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Guide to Tenerife - Los Cristianos
Los Cristianos still
retains a hint of the original fishing village and is the second largest
holiday resort in the south of Tenerife, the largest being its next door
neighbour Playa de Las Américas.
One of the main differences you will notice is that in Los Cristianos, unlike
in Las Américas, the town has a history pre-dating its transformation
into a tourist resort. Before undergoing major development in recent years,
Los Cristianos existed as a small fishing village. It has an old town centre,
complete with Catholic Church, stretching from the port up to the main shopping
street Avenida de Suecia. |
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The centre is entirely
pedestrianised, which is good news for tourists and a welcome change from
vehicles in Las Américas. This older area consists of houses in which
much of the town's local Canarian population still lives.
Los Cristianos meets Playa de las Americas at the headland, accessible by
bus or on foot, it has a lovely beach and rocky shore, plenty of restaurants,
a scattering of bars and one or two discos. Journey time from Reina Sofia
airport is approximately 20 minutes by coach. It also has a leisure port,
good selection of shops, and pretty pavement cafes on its long pedestrian
promenade. |
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Los Cristianos' port
also has the ferry and hydrofoil that depart daily to the islands of La
Gomera, La Palma and El Hierro - the three islands which, together with
Tenerife, make up the autonomous Spanish province of Santa Cruz de Tenerife.
Los Cristianos and Las Américas is difficult to determine where one
begins and one finishes, especially around the seafront area known as San
Telmo. Part of Los Cristianos, while the neighbouring Compostela Beach area,
only a short walk away along the seafront, is in Playa de Las Américas.
It is because Las Américas keeps expanding eastwards until it reached
Los Cristianos and could not go any further! |
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Los Cristianos brags
of expanse of beaches along its whole seafront; the aforementioned Playa
Vistas, which was completed in 1997 using sand imported from the Sahara,
is the best in town. Next to the port, right amid the hustle and bustle
of the town centre, is another good and popular stretch of beach with many
bars, restaurants and shops all around.
Los Cristianos is a match for Las Américas in the superiority and
diversity of restaurants. Everything you could desire is here somewhere
- Chinese, Indian, Mexican, Spanish and Canarian of course. Thanks to the
relaxed licensing laws over here, you will never be stuck for somewhere
to taste the local brew, day or night, whenever the fancy takes you.
Los Cristianos is a fairly small town with an energetic town centre but
with airy and relaxed 'suburbs', it has some fine beaches, typically good
weather, an international clientele, every shops and restaurants you could
hope for. Los Cristianos is in some ways more charming, perhaps even more
'exclusive' than Las Américas but lacks the night time 'edge' of
Las Américas, and some, particularly families and older visitors,
may see as a good thing. |
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