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6 parks selected in this guide.

Park Güell is Gaudí's colourful hilltop park — originally conceived as a garden city, it features undulating mosaic-covered benches, a dragon stairway, and forest-like colonnades with panoramic views across Barcelona to the Mediterranean.

Montjuïc is the 173-metre hill overlooking Barcelona's port, packed with gardens, museums, sports venues from the 1992 Olympics, a castle, and some of the city's best viewpoints.

Parc de la Ciutadella is Barcelona's most central and beloved park — the city's green lung in the Born quarter, built on the site of a demolished 18th-century military citadel and featuring a monumental waterfall fountain, a boating lake, and the Barcelona Zoo.

The Jardins del Laberint d'Horta are Barcelona's oldest surviving garden — a neoclassical park featuring an elaborate cypress hedge maze, romantic pavilions, canals, and fountains in the quiet Horta-Guinardó district.

Parc del Fòrum is a vast modern waterfront park at the northeastern tip of Barcelona, built for the 2004 Universal Forum of Cultures. It features open plazas, a photovoltaic panel canopy, and a bathing area on the Mediterranean.

The Jardins de Mossèn Costa i Llobera are a terraced botanical garden on the south-facing slope of Montjuïc, home to one of Europe's most important collections of cacti and succulent plants. The garden holds over 800 species from arid regions worldwide.