Calle de San Bernardo

The Calle de San Bernardo is a street in central Madrid, Spain.

[3] Straddling along the Palacio (the initial stretch up to the junction with the Gran Vía) and the Universidad neighborhoods part of the Centro District, the street starts at the Plaza de Santo Domingo and, going North, it enters the Chamberí district, forming the limit between the Arapiles and Trafalgar neighborhoods, ending at the Glorieta de Quevedo.

[7] Following the clamp down on the 1956 university protests, the street lost some of its bustling bookstores and coffee shops.

[6] The mashup of different architectural styles along the stretch going from the Plaza Santo Domingo to the Glorieta of Ruiz Jiménez has led to an overall lack of harmony in the street.

[8] The relentless gentrification of the Malasaña area in the 2010s led to the renovation of several traditional housing units in the street, turning them into high-end apartments.

1858 unveiling of the waters of the Canal de Isabel II in front of the Church of Our Lady of Montserrat.