When I visit a new city I want to get a feel for it as quickly as possible. Who lives there? What are they like? How do they dress? In my experience, one of the best ways to get a really good idea of a city’s local people is by visiting the main food market. By standing in the corner (sounds a bit creepy, but it works!) you can observe a lot of things about the local culture, and quickly feel in touch with a different society.One of the highlights of my summer travels was our visit to the gorgeous Malaga Central Market. The Mercado Central de Atarazanas is one of the most beautiful and lively markets I’ve visited in Spain. The mix of booths and small bars and restaurants make it a place you could easily spend the morning, and if we’d been lucky enough to have the use of a kitchen, we’d have stocked up on some of the area’s best seafood, fruits, and vegetables to make a lovely meal.The market was once Malaga’s shipyard, a place where ships were repaired over 600 years ago. At this point in history, the water made it all the way up to the market’s entrance. After the reconquest, the building was shortly used as a convent, a military hospital, and an army barracks, before finally becoming a market in 1879. Inspired (as most Spanish markets were during this time) by Mercado de Les Halles in Paris, the iron work on the market was a main feature, though the most striking part was definitely one of the original marble doors, dating back to when the building was first built as a shipyard.