Surface Area: 20 square kilometres
Population: 63,077
What the natives are called: Torremolinenses
Monuments: Calle San Miguel, Torre de Pimentel (Pimental Tower), Casa
de los Navajas (Los Navajas house), Molino de Inca (Inca Mill), Ciudad de
Torremolinos
sports complex, La Carihuela, Palacio de Congresos (Congress Palace), Príncipe
de Asturias auditorium
Geographical Location: in the Western Costa del Sol region. Its principal urban
centre is 50 metres above sea level and is 12 kilometres from the city of
Málaga
and 5 from Pablo Ruiz Picasso International Airport. The average precipitation
in the municipality is 500 litres per square metre and the annual average temperature
is 18º C.
Tourist Information: Tourism Office, Plaza de las Comunidades Autónomas (29620).
Telephone: (+34) 952 37 19 09
Fax: (+34) 952 37 95 51 E-mail:
turismo@ayto-torremolinos.org
Among the foothills of the Mijas mountain range, in an area of gentle terrain
that decreases in altitude as it approaches the seacoast, lies the territory
of Torremolinos, formerly a district of Málaga and a separate municipality
since 1988. The great green spaces at the foot of the mountains join the complex
and heterogeneous urban district on the opposite side of the Mediterranean Expressway
that bestows a distinctive profile upon the locality. (There are four well-differentiated
population centres: El Calvario, El Bajondillo, La Carihuela and the network
of streets that make up the most traditional district of the city).
The first human settlements in this municipality date back no less than 150,000
years. That is the period from which date the nine human skulls found in the
caves of El Tesoro, Los Tejones, El Encanto and Tapada. These caves no longer
exist but used to be at Punta de Torremolinos, the present Castillo de Santa
Clara, where clay vessels, axe heads, necklaces, bracelets and rings were also
found. Neolithic remains (5,000 B. C.) have also been found of what according
to the historian Juan Temboury was a Mesopotamian people who settled in this
place, where they would have found an excellent climate, natural shelters and
abundant water, game and fish.
During the Roman domination, Torremolinos was perfectly linked with Málaga
and Cádiz by the road that was built to connect those two cities. Due
to these good communications, three dried fish trading posts were set up in
the municipality, mainly to produce the famous garum sauce, a fish product that
was indispensable to Roman cuisine. All that remains of them, however, is a
few signs of one of them on the grounds of the old Campamento Benítez.
A small necropolis that came to light during some work on the Plaza Cantabria
is also from the Roman era.
The Arabs, with their undying reverence for water, did not hesitate to avail
themselves of the stream that had its headwaters in the area of Los Manantiales
and ran to the beach. They built numerous mills all along this stream. In about
1300, at the height of the Nazarite epoch, construction was begun on a defensive
tower at the end of present-day Calle San Miguel to prevent, so far as was possible,
invasions from the sea. The name of the city (“Tower-Mills”) alludes
to the tower and the mills.
Shortly after the fall of Málaga, the Catholic Monarchs granted that
capital ownership of the springs in Torremolinos. This decision was reaffirmed
years later, in 1511, by Juana la Loca. Thus, quite a few years later, the mills
that had been built by the Arabs gradually became inoperative for lack of a
water current.
It is an interesting footnote that the first resident of Torremolinos whose
name appears in any official document was Alonso Martín, who was contracted
as a tower guard with the mission of giving warning of invasions from the sea.
One such invasion occurred in 1503, as is shown by a document in the Archives
of the Málaga Cathedral. The resident in question was paid 25 maravedís
per day, but since his job consisted of watching over the coast he was not permitted
to have a fishing pole or play games. For failure to comply with that rule he
could be punished by two months without pay or even expelled from the service.
Pirate vessels did not relent in their harassment of the Málaga coastline,
and in order to defend the Torremolinos coast Antonio Jiménez Mesa, the
Royal Army engineer, proposed that a castle or artillery battery be built. This
work began in 1770 on the site now occupied by the Hotel Santa Clara. The fortress
housed infantry and cavalry garrisons, dwellings, a chapel and warehouses, and
was equipped with a battery of six 24-pound cannon with a range of about six
kilometres. The facility was a military base until 1830 when it was adapted
as a constabulary barracks, and years later it passed into private hands. There
are still some ruins of this fort in the area known as La Batería.
In 1923 two projects were begun to divert Torremolinos’ water to Málaga
due to the capital’s growing population and its scant water resources
during that era. This initiative ultimately caused the municipality of Torremolinos
to become a neighbourhood of Málaga.
Sir George Langworthy, an unusual British citizen who took up residence in
Torremolinos in the late nineteenth century, bought the Santa Clara castle and
in 1930 converted it into a residential hotel, thus founding the first tourist
establishment not only in Torremolinos but practically on the entire Costa del
Sol. Shortly afterwards, Carlota Alessandri converted her Cucazorra rural estate
into the Parador de Montemar; in the next decade the Hotel La Roca opened its
doors and in the late 1940’s the El Remo restaurant and cabaret in La
Carihuela began operations. The rest is recent history.
Beginning in the 1950’s with the opening of the Los Nidos and Pez Espada
hotels (the latter being the first luxury establishment in the area), the name
of Torremolinos became inescapably associated with tourism. 50 years later that
tranquil village, which sprang up around a watchtower and some mills exploiting
the abundant spring water is known throughout the world and finds itself at
the forefront of the international tourism industry.
How to Get There
Whether you are coming direct from the airport or from any other point on the
Costa del Sol, the signs for Torremolinos will not let you go wrong. The Mediterranean
Expressway and the old N-340, which has now become a boulevard passing through
the middle of the city, are this tourist centre’s access routes.