Welcome Tour to Madrid in Private Electric Tuk Tuk

Madrid Trip Overview

Eco Tuk Tuk offers you a 120-minute trip through the city of Madrid. A contact with the capital of Spain in which our guides will be able to point out the most relevant areas of the city and discover its secrets. It is a perfect way to get a broad idea of everything you can enjoy in the city on your travel days. And also the best possible photographic tour for the traveler.

Turn your stay in Madrid into an unforgettable experience and take home a great memory of this wonderful city!

We comply with the measures for the reduction of contagion by COVID19 of the Ministry of Health of Spain for guides and means of transport.

* Note: in winter the tuk-tuk have protective layers against rain and wind. They also have blankets so that our clients do not get cold.

Special Offer – Book by February 28 and travel between January 7 and February 28 to save 20% off our previously offered price! – Book Now!

Additional Info

* Duration: 2 hours
* Starts: Madrid, Spain
* Trip Category: Outdoor Activities >> 4WD, ATV & Off-Road Tours



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What to Expect When Visiting Madrid, Comunidad de Madrid, Spain

Eco Tuk Tuk offers you a 120-minute trip through the city of Madrid. A contact with the capital of Spain in which our guides will be able to point out the most relevant areas of the city and discover its secrets. It is a perfect way to get a broad idea of everything you can enjoy in the city on your travel days. And also the best possible photographic tour for the traveler.

Turn your stay in Madrid into an unforgettable experience and take home a great memory of this wonderful city!

We comply with the measures for the reduction of contagion by COVID19 of the Ministry of Health of Spain for guides and means of transport.

* Note: in winter the tuk-tuk have protective layers against rain and wind. They also have blankets so that our clients do not get cold.

Itinerary
This is a typical itinerary for this product

Pass By: Royal Palace of Madrid, Calle de Bailen s/n, 28071 Madrid Spain

The Royal Palace of Madrid, also called the Royal Palace of the East, is the official residence of the King of Spain; However, the current kings do not live in it, but in the Palacio de la Zarzuela, which is why it is used for state ceremonies and solemn acts.

Pass By: Museo de la Catedral de la Almudena, Calle Mayor 92 Catedral de la Almudena, 28013 Madrid Spain

The Almudena Cathedral is the most important religious building in Madrid. On June 15, 1993, it was consecrated by Pope John Paul II, becoming the first cathedral to be consecrated outside of Rome.

The Almudena Cathedral Museum gathers dozens of objects that narrate the history of the diocese of Madrid. In the twelve rooms that the museum has, you will see everything from mosaics to episcopal coats of arms and ornament.

Pass By: Puerta de Alcala, Plaza Independencia 1, 28001 Madrid Spain

This monumental door, built by mandate of Carlos III to replace a previous one dating from the 16th century, was inaugurated in 1778.

Designed by Francesco Sabatini, it is a granite arc of triumph of neoclassical style, the first built in Europe after the fall of the Roman Empire, a precursor to others known as the Arc de Triomphe in Paris or the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin. Unlike the Puerta de Toledo or San Vicente, it has five openings instead of the usual three.

The two facades of which it is composed show different decorations, making the inner face easier (initially the one facing the city, which includes the four virtues: Prudence, Justice, Temperance and Fortress) than the exterior, chaired by the royal shield and with greater decorative wealth, which was what those who entered Madrid saw.

It receives its name for being located next to the road that led to Alcalá de Henares.

Pass By: Plaza Mayor, Calle Gerona 4, 28012 Madrid Spain

This arcaded square is the heart of Madrid de los Austrias, the old part of the city and the ideal starting point for a visit to one of the most charming neighborhoods.

Before Madrid was a capital of great avenues and boulevards, its map was made up of small streets and passageways, which today take us back to the times of swordsmen and rogues.

The Plaza Mayor began to be founded on the site of the old Plaza del Arrabal, where the town’s most popular market was located at the end of the 15th century, when the court of Felipe II moved to Madrid. In 1617, the architect Juan Gómez de Mora was commissioned to establish uniformity in the buildings of this place, which for centuries has hosted popular celebrations, bullfights, beatifications, coronations and also some auto-da-faith.

Pass By: Mercado San Miguel, Plaza San Miguel, 28005 Madrid Spain

Covered market from around 1916 with local food, delicatessen and events in an elegant setting.

Pass By: Casa de Cervantes, Calle Cervantes 2, 28014 Madrid Spain

In the Barrio de las Letras de Madrid in the heart of Madrid, it is with the house where Cervantes died.

Pass By: Casa Museo Lope de Vega, Calle Cervantes 11, 28014 Madrid Spain

The Lope de Vega House-Museum is located at number 11 Cervantes street in the Spanish city of Madrid.

Pass By: Fuente de Neptuno, Paseo del Prado Plaza de Canovas del Castillo, 28014 Madrid Spain

Both gods occupy prominent positions within the Greek mythological hierarchy and rival in the sports field, since the fans of Atlético de Madrid celebrate their victories in the square of the god of the sea, while that of Real Madrid does so in that of Cibeles.

As part of the original Ventura Rodríguez project, both sources were initially confronted, looking at each other on the side of Paseo del Prado. Both Cibeles and Neptune experienced restructuring and transfer processes at the end of the 19th century, finally occupying the center of the Cibeles and Cánovas del Castillo squares, respectively.

Pass By: Estacion de Atocha, Glorieta Del Emperador Carlos V, 28045 Madrid Spain

Atocha station is a railway complex located near the Plaza del Emperador Carlos V, in Madrid, Spain. It acts as a railway junction, and this makes it the station with the most passenger traffic in the country.

Pass By: Real Jardin Botanico, Plaza de Murillo 2, 28014 Madrid Spain

The Royal Botanical Garden of Madrid is a research center of the Higher Council for Scientific Research. Founded by Royal Order of October 17, 1755 by King Fernando VI in the Soto de Migas Calientes, near the Manzanares River, Carlos III ordered the transfer to its current situation in 1781, to the Paseo del Prado, next to the Museum of Natural Sciences that was being built (currently the Prado Museum), in Madrid, Spain. This botanical garden houses on three stepped terraces, plants from America and the Pacific, as well as European plants.

Pass By: Prado National Museum, Calle Ruiz de Alarcon 23, 28014 Madrid Spain

Singularly rich in paintings by European masters from the 16th to the 19th centuries, according to art historian and hispanist Jonathan Brown “few would dare to doubt that it is the most important museum in the world in European painting.”

Its main attraction lies in the wide presence of Velázquez, El Greco, Goya (the most widely represented artist in the museum), Tiziano, Rubens and El Bosco, of which he has the best and most extensive collections that exist worldwide, a what should be added outstanding sets of authors as important as Murillo, Ribera, Zurbarán, Fra Angelico, Rafael, Veronese, Tintoretto, Patinir, Antonio Moro, Van Dyck or Poussin, to name just a few of the most relevant.

Pass By: Iglesia San Jeronimo el Real, Calle Moreto 4, 28014 Madrid Spain

The old monastery of San Jerónimo el Real, popularly known as “Los Jerónimos”, was one of the most important monasteries in Madrid, originally ruled by the Order of San Jerónimo. Next to it there was the so-called Royal Room, later expanded as the Buen Retiro Palace in the times of Felipe IV.

Pass By: Puerta de Alcala, Plaza Independencia 1, 28001 Madrid Spain

The Puerta de Alcalá is one of the five old royal gates that gave access to the city of Madrid, it is located in the center of the roundabout in the Plaza de la Independencia.

Pass By: Barrio de Salamanca, Jose Ortega y Gasset, 8 – patio, 28006 Madrid Spain

The tour includes a tour of the main streets of Barrio Salamanca: Velázquez, Ortega and Gasset and Serrano.

