Once central to the fabric of everyday life, the Spanish bar now faces a slow and steady disappearance, not as a dramatic collapse but as a quiet vanishing, absorbed by shifting urban logics, gentrification, and the rise of sanitized consumer spaces, traditionally, these bars were not just businesses but cultural organisms, staging sites for ritualised sociability—where breakfasts echoed with local news, domino games, and laughter, and where coffee came with names remembered and advice freely given, places like El Morillo in Vejer, Casa Aranda in Málaga or a taberna along the highway were marked not only by their menus but by their capacity to anchor memory and relational warmth, the erosion of these spaces is especially visible in the south, where the pitufos with manteca colorá, the hum of the plancha, and the chatter of regulars have been replaced by themed cafés offering frozen croissants in beige interiors, the transition isn’t just economic—it’s spatial, sensory and emotional, replacing the unpredictable charm of vernacular life with a streamlined predictability, each closing marks the end of a microcosm, the quiet fading of a communal texture built over decades, the documentation of these shifts—through video, photography, notes and sound—has become a form of resistance, a poetic gesture against the cultural amnesia of urban acceleration, Bar Español becomes both a eulogy and a call to witness, a positional essay on context, loss and the politics of everyday design, a project that continues to grow through fieldwork, memory fragments, and collaborative narration. Lloveras, A. (2026). Bar Español.
https://antolloveras.blogspot.com/2019/03/spanish-bar-2017-2018-2019-bar-espanol.html



