National Geographic Traveller UK - 04.2020

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PHILIPPINES
Get to know Filipino cuisine
From spit-roasted lechon pork to
adobo stew, the stars of Filipino
food are starting to shine

PUERTO RICO
A baptism in Bomba
In the north east of Puerto
Rico, the coastal city of Loíza is
championing its African heritage

DRINK
Where to mark 100 years
since Prohibition began
There are plenty of ways to
commemorate the US booze ban

A GUIDE TO NIGHTLIFE IN CHUECA


AND MALASAÑA, MADRID


Ask Madrilenians where to head of an
evening, and you’ll likely get a whole host
of responses: some will rhapsodise over La
Latina, which bristles with locals driting
between wine bars and taperías. There’ll be
votes for scrufy Lavapiés, too, a traditionally
working class ’hood that ofers a vibrant slice
of multicultural Madrid. Others, meanwhile,
will suggest Salamanca for well-heeled
restaurants and strolls along leafy avenues.
But most will demand you make a beeline for
Chueca and Malasaña — the beating heart of
the Spanish capital ater dark.
Roughly divided by the Calle de
Fuencarral, these neighbouring barrios truly
come to life when the sun goes down, and

In the March issue, we looked at Madrid’s nightlife. Take a closer look at
the city’s ater-dark scene with a guide to these dynamic neighbourhoods.
Words: Connor McGovern

BEYOND THE
TRAVEL SECTION

Can tourism save Italy’s ancient
‘Dying Town’?
Like many rural villages in Italy,
this 300t by 500t town was at
risk of disappearing — until the
world’s curiosity caught up to it.

| HISTORY |

Predicting the unpredictable:
inside the nerve centre of the
UK’s weather forecasts
Accurate weather reports help to
keep the country running. We
take a look at how they happen
— and why they could be about
to change.

| SCIENCE |

When deadly storms arrive,
here’s why some people run
towards danger
Braving hail, sandstorms and
tornadoes, we photograph nature
at its rawest — and most beautiful.

| PHOTOGRAPHY |

IMAGES: GETTY; BEN ROBERTS; ALAMY; LYMA RODRÍGUEZ; THOMAS DE CIAN


offer a taste of Madrid at its most magnetic
— fun, frivolous and full of opportunity for a
good time. Chueca has long been the core of
the city’s LGBTQ+ scene and it still wears its
rainbow colours with pride, while Malasaña,
with its slightly vintage feel, embodied
the movida madrileña — the irreverent
counterculture of 1980s that lourished in
Madrid ater the Franco dictatorship.
From cocktail bars to clubs, late-night eats
to people-watching on lamp-lit plazas, you
could spend plenty of time wondering what
to discover irst in this part of town, but
you’d be wasting the precious night. Here are
some tips to get you started.
READ THE FULL GUIDE ONLINE NOW

April 2020 47

ONLINE
Free download pdf