established in the area. The origin of the place goes back to pre-historic times, and it is known that the Phoenicians that set up factories in Malaga and Cártama in about 1,000 B.C. settled in Alhuarín. it was here that Lauro was founded, and centuries later the Romans called it Lauro Vetus. The Moors, in their time, called it Albarracín, and it grew from that into a larger collection of farm-houses. The re-conquest of the town in 1485 meant another variation on the name, and the place was finally called Alhaurín de la Torre. The population increased sharply due to the influx of Christian settlers during this period. There are many archaeological remains in the municipality, most of them being in the Estación de la Alquería area, officially designated as being of Cultural Interest. The area is about 18 hectares in size, and was occupied by settlers in the 3rd and 4th centuries B.C.

Places to Visit

Archaeological remains
Numerous ceramic fragments, bowls, wall drawings, coins and burial objects have been discovered from the Roman period in the municipality. One of the main areas of archaeological interest is the Cortijo de Mollina, where the remains of a Moorish farm-house and tower still stand, along with other ruins from the Roman period. There are also important remains in the El Cardón Valley and Carrera de Caballos areas, and in the area around the Casa de Torrijos, in Torrealquería.
Church of San Sebastián
This church was built at the request of Queen Isabel the Catholic in the year 1505, and the present parish church in the Plaza de la Concepción was built in 1610. It was destroyed years later in an earthquake and later reconstructed in a neo-classical style in the middle of the 19th century. It is built in the shape of the Latin cross with three naves and two bell-towers.
Casa Refugio de Torrijos
In 1831, General José María Torrijos led a rising against the absolute monarchy of Fernando VII. His aim was to restore the Constitution of 1812, but his enterprise failed and he fled to Alhaurín de la Torre and took refuge from the royal forces in a finca called the Hacienda de la Alquería, owned by the Conde de Mollina. He and his men were captured, nevertheless, and shot on the beaches of Carmen, in Malaga.
Arcos de Zapata
These well-preserved remains were once the aqueduct known as the Acueducto de la Fuente del Rey, dating from the 18th century and built to carry water from the stream of the same name in Churriana to Malaga city. It never became functional, due to the pressure applied by the land-owners of La Vega and other economic problems. The Hermitage of Santo Cristo del Cardón, situated in Los Callejones, was said to be the scene of a miracle in the year 1484, when the image of Christ painted on wood saved a Christian soldier from death at the hands of the Moors. As a result, this image is venerated at a number of grottos throughout the municipality.

Alhaurín de la Torre sits at the entrance to the Guadalhorce valley, easy to get to these days by the main National 340 coast road. At only 17 kilometres from Malaga city, one takes the airport road towards Torremolinos and turns off at the signposts to Alhaurín. The traditional and the modern live comfortably side by side in this town, with its old Moorish-style streets and houses in the Barrio Viejo and the modern housing estates and villas on the outskirts. The weather here is perfect, due to its privileged geographical position between the Guadalhorce river and the Sierra de Mijas.
Alhaurín de la Torre has become a prosperous municipality in which agriculture is the main source of income, with citric and sub-tropical fruit plantations and olive groves covering the landscape. The unique climate of the area has also resulted in a large number of nurseries having been established in the area. The origin of the place goes back to pre-historic times, and it is known that the Phoenicians that set up factories in Malaga and Cártama in about 1,000 B.C. settled in Alhuarín. it was here that Lauro was founded, and centuries later the Romans called it Lauro Vetus. The Moors, in their time, called it Albarracín, and it grew from that into a larger collection of farm-houses. The re-conquest of the town in 1485 meant another variation on the name, and the place was finally called Alhaurín de la Torre. The population increased sharply due to the influx of Christian settlers during this period. There are many archaeological remains in the municipality, most of them being in the Estación de la Alquería area, officially designated as being of Cultural Interest. The area is about 18 hectares in size, and was occupied by settlers in the 3rd and 4th centuries B.C.


The golf course has become one of the principal attractions of the area

FIESTAS
The month of January is particularly good for festivals in Alhaurín de la Torre. On January 5th, the well-known Cabalgata de los Reyes Magos (Procession of the Three Kings) takes place, and on January 20th there is a festival in honour of San Sebastián. The celebrations go on for three days, with cultural and folkloric activities taking place, in which the entire town takes part. The Day of the Purification of the Most Holy Virgin - El Día de la Purificación de la Santísima Virgen - takes place on February 2nd, the virgin being known as the Virgen de la Candelaria. One of the traditions in the town is to make offerings of traditionally made doughnuts decorated in coloured ribbons to the Virgin, and at night-fall, the burning of the dolls takes place in a huge bonfire in the central square. The carnival is held in February and March, with a few days of typical carnival fun in the streets during this period. After the carnival there is a national competition of percussion bands. There are only two brotherhoods (hermandades) in the Holy Week processions in Alhaurín, and these processions attract tourists and visitors from far and wide. The Festival of Corpus Christi takes place in May and June, in which the streets and houses are decorated with flowers and altars. The Fiestas Mayores de San Juan Bautista, summer patron saint of the municipality, take place at the end of June, with the Flamenco Festival, the "Torre del Cante", being held a week earlier. This is one of the most prestigious flamenco festivals in all of Andalucía.

GASTRONOMY
The traditional Alhaurín de la Torre cuisine is a mixture of all the different peoples and cultures that have been in the town. Among the most typical dishes are the rice with chestnuts, the garlic soup, the gachas and the soup made from local produce of the land.

RECREATION
Alhaurín de la Torre has a wide range of clubs and other centres for the enjoyment of the beautiful natural surroundings, including sporting activities. The tennis club "La Capellanía" organises an annual tournament in the month of September, called the Capellanía Open. This club has three tennis courts, a sports centre and other sports pitches. In the Jarapalo mountains there is the Real Sociedad de Tiro de Pichón (the Royal Society of Clay Pigeon Shooting) which has five areas for the practice of various shooting disciplines. And there is, of course, the well-known Lauro Golf Club, 18 holes over six kilometres of fairways with games lasting an average four hours.

Area information provided courtesy of the Sur in English