Availability
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General
Fira Barcelona Granvia Eurohotel is within 10 minutes’ drive from the Montjuic area, and offers free WiFi throughout the hotel. This elegant hotel is located in L’Hospitalet de Llobregat, 10 km from Barcelona Airport and 6 km from the port.
Rooms have a contemporary design and feature a flat-screen TV, private bathroom and air conditioning.
Its restaurant features a glass roof imitation and serves international cuisine. The hotel also features a bar.
The train station and the Fira Gran Via exhibition center are a 5-minute walk making it a perfect stay for anyone travelling to Barcelona for a congress. The city center of Barcelona is just 15 minutes by public transport from the hotel.
Check-in time
Check-out time
Cancellation / Prepayment
Children and extra beds
Pets
Accepted credit cards
Facilities
- Air Conditioning
- Airport Shuttle Service
- Audio/Video Capabilities
- Baby Cot
- Bath
- Desk
- Hairdryer
- Heating
- Ironing Facilities
- Kettle
- Lift
- Safety Deposit Box
- Shower
- TV
- Wake up service
- WiFi
Internet
L'Hospitalet de Llobregat

L’Hospitalet de Llobregat (in Catalan), or Hospitalet de Llobregat (in Spanish),[a] often shortened to L’Hospitalet, is a municipality to the immediate southwest of Barcelona in Catalonia, Spain.
By population, it is the second largest in Catalonia and the sixteenth in Spain. By population density, is notable for being one of the most densely populated cities in the European Union.
The first records of the settlement date to the Neolithic era with artefacts showing human habitation in the Llobregat river area. Roman artefacts have been found dating to the 2nd century BC such as a funeral decoration representing the head of Medusa now in the archaeological museum of Barcelona. However it is not until the 10th century that written references to Provençana (the city’s original name) appear. The current name originates from the Catalan language and derives from a hostel next to the Church Saint Eulalia of Provençana (Santa Eulàlia de Provençana) used by pilgrims in the Middle Ages. The city retained the character of a village until the 19th century when the first textile factories were built causing a population boom.[citation needed] The 1960s and 1970s saw a second population boom, caused by immigration from poorer regions of Spain: however this was not matched by construction of the necessary amenities and it was only in the 1990s that public investment resulted in additional schools, leisure facilities and housing.
The Swedish painter and former anarchist, later convert to Islam, ‘Abd al-Hādī ‘Aqīlī, formerly known as Ivan Aguéli, died there, being killed by a train, in 1917.
The main reason people would choose to stay in this area is to attend a tradeshow or exhibition at Fira Gran Via, which was located in L’Hospitalet as part of the regeneration of the area.
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