Feel at home in Barca

Nothing makes a tourist feel less at home than the "welcoming" hotel reception - plastic smiles and platitudes whenever you pass, merely reinforcing the fact that you're not livin' la vida local. Back to Barcelona recently for the nth time, my other half Ashley and I were no longer in the handy-for-Gaudi hotel market - we had been beckoned over, yet again, by great mate Carlos, with his promises of nightly revelry till mid-morning, beach slobbery till G&T time.

His palace, on fash Passeig de Gracia, was fit for a queen, but alas, no room at the inn - our mutual friends John, Brodie and David had easyJetted in and easySettled into the spare rooms, reclining smugly in a haze of Marlboro Lights and Bolly.

We took an insider tip and booked a flat with Barcelona Living. Set up by a Brit, Greg Davies, it promised "the experience of living in this wonderful city even if the stay were to be for only one night".

Refreshingly it was not on the Ramblas, but smack bang in the Born, Barcelona's medieval mercantile core, a web of ancient alleys spun around the tawny gothic Basilica de Santa Maria del Mar. Walkable to the Picasso Museum, it was, crucially, a cheap cab to Carlos's when we needed Bollycoddling.

Low-rent, sailor-sleazy until the 1992 Olympics, the Born thereafter gained a cash 'n' fashion injection from sideburned urbanites in stark specs, chasing cheap space. Now as hyped as Hoxton - designer delis, fashion fish - it is still shadily seductive.

In Carrer Flassaders 41 our apartment topped the property, up on the fifth: begonias on withered balconies, laundry lazily a-billow, flat roofs bristling with aerials. A 15-minute hike from the bowling blue Med at Barceloneta, it could have been Tunis, Athens, a smart part of Alexandria, a breeze through windows, and strange Catalan cries drifting up from the street.

Self-catering at its sexiest: below steep beams a giant divider, Japanese-style, slid to split bedroom from living space, where a wide, low couch unfolded to sleep two more.

Hand-painted window screens masked fingering morning light, decor was Scanditerranean: Playschool-retro raspberry walls, distressed-pine storage spaces washed white, a teak-floored shower with monsoon downpour, and candy-red chairs on Sputnik legs. In the steely kitchen we could have cooked for Catalunya, but do you think these hands were in Barcelona to do dishes?

We melted immediately into the city, off along leafy Passeig del Born for supermarket basics - gin, tonica, limones - adoring the shabby beauty of the neighbourhood. It might have been built by set designers, with the pungent curiosity shops full of Catalan irresistibles: cheeses, sausages, jams, pastries.

El Xampanyet proved the definitive local tapas bar, bright-tiled and chattery. Glass-fronted grottoes peddled a wild line in design: the Warhol-worthy screenprint of Joan Collins with gluedon jewels in Rec di8 would be gracing our London flat as I write, had it not been as wide as an Airbus.

We itched to show off our new pad to the uptowners, so a soirette ensued. Over came Carlos, John, Brodie, David, clutching an arsenal of cava. At 2am, with no shop open for boozeness, we headed to subterranean Salvation. Like Hell, only hotter, with V&Ts the size of swing bins. Sometime next day, sore heads were soothed by the perfect paella - herby, carby, caramelised at the edges - at family affair Can Costa, on Passeig Joan de Borbo in Barceloneta.

Loved by locals, it was Carlos's call - he had been lunching with them, why, since his student days. All agreed that, for an establishment of that many years, it was very well kept, with staff seemingly on castors, glinting zinc terrace tables and tablecloths aflap in the breeze off the beach.

Too lovely to leave. The last afternoon, fired with design desire, in an interiors store on Carrer Flassaders the two of us picked up some good-looking pouffes from Valencia - three black, one white - stackable, like giant Pontefract cakes. Wrestled into the Iberia overhead lockers, they now fit in with our own furnishing scheme like a dream. Barcelona, London: home from home.

Way to go

Barcelona Living (00 34 932 721 411; www.barcelonaliving.com); apartments from e187 (£140) a night, four sharing, e134 (£100) two.

Create a FREE account to continue reading

eros

Registration is a free and easy way to support our journalism.

Join our community where you can: comment on stories; sign up to newsletters; enter competitions and access content on our app.

Your email address

Must be at least 6 characters, include an upper and lower case character and a number

You must be at least 18 years old to create an account

* Required fields

Already have an account? SIGN IN

By clicking Create Account you confirm that your data has been entered correctly and you have read and agree to our Terms of use , Cookie policy and Privacy policy .

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged in