Sants
Sants is a neighbourhood in the southern part of Barcelona. It belongs to the district of Sants-Montjuïc and is bordered by the districts of Eixample to the northeast, Les Corts to the northwest, and by the municipality of l'Hospitalet de Llobregat to the south.Photo: Pere prlpz, CC BY-SA 3.0.
Places of Interest
Highlights include Camp Nou and Plaça de Sants.
Camp Nou
Stadium
Photo: Oh-Barcelona.com, CC BY 2.0.
Camp Nou, officially Spotify Camp Nou for sponsorship reasons, and often referred to in English as the Nou Camp, is a stadium in Barcelona and the home of La Liga club FC Barcelona since its opening in 1957.
Plaça de Sants
Metro station
Photo: Josep Maria 15., CC BY-SA 3.0.
Plaça de Sants is a Barcelona Metro station, named after the nearby Plaça de Sants, in the Sants-Montjuïc district of the city of Barcelona. The station is served by lines L1 and L5.
Can Vies
Community center
Photo: Enric, CC BY-SA 4.0.
Can Vies is a building located in the Sants neighborhood of Barcelona, built in 1879. It has been squatted since 1997, when a group of youths occupied it and began using it as a self-managed social centre and infoshop.
Places in the Area
Nearby places include Sants-Badal and Hostafrancs.
Sants-Badal
Quarter
Photo: Pere prlpz, CC BY-SA 3.0.
Sants-Badal is a neighborhood in the Sants-Montjuïc district of Barcelona, Catalonia. It belonged to the former municipality of Sants, current district of Sants-Montjuïc.
Hostafrancs
Quarter
Photo: Friviere, CC BY-SA 3.0.
Hostafrancs is a neighbourhood in the Sants-Montjuïc district of Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. Originally the land of the neighbourhood belonged to the former municipality of Santa Maria de Sants, the current district.
La Bordeta
Quarter
Photo: Jordi D. A., CC BY-SA 2.0.
La Bordeta is a neighbourhood in the Sants-Montjuïc district of Barcelona, Catalonia. It is located between Sants and l'Hospitalet de Llobregat. The neighbourhood was in the bottom of the former municipality of Sants.
Sants
- Type: Quarter with 40,800 residents
- Description: human settlement in Sants-Montjuïc, Barcelona, Barcelonès, Spain
- Categories: administrative quarter in Barcelona and locality
- Location: Sants-Montjuïc, Barcelona, Barcelona, Catalonia, Eastern Spain, Spain, Iberia, Europe
- View on OpenStreetMap
Latitude
41.37533° or 41° 22′ 31″ northLongitude
2.13491° or 2° 8′ 6″ eastPopulation
40,800Elevation
45 metres (148 feet)Open location code
8FH494GM+4XOpenStreetMap ID
node 1710349125OpenStreetMap feature
place=quarterGeoNames ID
3109493Wikidata ID
Q2476184
This page is based on OpenStreetMap, GeoNames, Wikidata, Wikimedia Commons, and Wikipedia.
We’d love your help improving our open data sources. Thank you for contributing.
Satellite Map
Discover Sants from above in high-definition satellite imagery.
In Other Languages
From Achinese to Zulu—“Sants” goes by many names.
- Achinese: “Sants”
- Afar: “Sants”
- Afrikaans: “Sants”
- Akan: “Sants”
- Albanian: “Sants”
- Arabic: “سانتس”
- Aragonese: “Sants”
- Arpitan: “Sants”
- Asturian: “Sants”
- Aymara: “Sants”
- Azerbaijani: “Sants”
- Bambara: “Sants”
- Banjar: “Sants”
- Basque: “Sants”
- Batak Toba: “Sants”
- Bavarian: “Sants”
- Bislama: “Sants”
- Bosnian: “Sants”
- Breton: “Sants”
- Buginese: “Sants”
- Catalan: “Barri de Sants”
- Catalan: “Sants”
- Cebuano: “Sants”
- Central Bikol: “Sants”
- Chamorro: “Sants”
- Chavacano: “Sants”
- Cheyenne: “Sants”
- Chinese: “圣徒社区”
- Choctaw: “Sants”
- Cornish: “Sants”
- Corsican: “Sants”
- Cree: “Sants”
- Creek: “Sants”
- Crimean Tatar: “Sants”
- Croatian: “Sants”
- Czech: “Sants”
- Danish: “Sants”
- Dimli (individual language): “Sants”
- Dutch: “Sants”
- Eastern Canadian Inuktitut: “Sants”
- Erzya: “Sants”
- Esperanto: “Sants”
- Estonian: “Sants”
- Extremaduran: “Sants”
