A series of billboards on building facades bring you closer to different characters, architectures and periods that tell us about the history of the city.
This building was one of the headquarters of the "Colegio de Doña Luisa" (school) (1967-1977). Luisa Casas Bueno (1924-2001), a native of Málaga, moved to Coín after her marriage to the photographer López Duerto.
This was for some centuries, the jail and the House of Cabildo, a term used for the institution and the building that housed the municipal authorities sent by the crown.
At the beginning of this street is one of the entrances to the villa from the Nasrid period. Only a few decades ago there were still remains of the arch that flanked the door.
Known as the Sevillana house, it was a house whose name corresponds to its use as a space for the transformation and distribution of electrical energy in Coín.
The most influential Spanish philosopher of recent decades, Don Javier Muguerza Carpintier (1936-2019), was born here. Author of works such as "Hopeless Reason" or "From Perplexity: Essay on Ethics, Reason and Dialogue."
The photographic studio of "López Duerto" (1921-1996) was located in this place since 1959. The nineteenth-century house where it was located was replaced by the current building according to the current approach of the moment.
D. Francisco Loriguillo Márquez (1850-1924) known as "Loriguillo el de Coín" lived here during the first years of his marriage to Mrs. María Dominguez Macías, with whom he had nine children.
The canon D. José Moreno Maldonado (1867-1935) was born here, to a carpenter father, trained in his childhood by D. Fernando de Hermosa y Santiago. He was an outstanding and outstanding student at the Malagueño Council Seminary.
Here are the remains of the only Episcopal Palace that existed in the province of Malaga outside its capital, for the residence of the high ecclesiastical authorities. Ordered to be built by Don Bernardo Manrique de Lara in the s.
This building, currently adapted to the popular and traditional "Carnicería de Peña", maintained its function as a court since its creation, between the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th
The chronicler of Coín, Juan Santos Gutiérrez (1921 – 2009), a lawyer by profession and in love with history and his people, lived here with his family.