2 Apr, 2010 @ 13:01
1 min read
7

Future of Moorish King’s Palace crumbling away

CAUGHT up in a long-running legal battle, one of Rondaโ€™s most famous landmarks is being allowed to crumble away.

The 13th-Century Moorish Palace, perched on the edge of the El Tajo gorge, has now fallen into a state of disrepair.

Despite fears it may eventually succumb to the 200-foot drop below, the legal battle to secure the future of the Casa del Rey Moro rumbles on.

The palace may soon be put up for auction to settle an alleged 150,000-euro debt between a disgruntled creditor and the buildingโ€™s owners.

It is reported that the creditor is demanding the sum after proposed bid to turn the palace into a five-star hotel in the year 2000 never transpired.

However, Jochen Knie, head of the Casa del Rey Moro group, insisted that โ€œit would be completely unfair if the historical building were put up for auctionโ€.

Knie blamed Ronda town hall for thwarting the groupโ€™s attempts to transform the palace into a luxury hotel.

He added: โ€œWe still want to remain true to our initial agreement but at the moment our hands our tied. If officials allow us, then we will do it.โ€

Meanwhile, amid the legal wrangling, the palace is tottering ever closer to the Tajoโ€™s edge.

Ronda resident Wendy Burrows, who lives opposite the palace, explained: โ€œNo doubt about it, itโ€™s on the point of collapse.

โ€œSurely this is a crime against historical heritage, it really is an absolute national treasure and it would be a tragedy if it were to fall down.โ€

And a landscape gardener who has worked in the palaceโ€™s gardens shares the same worries as Burrows.

Luis Coronel said: โ€œIt is in a very bad way, at the moment nobody can ever enter it due to the risk.

โ€œIt is getting worse every day, it is completely saturated with water, cracks are appearing and there is a lot of movement within the foundations.โ€

Click here to read more Spain News from The Olive Press.

Jon Clarke is a Londoner who worked at the Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday as an investigative journalist before moving to Spain in 2003 where he helped set up the Olive Press.

After studying Geography at Manchester University he fell in love with Spain during a two-year stint teaching English in Madrid.

On returning to London, he studied journalism and landed his first job at the weekly Informer newspaper in Teddington, covering hundreds of stories in areas including Hounslow, Richmond and Harrow.

This led on to work at the Sunday Telegraph, Sunday Mirror, Standard and even the Sun, before he landed his first full time job at the Daily Mail.

After a year on the Newsdesk he worked as a Showbiz correspondent covering mostly music, including the rise of the Spice Girls, the rivalry between Oasis and Blur and interviewed many famous musicians such as Joe Strummer and Ray Manzarak, as well as Peter Gabriel and Bjorn from Abba on his own private island.

After a year as the News Editor at the UKโ€™s largest-selling magazine Now, he returned to work as an investigative journalist in Features at the Mail on Sunday.

As well as tracking down Jimi Hendrixโ€™ sole living heir in Sweden, while there he also helped lead the initial investigation into Prince Andrewโ€™s seedy links to Jeffrey Epstein during three trips to America.

He had dozens of exclusive stories, while his travel writing took him to Jamaica, Brazil and Belarus.

He is the author of three books; Costa Killer, Dining Secrets of Andalucia and My Search for Madeleine.

Contact jon@theolivepress.es

7 Comments Leave a Reply

  1. I don’t know about the houses, but they certainly need a car park … now that the enormous space next to the bullring is reserved for a few carts and one or two tourists!

  2. that carpark is made on the top of calle le espinel ( la bola ) in fromt of the street from the station. There now you can park your car…. much better since now the bullring’s view is not ruined by parked cars…

    What Ronda needs is that the people have less cars per family and walk a bit since they take the car even to go around the corner……

  3. Este Sr. debe dinero en toda Andalucรญa, a otros empresarios, a sus antiguos trabajadores y sus proveedores. Durante aรฑos fallรณ en el pago a los mismos, adeudando grandes sumas a Hacienda y a la Seguridad Social.

    Tiene numerosas causas abiertas en los juzgados de Sevilla y Mรกlaga, y otras tantas perdidas y pendientes de embargos.

    El Hotel Casa Imperial, que supuestamente gestionaba y donde habrรญa obtenido su experiencia para esta nueva aventura, despuรฉs de aรฑos abierto sin licencias y sin inscripciรณn en los registros de Turismo de Andalucรญa (consultar en Turismo los expedientes abiertos en contra suya), ha tenido que cerrarlo porque no se lo ha pagado al banco y a puesto en la calle sin cobrar a la mayorรญa de sus trabajadores.

    ยฟCรณmo va a financiar este nuevo proyecto?

    ยฟHa pagado ya a la Sra. a la que comprรณ las casas frente al hotel y a quien dejรณ en la calle, tras prometerle una vivienda? ยฟHa depositado en los juzgados los importes del juicio que perdiรณ contra ella?

  4. A mi entender, se le permitiรณ comprar el hotel, pero cuando se negรณ a pagar sobornos a los polรญticos locales para las licencias que se detuvo a partir de la renovaciรณn o la apertura del hotel. Asรญ que รฉl fue incapaz de hacer dinero, pero las facturas seguรญan llegando por lo que fue quebrado por aquellos que se negaron a soborno. ยฟNo es este el caso?

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Previous Story

Drumming up a storm

Next Story

Bird route nestles in the Genal valley

Previous Story

Drumming up a storm

Next Story

Bird route nestles in the Genal valley

Go toTop