Triana Hostel (Sevilla)

OPEN ALL YEAR.

Amenities

Set in a typical Sevillian house in Triana, the most popular neighbourhood in Seville, the Triana Hostel offers you a genuine Sevillian atmosphere away from the tourist crowds, just 15 minutes from the Cathedral and the Royal Alcázar.

At the Triana Hostel we offer internet, Wi-Fi, breakfast, kitchen access, heating, air conditioning and bed linen. Everything included in the price.

If you want to meet people, our common room and terrace are the perfect place to enjoy a pleasant time chatting with friends.

If you are a pilgrim, the Triana Hostel is the best place to start the Ruta de la Plata from Seville. Just follow the arrows painted at the hostel exit, which will lead you to Santiago de Compostela.

The Triana Hostel is also just two minutes from Calle Betis, full of bars and terraces on the banks of the Guadalquivir with views of Seville’s Giralda, the Maestranza and the Torre del Oro.

Services

The Vía de la Plata awaits you with 1,000 km of paths to Santiago de Compostela, and what better place to start than the Triana Hostel. For Bicigrinos we offer:

Credentials: we issue credentials 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. If you are not staying with us and do not have a credential, drop by our reception — we have one for you too.

Ruta de la Plata guides: we have guides to the Vía de la Plata so you don’t get lost.

Bicycles: with the transport service on the Bicigrino website you can send your bike and we will store it without any problem until you arrive, so you can start the Vía de la Plata easily and transporting the bike is no obstacle. We will keep your bike until you get here. Bicycle storage.

Pilgrim’s Corner: with useful information for the pilgrim about the Ruta de la Plata.

Nearby

The house where the hostel is located was a former tenement yard (corral de vecinos), built at the end of the 19th century. Ten families lived in the house, sharing a bathroom and a kitchen located in the courtyard — their common area and meeting place. It was renovated 13 years ago.

The Triana neighbourhood has kept all the flavour of the old working-class quarters. It was not until the mid-19th century that the first permanent bridge was built to connect it with Seville, the Isabel II bridge (better known as the Triana bridge). This traditional isolation gave rise to a sense of independence that still endures. In fact, the neighbourhood’s main church, Santa Ana, is known as the “Cathedral of Triana”.

View location on map

Accommodation website

📅 Alquiler de bicicletas
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