When Cartagena's mining wealth peaked around 1900, architect Víctor Beltrí lined Calle Mayor with riotous Art Nouveau facades, and walking it is like strolling a small Barcelona: the Gran Hotel, the Casino, Casa Cervantes, Casa Maestre and the Palacio Aguirre. Pair the architecture with a guided tapas crawl through the historic bars for the region's catch and the famed huerta de Europa produce, and you have the city's living present rather than only its Roman past. This is the elegant, sensory side of Cartagena most cruisers miss.
What to expect
Calle Mayor is pedestrianised and flat, an easy 1-2 hour amble past the showpiece facades, with the Gran Hotel's corner dome the standout. A good tapas tour threads emblematic bars near San Francisco square for things like local prawns, marinated fish and the Murcian michirones, paired with Jumilla or Bullas wines. Pace is leisurely and social. Midday is liveliest; some bars rest mid-afternoon.
The ship's 'Taste of Tapas' style tours run roughly EUR 70-90 per person. A direct-booked local gastronomy walk at EUR 45-60 covers the same modernista landmarks with better food stops and smaller groups; book direct. If you only want the architecture, do it free and self-guided and spend the savings on a long lunch.
Good to know
Everything is within the old town, a few minutes from the pier; no transport needed. Pick up the free modernista route map at the City Hall tourist office on arrival. Pre-book the tapas tour as small-group slots sell out on cruise days, and confirm the finish time against all-aboard. Cartagena lunches start late by northern standards, so an early-afternoon slot suits a port call best.
Sail there
Luxury cruises that call at Cartagena — book through us, the fare is identical and your concierge stays on your side.