book in Bodegas Campos
restaurant and lounges
Las canastas
The Nave de las Canastas takes its name from the time when it was dimly lit by bulbs hidden in the cane baskets of wine decanters. This was the main aging warehouse of the old winery, where the soleras of the emblematic brands were stored.
What most astonishes visitors who look into the warehouse today is the collection of large-format bullfighting and fair posters from the late 19th and early 20th centuries that line its walls—fifteen in total, protected in dimly lit frame-boxes. The oldest poster in the collection announces the 1915 May Fair and is the work of Zaragoza artist Manuel León Astruc.
Various combinations of lights and spotlights allow the warehouse to be adapted to different uses, such as a dining room, a conference and audiovisual room, and even a final reception to conclude wedding banquets.
Throughout all these years, flamenco festivals have been held here, and this, whether you like it or not, has imbued the walls with the finest flamenco singing, authenticity, joy, and spirit.
Through arches, you can enter three courtyards (the Ivy, the Well, and the Women’s Courtyards), and the only blind archway houses the beautiful dedication written by the poet and Prince of Asturias of Letters, Pablo García Baena, to his friends in the Campos.
