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about Lliçà d'Amunt
Large residential municipality with scattered Romanesque hermitages
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The scent of raw butifarra hits you before the square even comes into view. It’s Friday morning. A row of food stalls lines one side of Plaça Major, terracotta-coloured slices shining beneath plastic sheets. Hands fold them with the ease of long practice. This is how you meet Lliçà d’Amunt: not with a landmark, but with the smell of meat, thyme, and warm bread tucked into a paper bag. People pass through, buy something, exchange a few words, then carry on.
Stone and shadow
The old quarter is small, easy to cover in a slow loop. The houses in some corners lean close enough that their roofs nearly touch. Their walls hold a muted grey that only comes after many winters.
At the centre stands the church of Sant Julià. The parish appears in medieval documents, likely from around the 11th century. Inside, the light is low and carries a faint smell of wax and aged wood. If you stand under the bell tower in the late afternoon, you can hear the dry flutter of pigeons moving between the beams, their wings echoing against stone.
Traces of older times surface occasionally. Pieces of Roman-era pottery and signs of ancient agricultural work have been found when land is disturbed near some of the older masías. They are not grand remains, just scattered clues that this valley has been lived in for a long time.
Evenings of smoke and small bites
A different rhythm takes over on certain summer evenings. During the local fiesta del pintxo, the town fills with people moving through the streets, a small bite in one hand, a drink in the other. There is no fixed route. You follow the smoke from a hot griddle or the smell of something toasting nearby.
Tables appear in courtyards. Trays empty quickly. The pace is loose, informal. One bite leads to another a little further along, and the town becomes a continuous walk shared by neighbours and a few visitors from nearby places.
If your visit coincides with this, arrive early. As the evening goes on, the streets crowd and getting near the centre becomes difficult.
A view from the hermitage path
The most revealing moments come when the day begins to quieten. The market ends, cars disperse. The wind moves through the plane trees in the square. A shutter rolls down somewhere.
A short walk leads towards the hermitage of Santa Justa i Santa Rufina at sunset. The path is unpaved, with loose stones in places—sturdy footwear helps, and it’s better avoided just after rain. From higher ground, the Vallès opens out. Red rooftops cluster below, thin roads trace lines across the land, and beyond them sits the darker outline of the mountains.
As the light fades, towns across the valley switch on their streetlights one by one. It’s a brief moment, clear and unhurried.
When to go
Weekdays are calmer, especially in the morning. Summer heat builds from midday onwards, so earlier hours or late afternoon are more comfortable for walking. Autumn brings the smell of firewood and damp earth to the surrounding paths, and they are often quieter then.