Surface Area: 26.6 square kilometres
Population: 55,960
What the natives are called: Benalmadenses
Monuments: the Santo Domingo church, El Muro gardens, Museo Arqueológico
(Archaeological Museum), Bil-Bil and Colomares castles, Las Águilas garden,
the Estupa Budista (Buddhist Stupa), watchtowers (Torrebermeja, Torrequebrada,
and Torremuelle), Plaza de España, historic quarter of
Benalmádena
– Pueblo, and the Roman ruins at
Benalmádena – Costa.
Geographical Location: in the Western Costa del Sol region, 20 kilometres from
the city of
Málaga and at an altitude of 280 metres. Average annual rainfall
is 610 litres per square metre and the average temperature is approximately
18º C.
Tourist Information: Tourism Office, Avda. Antonio Machado, 10 (29630).
Telephone: (+34) 952 44 24 94
Fax: (+34) 952 44 06 78 E-mail:
turismo@benalmadena.com
The most striking peculiarity about this municipality, which stretches from
the southern foothills of the Sierra de Mijas range to the sea’s edge,
is that it consists of three population centres, which are now practically joined
together, but which nevertheless are still well differentiated: Benalmádena
Pueblo, Benalmádena Costa and Arroyo de la Miel.
The first of these is the oldest and is a typical whitewashed Andalusian village
-whitewashed with exceptional care, in fact-with narrow streets and relaxing
squares. Due to the elevation (almost 300 metres) of the village centre, and
its proximity to the sea, it has a number of exceptional vantage points for
viewing the Costa del Sol.
A large part of the population and municipal services are concentrated in Arroyo
de la Miel, a subsidiary administrative district that owes its growth to the
commuter railway station, and is the economic centre of the municipality. Benalmádena
Costa is the most cosmopolitan section and it is here that the tourist offer
of sun and beach is found: large hotels, a casino, leisure port and businesses
of all kinds.
Benalmádena is one of the leading municipalities in the province of
Málaga in the tourism field, due to its location, its solid hotel industry
base and its extremely broad leisure offer (beaches, a leisure port, hiking
and trail walking, a cable car, golf, amusement parks such as Tivoli, Selwo
Marina, and Sea Life, etc.) as well as intensive cultural activities connected
to plastic and scenic arts and music.
The first human settlement in this municipality occurred in the Upper Palaeolithic
period, as proven by remains discovered in the El Toro, Los Botijos and Las
Zorreras caves. The Phoenicians established themselves in this region between
the eighth and sixth centuries B. C., and there are also remains proving this
in the coastal area. The Romans came later (a salted fish trading post at Benal-Roma
and ruins of villas in Torremuelle and Capellanía), but it was the Arabs
who provided the origin of the municipality’s name.
In fact, the present name seems to derive from the Arabic Ibn al-Madin, meaning
“children of the mines” in reference to the ancient iron mines in
this region. This is not the only hypothesis as to the origin of the name of
the municipality, but it is the one that is most accepted by students and historians.
The Christian troops not only conquered but also destroyed the village, and
with it, its castle, which offered a stubborn resistance to the Catholic Monarchs’
army. In the late sixteenth century, it was repopulated by long-time Christians,
who were not able to establish themselves in the region owing, mainly, to the
dangers they faced from the continuous attacks from the sea. The watchtowers
that still stand close to the sea date from that era.
When several paper factories began operations in the eighteenth century the
region began to recover a stable population. It was to increase years later
with grape cultivation, which disappeared in the early twentieth century as
a result of the phylloxera (leaf louse) pest. The phenomenon of tourism, which
began in Benalmádena in the 1960’s, was to drive the economy forward
at an unstoppable rate.
How to Get There
The locality is perfectly linked to the Costa del Sol by the Mediterráneo
Expressway (AP-7; N-340), and by commuter rail also to Fuengirola, Torremolinos
and the provincial capital.