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Barcelona is adding 11 bodegas — traditional wine bars — to its list of protected cultural heritage sites, as the city attempts to save businesses that are struggling amid soaring rents, chain store competitors and tightening coronavirus restrictions.
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These difficulties have encouraged Barcelona's city council to step in and apply protected status to 11 of the Catalonian capital's bodegas. The initiative was launched in July last year, before the pandemic hit. It seeks to protect at-risk and traditional retailers who may be ousted from the city by soaring rents and chain store competitors. According to the council, most of the bodegas added to the list have had "an important social influence" on their neighborhood and "retain aspects of historic interest and originality".
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They join about 220 at-risk retailers, including bookshops, toy shops, grocery shops and furniture workshops, have already been granted protected cultural heritage status. "I think it’s great that the city council is giving us this recognition because we’re part of the fabric of the barrio,” David Montero, who runs Bodega Quimet in Gràcia told the Observer. “If not, it will end up as just another Starbucks."
The bodegas added to the protected list include:
Bodega Sopena (en Sant Martí)
Bodega J.Cala ( Sant Martí)
Bodega Marín (Sant Martí)
Bodega Quimet (en Gràcia)
Bodega Manolo (Gràcia)
Bodega Vendrell (en Eixample)
Celler Miquel (Eixample)
Bodega Salvat (en Sants-Montjuïc)
Bodega Lluís (en Sant Andreu)
Bodega Massana (en Horta-Guinardó)
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