156:, moved the court's summer location to San Sebastián when she was widowed. The royal family's summer visits required a Royal Summer House, which was ordered by Maria Christina to English architect Selden Wornum. The site chosen for the palace was a large estate over La Concha Bay where the Monastery of San Sebastián El Antiguo had been located; the Queen bought the estate from the Count of Moriana. The estate was enlarged with an adjacent estate where El Antiguo Church was located – the church had to be moved to a nearby site – and some other small estates. The palace was finished in 1893, although a new building named the
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182:. The joint ownership over the estate was dissolved in 1958. Don Juan retained the palace and the immediate surroundings, except for a 1,000 square-metre plot, sold in 1963. The rest of the estate, separated in two plots of 10,000 and 37,000 square metres, was sold in 1963 in benefit of Juan de Borbón's siblings for housing construction.
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ornaments. On the inside it has some noble areas that remain faithful to their original configuration, among them the White Hall, the Music Hall, the Wooden Hall, the Petit Salon, the
Library and the Royal Dining Room. The rest of the palace has been renovated successively since it was acquired by
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After the dissolution of the joint ownership, the initial area of 80,000 square metres of the estate was reduced to 34,136 square metres, bought by the San
Sebastián City Council from Don Juan in 1972.
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Currently, the palace gardens are open to the public in fixed opening hours, and the noble areas can be visited in guided tours on fixed times. The
Miramar Palace houses the summer courses of the
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The palace preserves the original outside look. Parties are conducted in the palace's gardens and noble areas, particularly in the context of the
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the City
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After Maria
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Tourist attractions in the Basque
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The
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The close relationship between San
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Palaces in the Basque
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241:(in Spanish). Palacio de Miramar. Archived from
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225:References
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