- Faroese: “Sants”
- Fiji Hindi: “Sants”
- Fijian: “Sants”
- Finnish: “Sants”
- French: “Sants”
- Friulian: “Sants”
- Fulah: “Sants”
- Gagauz: “Sants”
- Galician: “Sants”
- Ganda: “Sants”
- German: “Sants”
- Goan Konkani: “Sants”
- Gorontalo: “Sants”
- Guarani: “Sants”
- Haitian: “Sants”
- Hawaiian: “Sants”
- Herero: “Sants”
- Hiri Motu: “Sants”
- Hungarian: “Sants”
- Hunsrik: “Sants”
- Icelandic: “Sants”
- Ido: “Sants”
- Igbo: “Sants”
- Iloko: “Sants”
- Indonesian: “Sants”
- Interlingua: “Sants”
- Interlingue: “Sants”
- Inupiaq: “Sants”
- Irish: “Sants”
- Italian: “Sants”
- Jamaican Creole English: “Sants”
- Javanese: “Sants”
- Kabyle: “Sants”
- Kalaallisut: “Sants”
- Kanuri: “Sants”
- Kara-Kalpak: “Sants”
- Kashubian: “Sants”
- Kazakh: “Sants”
- Kikuyu: “Sants”
- Kinyarwanda: “Sants”
- Kölsch: “Sants”
- Kongo: “Sants”
- Kuanyama: “Sants”
- Kurdish: “Sants”
- Ladino: “Sants”
- Latgalian: “Sants”
- Latin: “Sants”
- Latvian: “Sants”
- Ligurian: “Sants”
- Limburgan: “Sants”
- Lingala: “Sants”
- Lingua Franca Nova: “Sants”
- Lithuanian: “Sants”
- Liv: “Sants”
- Livvi: “Sants”
- Lojban: “Sants”
- Lombard: “Sants”
- Low German: “Sants”
- Lower Sorbian: “Sants”
- Lule Sami: “Sants”
- Luxembourgish: “Sants”
- Mainfränkisch: “Sants”
- Malagasy: “Sants”
- Malay: “Sants”
- Maltese: “Sants”
- Manx: “Sants”
- Maori: “Sants”
- Marshallese: “Sants”
- Megleno Romanian: “Sants”
- Min Dong Chinese: “Sants”
- Minangkabau: “Sants”
- Mirandese: “Sants”
- Narom: “Sants”
- Nauru: “Sants”
- Navajo: “Sants”
- Ndonga: “Sants”
- Neapolitan: “Sants”
- Northern Frisian: “Sants”
- Northern Sami: “Sants”
- Norwegian Bokmål: “Sants”
- Norwegian Nynorsk: “Sants”
- Novial: “Sants”
- Nyanja: “Sants”
- Occitan (post 1500): “Sants”
- Old English (ca. 450-1100): “Sants”
- Oromo: “Sants”
- Pali: “Sants”
- Pampanga: “Sants”
- Pangasinan: “Sants”
- Papiamento: “Sants”
- Pedi: “Sants”
- Pennsylvania German: “Sants”
- Pfaelzisch: “Sants”
- Picard: “Sants”
- Piemontese: “Sants”
- Pitcairn-Norfolk: “Sants”
- Polish: “Sants”
- Portuguese: “Sants”
- Prussian: “Sants”
- Quechua: “Sants”
- Romagnol: “Sants”
- Romanian: “Sants”
- Romansh: “Sants”
- Rundi: “Sants”
- Russian: “Сантс”
- Samoan: “Sants”
- Sango: “Sants”
- Sardinian: “Sants”
- Saterfriesisch: “Sants”
- Scots: “Sants”
- Scottish Gaelic: “Sants”
- Serbian: “Sants”
- Shona: “Sants”
- Sicilian: “Sants”
- Silesian: “Sants”
- Slovak: “Sants”
- Slovenian: “Sants”
- Somali: “Sants”
- Southern Sami: “Sants”
- Southern Sotho: “Sants”
- Spanish: “Barrio de Sants”
- Spanish: “Sans”
- Spanish: “Sants”
- Sranan Tongo: “Sants”
- Sundanese: “Sants”
- Swahili: “Sants”
- Swati: “Sants”
- Swedish: “Sants”
- Tachelhit: “Sants”
- Tagalog: “Sants”
- Tahitian: “Sants”
- Tajik: “Sants”
- Tatar: “Sants”
- Tetum: “Sants”
- Tok Pisin: “Sants”
- Tonga (Tonga Islands): “Sants”
- Tsonga: “Sants”
- Tswana: “Sants”
- Tumbuka: “Sants”
- Tunisian Arabic: “Sants”
- Turkish: “Sants”
- Twi: “Sants”
- Uighur: “Sants”
- Upper Sorbian: “Sants”
- Uzbek: “Sants”
- Venda: “Sants”
- Venetian: “Sants”
- Veps: “Sants”
- Vietnamese: “Sants”
- Vlaams: “Sants”
- Vlax Romani: “Sants”
- Volapük: “Sants”
- Võro: “Sants”
- Votic: “Sants”
- Walloon: “Sants”
- Waray (Philippines): “Sants”
- Welsh: “Sants”
- Western Frisian: “Sants”
- Wolof: “Sants”
- Xhosa: “Sants”
- Yoruba: “Sants”
- Zeeuws: “Sants”
- Zhuang: “Sants”
- Zulu: “Sants”
- “Sants”
Places with the Same Name
Discover other places named “Sants”.
Localities in the Area
Explore places such as La Font de la Guatlla and Pavelló Prat de la Riba.
Notable Places Nearby
Highlights include Placeta de Ramon Torres i Casanovas and La Palangana.
Barcelona: Must-Visit Destinations
Delve into Ciutat Vella, Eixample, Gràcia, and Sants-Montjuïc.
Curious Localities to Discover
Uncover intriguing localities from every corner of the globe.