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  • 29 Feb 2024 17:14 | Deleted user

    Italian- born Cris Barbi, an experienced estate agent talks to us about the property market in Madrid and her passion for photography

    What do most expats look for in a house or an apartment here in the suburbs of Madrid?

    Most clients are interested in light, space and proximity to their children’s school. Outside space is also an important attribute such as a terrace for an apartment and a swimming pool for a house.  These are also key reasons why many clients prefer the outskirts of the city, in addition to getting a bigger bang for their buck in the city centre.


    Maxing out at Remax

    Do you specialise more in sales or rentals?

    I do both. My clients are both Spanish and Expats and as an expat myself I appreciate how hard the leasing process is here in Spain. I also help a lot of foreign buyers to understand the sales process here with all the legislative foibles there are this jungle market, ensuring they don´t fall into the wrong hands.

    Family time

    How did you first get into the real estate business?

    I´ve been an Expat for more than 20 years and although I have dealt with some good real estate agents, I’ve never found one that I´ve been 100% happy with. I wanted to be that agent I never had. I started in Brazil in January 2016 and continued on my return to Madrid later on the same year.


    Daredevil Cris at Iguassu Falls

    Which nationalities are the most and least demanding clients?

    Americans are used to professional service, transparency, modern and well-maintained houses, none of which is easy to find here.

    Overseas clients coming from troubled areas are often happy to overlook some of a particular house´s issues and to sacrifice some of their requirements in order to settle here quickly.

    Spacious living

    What is the key to a successful estate agent?

    Listen, listen and listen some more and apply oodles of patience. Good negotiation skills go a long way too!

    You lived in Curitiba for 10 years, how do your Madrileño customers differ from the Brazilian ones?

    Brazil is closer to the American Real Estate market in so far as you need a licence to work in this field, unlike in Madrid, where anybody can start up in this industry with no experience whatsoever and this is often reflected in the poor image that Spanish property owners have of my profession.

    Iconic Ipanema

    How did you get into photography and how has it shaped your life?

    I have always loved photography as a way to capture a detail that trigger an emotion ten years from now. I like photos that tell a story. I´d love to incorporate a bio-engineered camera in my eyes!

    Cris captures the essence of Camburiu

    What trends do you see in the real estate business in Madrid in general?

    Some say that AI will take over even in Real Estate and some Companies are already using impersonal online sites to list properties, charging a fixed minimum amount. However, I still feel that buying a house is such an emotional process which must be taken into account. For example, some people have to downsize for heartfelt reasons. I work with people, not bricks. AI wouldn´t know the difference….at least for the time being.

    Blue sky living

    Where would you buy a flat or a house if you could choose, budget aside?

    As an investment maybe Tetuán, Embajadores or Pacífico…although prices are already going up.

     Otherwise, I love Chamberí, Justicia, Lista and some parts of Hortaleza and Charmartín as they are quieter than the more touristic areas such as Recoletos. In terms of the suburbs, both Pozuelo and Majadahonda tick my boxes.

    Email Cristina.barbi@remax.es

    Tel  – 34 636 47 58 29


    Relaxing in Sicily


  • 26 Jan 2024 17:17 | Deleted user

    Before our Co-Vice President moves back to Germany we take a heady nose dive into big hitter, María Elena´s multi-faceted life as a British-born university lecturer, author and motivational trainer and former globetrotting fashion buyer who spent her formative years amongst colourful peacocks in the heart of the English countryside.

    Your parents are from Spain, do you feel at home here?

    I do feel totally at home in Spain, especially in Galicia where my extended family live.

    María Elena at Belvoir Castle

    How has being brought up in an English fairytale castle where your parents worked shaped your life?

    It undoubtedly gave me my fascination with clothes. Living at such a grand 356-room castle gave me a glimpse into a world where the ladies were all beautiful and glamourous. It prompted me to go into fashion retail.

    As a daughter of 2 chefs, are you a culinary goddess?

    Yes, I am a good cook. However, I do not enjoy cooking and the happiest period of my life was when we lived in Hong Kong and I didn´t cook anything for almost four years as we had the luxury of a live-in helper who did it all. Absolute heaven.

    María Elena with her brother on a visit to Belvoir Castle

    How did you cope moving round the UK every few years?

    I had a big enough ´why´, working in fashion retail, to make the ´what´ of moving around the country at a moment´s notice manageable. I made sure that in every town I moved to I had certain elements in my life that brought me joy, such as a nice home, a friend and tennis.  I called this my ´Joy Backbone´ and you can read about it in my chapter in The Book on Joy.

    Do you have any amusing stories about adapting to life in Hong Kong?

    As an English teacher, I would be despatched to various government schools in places far away from the glitzy Central district. Hong Kong has these fantastic minibuses that take you everywhere, but they don´t have proper bus stops. You just shout out to the driver when you want to get off. As the only Westerner on these buses, I found the thought of shouting out in my tourist Cantonese so excruciatingly mortifying that I just used to wait until someone else got off, meaning that I regularly ended up miles away from where I was meant to be and had a pretty long walk back.


    María Elena in action in Hong Kong

    You coach people on how to add more joy into their lives, how do you add more to yours?

