The Daily Telegraph - Saturday - Travel

‘YOU WON’T FIND A PRETTIER, MORE SHIP-SHAPE TOWN’

- Mary Lussiana

The Atlantic Ocean can reach a balmy 26 degrees. What’s not to love?

Stand between the fragrant orange trees that line the main square in Vila Real de Santo Antonio, surrounded by charming 18th-century town houses and a mosaic of bold black and white cobbleston­es at your feet, and you could be forgiven for thinking this little town’s claim to fame lies in its looks.

In many ways you would be right, for travel the length of the Algarve and you won’t find a prettier, more shipshape town. But Vila Real de Santo

The Grand Beach Club, where the city’s best Algarvian clams may lure you from your lounger

Antonio, which stands right on the River Guadiana which separates Portugal from Spain, has hidden depths.

It was only a small fishing village when engulfed by a tsunami in the 18th century, but because of its importance as a border town, it was rebuilt with a certain grandeur. The elegant, whitewashe­d terraced houses that front the river are noticeably uniform – in order, so the story goes, to make the Spanish, peering through their telescopes, think it was actually the facade of a magnificen­t palace. The energetic Marquis of Pombal (after whom the main square is named) – who had just rebuilt Lisbon after the same devastatin­g earthquake and tsunami of 1755 – constructe­d this town in a mere two years using his Pombaline orthogonal grid (a mapping tool) and, at ruinous expense, ashlar (finely worked stone blocks) transporte­d from Lisbon.

In 1835 the town became the birthplace of canned fish, at one point having 27 factories. Look inside your kitchen cupboards today and you might well see the name Ramirez on your tuna or sardines. It was that family, resident here then (and now, in its fifth generation, running the oldest canned fish business in the world), which founded the first purpose-built hotel south of Lisbon, Hotel Guadiana, which opened here in 1926. Designed by Swiss-born architect Ernesto Korrodi it brimmed with artdeco elegance, encapsulat­ing the style of the Roaring Twenties, hoping to attract those travelling to the 1929 Expo in Seville, less than 100 miles away.

Then came the Second World War; the Ramirez family moved their production to the north of Portugal to benefit from the more efficient rail network and business in the town centre dried up, leaving the tall red chimneys of the canning factories to the storks that nest here year after year.

But some 10 years ago a local boy became mayor and started a serious drive to restore the town’s deteriorat­ing heritage. Now, it gleams resplenden­t with everything except British tourists.

The Hotel Guadiana is now the Grand House. Its light-filled rooms recreate the glamour of its past, while its bar delivers the best martini in town. Last year saw the opening of a pousada within four of the historic 18th-century town houses, right on the orange treelined main square where, from the rooftop pool, you can look across at the characteri­stic sloping terracotta roofs.

Following hard on its heels came an outpost of the Addresses, a beautifull­y restored three-bedroom house to rent with concierge services just off the main square.

The hotels have added restaurant­s to those that were there already, which mostly serve Portuguese regional food ranging from chicken piri-piri to grilled octopus. In between the restaurant­s, shops abound – including the Soares wine store on Teofilo Braga Street, where you can explore the very rich world of Portuguese wines.

And then there is the beach. Praia de Santo Antonio is reached through a pine grove aromatic with the smell of resin and across sand dunes decorated by yellow-flowered succulent plants and the occasional basking chameleon. The Atlantic Ocean, warmed from the nearby Mediterran­ean, can reach a balmy 26C, making it the Algarve’s hot spot. What’s not to love?

WHERE TO STAY

Grand House (00 351 2815 30290; grandhouse­algarve.com) stands on the river front and offers old world elegance throughout its 31 rooms. Doubles from £265 including breakfast.

Pousada Vila Real de Santo Antonio (00 351 2812 49120; pousadas.pt/en/ hotel/pousada-vila-real-santo-antonio) offers a choice of swimming pools and a restaurant which spills on to the town’s main square. Doubles from £64 including breakfast. Casa Tres (theaddress­es. com) sleeps six with three double bedrooms and a swimming pool. From £920 for a week.

WHAT TO EAT

Live like a local and dine on Algarvian clams. The best – with garlic, olive oil and coriander – are to be had at the Grand Beach Club with your feet in the sand.

DON’T MISS

A visit to the neighbouri­ng salt pans at Castro Marim (salmarim.com). Recently restored by artisanal salt company Sal Marim, they now supply many of Portugal’s best restaurant­s. The beautifull­y packaged salts make the perfect souvenir to bring home, particular­ly if you opt for the piri-piri version.

HOW TO GET THERE

British Airways (britishair­ways.com) and easyJet (easyJet.com) fly from multiple UK airports to Faro, which is a 50-minute drive along the coast from Vila Real de Santo Antonio.*

 ?? ?? i
i

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom