Salamanca
Salamanca

TORMES RIVERBANK

1 hour 30 minutes
The Salamanca Riverside Walk is located on both banks of the Tormes river. The right bank extends, following the course of the river, from the vicinity of the Roman Bridge to the La Aldehuela area. The route is divided into sections marked by bridges that allow us to cross from one bank to another with ease.
On the left bank, between the bridges, there is the pier and the viewpoint with a selfie stand to enjoy the best panoramic view of the city.
The riverside forest constitutes an ecosystem of great ecological value. Its riverside vegetation —poplars, ash trees, and willows— contributes to maintaining water quality and offers shelter to numerous bird species. Nature, history, and art merge along the route.

It can be explored both on foot, along a wide and comfortable sidewalk, and by bicycle thanks to the bike lane that crosses it. The environment is especially pleasant for walking, exercising, or enjoying with family, as it has a playground, a bio-healthy area, picnic areas, and a dog park.

In recent decades, Salamanca has undergone a profound urban transformation that has made it a greener, more accessible, and more pleasant city to live in. Today, it boasts around three hundred hectares of parks and gardens, most of them distributed along the natural corridor that runs parallel to the Tormes River.

For centuries, the city practically turned its back on the river. Only those who directly depended on its waters—tanners, fishermen, cattle breeders, millers, or washerwomen—occupied its banks. With the disappearance of these traditional trades, the great progress of recent years has been to integrate the river into urban life. Currently, athletes, families, visitors, and people with pets enjoy this natural environment, which has become one of Salamanca's main green lungs.

The banks of the Tormes, especially in the Fluvial Promenade area, have been transformed into a true garden, with meadows, riparian vegetation, parks, and extensive sports areas. Its riparian vegetation—poplars, ash trees, and willows—constitutes an ecosystem of great ecological value that helps maintain water quality and offers refuge to numerous bird species. Among the most common are the little egret, the house sparrow, the black-headed gull, the great cormorant, and the red kite. Seasonal birds such as swallows, martins, night herons, and various raptors can also be observed.

This space takes on special significance every Lunes de Aguas (Water Monday), when thousands of young people and families celebrate this Salamancan tradition by tasting the typical hornazo. This festivity recalls that during Lent, prostitutes were forced to leave Salamanca and cross the river to Tejares. On Lunes de Aguas, they returned accompanied by students and the so-called Padre Putas (Father Whores), crossing the Tormes in boats. A large party was then organized in the meadows near the bridge, the main dish of which was hornazo, a pastry filled with pork loin, chorizo, ham, and hard-boiled egg.

The Fluvial Promenade is traversed by a bike lane that connects this section with existing ones towards Santa Marta de Tormes—through La Aldehuela and Isla del Soto—and towards Carbajosa de la Sagrada, through the San José neighborhood and the El Montalvo industrial park.

Thanks to this environmental and urban recovery, the Tormes River Fluvial Park has become a consolidated space where leisure, sport, culture, and nature coexist.

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Comprehensive sports facilities: tennis courts, stadiums, swimming pools, etc.
Water bodies: Lakes, rivers, canals
parks and gardens
Free visit price
  • Individual - 0.00 €