    By keeping the things that bring me joy at the forefront of my mind and ensuring that I follow them as a guide to how I live my life. l have my current top 5 on my noticeboard as a constant reminder.

    What is it about being a motivational speaker that inspires you?

    Having the opportunity to influence people´s lives for the good.


    María Elena in virtual action

    What was it like bringing up your husband´s 3 German-speaking children in a suburb of Dusseldorf?

    As a non-German-speaking career girl, it was both a baptism of fire and a comedy of errors, involving lots of hand gestures and exaggerated facial expressions.


    María Elena at home in Germany

    What´s your favourite podcast?

    Best Friend Therapy, which mirrors conversations I love to have with my own best friend. I also like My Wardrobe Malfunction, which is all about our relationship with clothes.

    Which lesson has been the hardest to learn?

    The reality of the words about friends in the poem, Train of Life, and how we never know when they will step down and vacate their seat.

    https://allpoetry.com/poem/16173387-The-Train-of-Life-by-Vincent-Moore

    Are you a natural sportswoman?

    No, definitely not.  However, I have always loved tennis. Nothing beats hitting a scorching winner down the line. I came to yoga during my Hong Kong years, learning it from an array of Indian yogis who manoeuvred me into positions I didn´t believe possible. I love the stretched-out feeling yoga gives me, coupled with the sense of accomplishment when conquering a tricky pose.


    Hard-hitters

    Which fashion website should we consult for the latest trends?

    My daily guilty pleasure is the “moda” section of Hola.com. I´ve also recently gone back to my first love, fashion magazines, which are great here in Spain.


    María in her fashion executive days

    Why can´t you stay still?

    I spend so much time immersed in the world of personal development, it´s almost impossible not to be. Being surrounded by positive, enthusiastic people lifts you to new heights.

    Where´s next for María Elena?

    My third collaborative book, The Book on Abundance, is released mid-February. My chapter is all about what a wardrobe purge tells you about yourself. I´m launching an online course, English for Fashion Buying and Retail, in the summer and following that, my friend and I are planning on creating our own podcast in the latter part of the year.  The working title is ´Would I do that differently now?´ and it´s a light-hearted reflection on life with the benefit of hindsight and experience.

    María Elena strikes a pose in yoga in Granada



  • 12 Jan 2024 17:18 | Deleted user

    The Asturians are baying for blood, yet the jury has spoken and as of March last year, the Best Fabada in the World is in Madrid! The winners of last year´s competition was none other than the Mesón Asturiano Sidrería Arturo in the Hortaleza area of our capital.

    The ultimate taste test

    Originally run by Asturians, today the Mesón is in the hands of chef proprietor Carlos Guillermo García, a former pharmacist from Peru. Unable to find work in his previous profession, he was forced to take a cooking job to make ends meet. “I´d never even been near a saucepan in my life”, confesses García timidly. The original Asturian owners treated him like one of the family and passed on their secret recipe for their winning bean stew on their retirement in 2015 and García has been working his chemistry on it ever since.



    García’s magic touch comes up trumps

    For those of you unfamiliar with Spanish pulses, fabada is a slow-cooked white bean dish with various guises of pork. Ranging from morcilla (blood sausage), chorizo, tocino and pancetta (lard and bacon). Slightly similar to its French cousin, cassoulet, yet without the silky duck confit.  This is potent fare and the resultant gases when eaten in “fartura”, which ironically means abundance in Asturiano, and harnessed correctly could probably power the whole of Pozuelo.

    People travel from miles around to sample the Mesón’s Asturian fare

    On an icy cold day I am rather partial to a steaming bowl of fabada and on a recent trip to Asturias we had the pleasure of sampling a delicious variety at Casa Belén in Villaviciosa, just 20 minutes inland from the beautiful coastal town of Gijón. Asturians are known for their hearty appetite so the Menú del Día comprised an ample starter of Sopa de Ajo, alias a garlic and pimentón soup thickened with bread, a giant chalice of Fabada and then the other regional speciality: Cachopo (2 breaded veal fillets filled with melted cheese) & chips washed down with cider and Belén´s special natillas (custard) to follow, all for the paltry sum of €15. The Macdonalds Happy Meal with its meagre soggy burger and mass produced French Fries for the same price wouldn´t do very well in this area…..

    Playa Rodiles, near Villaviciosa makes for a popular holiday spot

    Funnily enough, if you´re looking for a quick fix, whilst not being a huge advocate of tinned food, the Litoral brand of ready made fabada is surprisingly tasty and the giant catering can sizes of 5 portions have served up many a happy winter lunch to me and my 51 immediate in laws at the farm near Aranjuez where we got married. Think of it as gourmet Baked Beans with all the porky trimmings. It certainly takes pride of place as a Spanish storeroom staple and I´m hoping to get my hands on some of Jurgita´s prize Lithuanian chillies to perk up my next Asturian ration.

    My go-to Fabada, sssh, don´t spill the beans

    So watch this space for a possible visit to an Asturian restaurant with the lunch bunch coming soon….


    Belén serves up a mean bean feast for two

    Mesón Sidrería Arturo – Calle del Mar Bering, 9. Hortaleza, Madrid. Tel 917 63 12 39

    Casa Belén – Calle General Campomanes, 1, Villaviciosa, Asturias. Tel 696 05 37 21


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