Patio de Los Silos
The odd cement nubs littering this Spanish square are actually the entrances to a series of buried silos.
For hundreds of years, the Spanish town of Burjassot has been building buried stone silos on a hill overlooking the municipality and the rounded stone entrances can still be seen in the Patio de los Silos where lucky visitors can sometimes even enter the ancient stone pits.
Taking a novel approach to a grain shortage in the surrounding Kingdom of Valencia during the 16th century, the local government installed three large silos beneath a limestone hill. The idea was that Sicilian grain could be imported and stored in the cool, dry subterranean chambers. The scheme proved a success and the next year, additional silos were added, and as demand continued to grow over the centuries, so did the number of silos.
During the Spanish Civil War some of the unused silos were even used as hiding places and tunnels were built between them to connect the separate chambers.
In the end, a total of 47 silos were built, although only 41 remain. Today a plaza has been built atop the hill where visitors can amble among the bulbous stone caps of the silos and during the yearly Medieval Market Festival, some of them are opened and people are allowed to go inside. Tours of the silos can also be requested of the local government.
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