
On your right stands a pale stone palace with steep slate roofs, stepped gables, and a façade of tall windows that never quite repeat the same pattern.
This is the Chávarri Palace, the showpiece of Plaza Moyúa and one of Bilbao’s boldest declarations of arrival. In the early twentieth century, Víctor and Benigno Chávarri y Salazar commissioned it as their family residence. They chose Paul Hankar, a Belgian architect, and the Bilbao architect Atanasio de Anduiza carried the project into the street you see now. Hankar borrowed ideas from his own work in Brussels, which is why this place feels a little like Antwerp or Bruges took a train south and settled in Biscay.
Here’s a useful term for the tour: the industrial bourgeoisie. That means the urban business-owning class enriched by industry rather than old inherited titles. In Bilbao, families like the Chávarris made fortunes from the industrial boom and wanted architecture to say so... clearly, elegantly, and without much modesty.
Take a moment and scan the windows. Locals love this detail: no set is exactly the same as another. That is not accident. It turns the whole façade into a polished performance of uniqueness, wealth, and cultivated taste.
And notice where it stands. This district was part of the Ensanche expansion, meaning the planned enlargement of the city beyond the old town, with new streets and grand plots laid out in Abando. If you glance at the wider view on your screen, you can see how the palace claimed its place in that new urban canvas.
There’s a human sting here too. Víctor Chávarri fell gravely ill and died in nineteen hundred, before he could truly enjoy the house he ordered. Later, in nineteen forty-three, the family sold it to the Spanish state, and Eugenio María de Aguinaga reshaped it for government use. Franco even stayed here during his long Bilbao visit in nineteen fifty, turning private ambition into official theater.
So this palace tells you something important about modern Bilbao: planners drew the map, yes... but people with money made sure their power stood where everyone could see it. When you’re ready, Doña Casilda Iturrizar Park is about an eight-minute walk from here.



