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Madrid · Malasana

1862 Dry Bar

Elegant cocktail bar in a restored 19th-century building focusing on gin-based classics and Mediterranean-inspired drinks.

1862 Dry Bar, Madrid · Malasana
Category
Nightlife
Duration
1h 30m
Best Time
Evening
Entry
€€€
Rating
4.6 (2,455)
The place

About 1862 Dry Bar

Elegant cocktail bar in a restored 19th-century building focusing on gin-based classics and Mediterranean-inspired drinks. The interior features exposed brick, vintage furniture, and a curated selection of over 100 gins. Bartenders in vests and ties craft drinks with house-made syrups and botanicals.

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The details

Practical bits

WalkingMinimal walking
The place

Getting there

Address
C. del Pez, 27, Centro, 28004 Madrid, Spain
Neighborhood
Malasana
Nearest Metro
Lines 1, 5, 10 to TribunalLine 3 to NoviciadoLine 10 to Plaza de Espana
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Good to know

Tips, answered

Try the house gin and tonic with their recommended botanical pairings, which change seasonally based on available fresh herbs.

Plan for about 1h 30m. Evening visits offer a different atmosphere with softer light.

1862 Dry Bar is in the Malasana neighborhood of Madrid. The address is C. del Pez, 27, Centro, 28004 Madrid, Spain. The area is well-served by metro.

Evening visits offer a unique atmosphere. The light is softer, crowds thin out, and the experience feels more intimate.

Around the corner

Nearby in Malasana

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Museo de Historia de Madrid
Museum

Museo de Historia de Madrid

This free museum tells Madrid's complete story through actual artifacts, not tourist-friendly summaries. You'll walk through recreated 19th-century shops, see original city planning maps that shaped modern Madrid, and browse thousands of historical photographs showing streets you probably walked today. The baroque facade by Pedro de Ribera is genuinely spectacular, all swirling stone and theatrical drama. Inside, the collection spans from medieval settlement remnants to 1980s urban development, with detailed models of how neighborhoods like Malasaña evolved. The visit flows chronologically across three floors, starting with Roman foundations and medieval walls on the ground floor. The recreated historical interiors feel authentic rather than theme-park fake, especially the old pharmacy and traditional Madrid kitchen. The photography collection on the upper floors is genuinely addictive: you'll recognize intersections and buildings, then see them as farmland or construction sites decades ago. The atmosphere stays quiet and contemplative, attracting more locals than tourists. Most guides oversell the decorative arts collection, which feels scattered compared to the photography and urban planning sections. Focus your time on the historical photographs and city development displays on floors two and three. The museum shop sells excellent reproductions of historical Madrid maps for around 15 EUR. Skip the temporary exhibitions unless they specifically cover Madrid topics, as they often feel disconnected from the main collection's strengths.

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