Pass By: Paseo de la Castellana, 28046 Madrid Spain

Paseo de la Castellana is an avenue in Madrid that runs through the city from Plaza de Colón, in the center, to the Nudo Norte. It entered service at the beginning of the 20th century d. C .. In the first decade of the 21st century, it was made up of six central and four lateral lanes.

Pass By: Santiago Bernabeu Stadium, Avenida Concha Espina 1, 28036 Madrid Spain

The Santiago Bernabéu Stadium is a sports venue owned by the Real Madrid Football Club, located on the Paseo de la Castellana, in the Chamartín district of Madrid, Spain. It was inaugurated on December 14, 1947 and its capacity currently stands at 81,044 spectators.

Pass By: Plaza Colon, Madrid Spain

The Christopher Columbus monument presides over the square from the center of the fountain around which the traffic revolves. This white marble sculpture, in neo-Gothic style, next to its imposing stone-carved pedestal, measures 17 meters and was built in 1885 by Jerónimo Suñol, on the occasion of the wedding celebration between Alfonso XII and María de las Mercedes de Orleans.

The square also houses the Gardens of Discovery, a park opened in 1970, where you can admire various sculptures such as the monument dedicated to the discovery of America.

In the basement is the Cultural Center of the Villa Fernán Gómez.

Pass By: Cibeles Fountain, Plaza de Cibeles, Madrid Spain

Surrounded by the buildings of the Palacio de Buenavista (Army Headquarters), Palacio de Linares (Casa de América), Palacio de Comunicaciones (formerly the Post Office headquarters and currently the City Council of Madrid) and Banco de España.

The fountain represents the Roman goddess Cibeles, symbol of the land, agriculture and fertility, on a car pulled by two lions, the mythological characters Hipomenes and Atalanta. The goddess and the lions were carved in marble and the rest in stone. The sculpture of the goddess is the work of Francisco Gutiérrez. The two lions have been sculpted by the Frenchman Roberto Michel.

The goddess is an icon for the followers of the Real Madrid football team, since the Madrid team titles are celebrated, as well as the successes of the Spanish soccer team.

Pass By: Palacio de Cibeles, Plaza Cibeles 1 and Calle de Alcala, 28014 Madrid Spain

Designed and built by Antonio Palacios and Joaquín Otamendi as the headquarters of the Post and Telegraph Society of Spain, it was inaugurated in 1909. In 1993, it was declared a Site of Cultural Interest with a Monument category.

Following patterns of rationality and functionality, the building represents the union of tradition and modernity. Built in stone, iron and glass, the Cibeles Palace sits on a site that had housed the former recreational gardens of El Buen Retiro.

Pass By: Banco de Espana, Calle Alcala 48, 28014 Madrid Spain

All a decorative waste, awarded at the National Exhibition of Fine Arts of 1884. The building was built with the aim of providing the National Bank with a seat more in line with the importance of its functions, such as the single issuance of coins and bills for everything Spanish territory

The interior of the building can only be visited by groups of educational centers and universities. Exceptionally, also by non-profit cultural and associative entities.

Pass By: Plaza de Canalejas, Plaza de canalejas., Madrid Spain

The Plaza de Canalejas, formerly known as the Four Streets; It is located in the Centro district of Madrid, it is located between the Carrera de San Jerónimo and the streets of La Cruz, Seville and Príncipe. It bears the name of the politician and orator José Canalejas (1854-1912), who was assassinated by an anarchist while looking at the window of the now-defunct San Martín bookstore, on the neighboring Puerta del Sol corner of Carretas street, about a hundred meters from this small square.

Pass By: Plaza de Santa Ana, Madrid Spain

Plaza de Santa Ana is an open space in the Cortes neighborhood, in the Centro district of Madrid. It dates back to 1810 and throughout its history it has undergone numerous urbanization processes that have modified its appearance with varying degrees of success.

Special Offer – Book by February 28 and travel between January 7 and February 28 to save 20% off our previously offered price! – Book Now!



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