Covering an area of 91 hectares, this natural space is the best-preserved remnant of the lush laurel forests that once occupied the entire northern part of Gran Canaria.

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19th-century two-storey building with courtyard and roof garden, in which the poet Tomás Morales (1884-1921) lived during his childhood.

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Built in 1957 over the original chapel where the Moya Parish was founded in 1515.

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Natural swimming pools carved out of the volcanic rocks on the Moya coast where bathers can take a dip protected from the strong waves.

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Old rural building transformed into a space for artistic exhibition and cultural promotion.

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At 1,350 metres above sea level, this is one of the most recent volcanoes in the geological history of Gran Canaria.

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Basalt promontory that juts more than 300 metres into the sea on which sits a strip of houses linked by narrow streets.

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A cemetery with beautifully maintained gardens and sculptures that crown several family mausoleums.

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One of the greatest and uniquely beautiful ravines in the north of Gran Canaria, part of the Doramas Rural Park and declared a Special Nature Reserve.

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Stately building constructed in the late 19th and early 20th century.

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A natural monument located at the highest reaches of the municipality, at an altitude of 1,500 metres.

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Located behind the church of Our Lady of Candelaria, this is a viewpoint offering vistas of the Barranco de Moya.

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It is the most important archaeological site in Villa de Moya, made up of a large group of natural caves in which the Canarian aborigines inhabited.

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Dating back to the 19th century, this is one of the most striking hydraulic structures in Moya.

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Dedicated to Saint Bartholomew the Apostle, the original Fontanales chapel was built in 1635 and another in 1872.

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Built in the first half of the 19th century, this is a hydraulic structure of great historical value.

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