terrassa
Roads blocked off in Terrassa area after 60 mm downpour in an hour
Parts of B-40 and C-16 closed as northern metropolitan cities suffer floods and streams burst banks
Vilafranca 'castellers' create 10-tier human tower for first time since pandemic began
Biggest day in quintessential Catalan tradition for three years as groups steadily return to old shape
Spanish PM assassination conspirer sentenced to seven years in prison
National Court finds Terrassa man guilty of attempted homicide and possession of military weapons
Toy industry says no shortage of supplies for Christmas
Advanced planning means six-week delay for container ship deliveries will not lead to empty shelves
Cities near Barcelona grow poorer as wealthy move to smaller towns, study finds
Mataró, Terrassa, Granollers, and Sabadell lose higher-income residents to neighboring towns
Clashes at protest for rapper Pablo Hasel's release in Terrassa
At least seven people arrested as rally descends into violence
Judge overturns restrictions in Terrassa, greenlights measures in Granollers
Court argues that situation in third most populated Catalan city is "positive"
Targeted mass screenings in Covid-19 clusters surpass 15,000 PCR tests
Take a look at this interactive map to know where and when a free coronavirus PCR test can be requested
Mass testing can cut transmission chains says health minister
Sabadell, Terrassa, Ripollet and Granollers will see widespread screening after rise in cases
‘Save my eyes’ fundraiser for 24-year old Catalan in Seattle hospital raises €220,000 in three days
Marta Bustos burnt her face with lye while making homemade soap
Fewer than one in four mayors in Catalonia are women
The number of women mayors increased by 27.33% since 2015
Jihadist cell which "wanted to attack" uncovered by Catalan Police
The Catalan Police Force, Mossos d'Esquadra, detained on Wednesday in several cities across Greater Barcelona 11 people who were allegedly forming an Islamic terrorist cell. The cell was "operational" and "wanted to attack in Catalonia", according to the Catalan Minister for Home Affairs, Ramon Espadaler. The alleged terrorists were "clearly connected to the Islamic State" and "supported its ideology", emphasised Espadaler. The cell "had 3 objectives": "recruiting young people and radicalising them", "sending some of these young people to Syria and Iraq", and preparing an attack in Catalonia. Despite this information, Espadaler highlighted that "at no time has this cell generated any kind of danger, as it has been under investigation and police surveillance for the last 13 months".