Mercado Gastronómico San Albín

Top choice in Mérida


The halls of Mérida's red-washed 20th-century bullring have been transformed into a busy tapas-style hangout. In each alcove, individual stalls deliver their own specialities, with everything from jamón and croquettes to cocktails and cakes making an appearance. Mix and match and and sit wherever you like. It's a wonderful alternative to the formal atmosphere of the sit-down restaurants.


Lonely Planet's must-see attractions

Nearby Mérida attractions

1. Casa del Mitreo

0.06 MILES

Beside Mérida's Plaza de Toros, the Casa del Mitreo is a late-1st- or 2nd-century Roman house with a well-preserved fresco and several intricate mosaics…

2. Los Columbarios

0.16 MILES

This garden-fringed Roman funeral site contains two well-preserved 4th-century crypts and is decently documented (in Spanish) and illustrated. A footpath…

3. Teatro Romano

0.29 MILES

Mérida's most spectacular Roman monument, and the only one to once again fulfil its original function – by hosting performances during the Festival…

4. Templo de Diana

0.34 MILES

The soaring columns here are one of Mérida's most dramatic, incongruous sights, surrounded as they are by the buildings of a modern Spanish city…

5. Pórtico del Foro

0.34 MILES

The restored 1st-century Pórtico del Foro, the municipal forum's portico, is 100m northeast up Calle de Sagasta from the Templo de Diana.

6. Anfiteatro

0.35 MILES

Attached to the grand Teatro Romano, the (slightly less dazzling) Anfiteatro opened in 8 BCE for gladiatorial contests and held 14,000; the gladiator…

7. Museo Nacional de Arte Romano

0.37 MILES

Even if you visit only a handful of Mérida's sights, make sure one of them is this fabulous museum, which has a superb three-floor collection of statues,…

8. Alcazaba

0.38 MILES

This large Islamic fort was built in the mid-9th century on a site already occupied by the Romans and Visigoths, probably becoming the first ever alcazaba…