Balcony rental at 9,000 euros

Religious fervor cannot be bought with money. The best places to contemplate it, yes. For some time now something curious has been happening in Andalusia: Holy Week comes preceded by a news blast about quotes and increases and decreases (usually just increases) in rental prices. The chronicles in question have nothing to do with housing, not even with the rates charged by hotels or Airbnb. Its focus is on the balconies of cities like Seville or Malaga with the best views of the religious steps, small viewpoints for which you can pay now. 9,000 euros. There are those who talk about “commodification” of Easter. What has happened? There is news that, no matter how much it is repeated year after year, is still that: news. The balconies in the center of Seville or Malaga are a good example. From long ago the media have been counting the prices increasingly exorbitant that are requested during Holy Week for these spaces, places with privileged views of the religious processions. What is curious (as has just been proven in Andalusia) is that, as is the case with residential or vacation rentals, the terrace business is not reaching its ceiling. In the end it is nothing surprising. Something similar happens with the terraces of Valencia during the Fallas, those of Vigo at Christmas or in other cities Spanish when celebrations are organized in the street, which includes, for example, the celebration of football titles. If there are balconies with good views there is guaranteed business. One that can bring in hundreds or even thousands of euros in a few days. Are they that expensive? The data has been provided by the College of Property Administrators (CAF) of Seville. According to their estimates, enjoying a good balcony in the historic center to admire the images of El Silencio, El Gran Poder or La Macarena costs several thousand euros. To be more precise, 6,000 in exchange for a whole week. The data draws attention for two reasons. First because it is double than what was requested a few years ago (in 2023 the average was around €6,000). Second, because in cases in which a privileged location is combined with catering services, this cost can skyrocket until reaching €9,000. Does it only happen in Seville? No. A few weeks ago the Andalusian press reported that in Malaga the rent for accommodation with the best views of the processions had also skyrocketed. In mid-March, 15 days before the start of Easter, Malaga Today assured that Airbnb was asking for 900 euros for a two-night stay in a studio on Larios Street. In Cisneros (also in the center) an apartment with windows facing the street was rented for €500 for two days, a figure that rose to €750 on Booking. What exactly is paid? Basically two things. Dates. And location. Rents do not skyrocket just because. They do it mainly in accommodations with balconies located in strategic areas from which to admire the images of El Silencio, El Gran Poder or La Macarena (in the case of Seville) or El Cautivo, Cristo de la Buena Muerte or Los Estudiantes (Málaga). The height, the quality of the views or the specific day complete the rates and explain why there are cases in which €9,000 is requested for a week. Also that rentals have stopped being a private business and have become ‘professional’ hand in hand with companies. Does it only happen with balconies? No. The subscriptions for chairs and boxes of the Official Race offered by the General Council of Brotherhoods and Brotherhoods of the City of Seville are not affordable for everyone. Especially after experiencing a 3% year-on-year increase. The price table published by the organization shows that rates range from €90.5 for a chair in Plaza Virgen de Los Reyes to 1,016 for the best boxes in Plaza San Francisco. Between both figures there are several options above €100. For example, on Avenida Constitución (Tribuna Faro) there are places available for €161.3. It may seem like a lot, but a subscriber recently recognized to The Country who rents out the two chairs he has at the beginning of the Official Race for double what they cost him (170 each). And that’s because he gives them to a friend. “If it wasn’t him, I could ask for whatever I wanted, and even more so right now with the boom around Holy Week in Seville,” presume. The fertilizers represent the main source of financing for the brotherhoods that organize Holy Week in Seville. Why is it so important? Beyond the interest aroused by the exorbitant prices that are asked (and paid) for the best balconies in Seville or Malaga to follow in the footsteps, the topic raises another interesting question: the debate on commodification of Holy Week, an event that (beyond tourism or the law of supply and demand) has a religious reason for being. “We have become accustomed to the fact that there is no area of ​​human activity that is not subject to commercialization, because the justification is that everything is subject to costs and the same thing you pay to go to the theater or football is paid to see Easter in the front row,” I was reflecting recently in The Country Alberto del Campo, professor of Social Anthropology at the Pablo de Olavide University. Images | Jon Connell (Flickr) 1 and 2 In Xataka | In Sagunto they have voted on whether tradition or equality should have more weight in the Holy Week processions. They have been quite clear

the luminous paradox of a vertical panel on the balcony

Last month, Alejandro Diego Rosell – energy consultant, professor and analyst with more than a decade in the photovoltaic sector – discovered something that does not fit with what we all believe about solar energy: his balcony produced the highest generation day of the year and also a day of absolute zero. Same month, same installation, but opposite results. The paradox is not a flaw: it is exactly how a solar balcony works in a real city. And what his case reveals dismantles many of the myths of urban self-consumption. The solar balcony phenomenon. The explanation begins with a phrase that Diego repeats in the interview he gave us in Xataka: “The real performance depends more on the angle, shadow and geometry of the building than on the calendar month.” Its panels are installed almost vertically, an unusual orientation on roofs but very common in Spanish apartments. And this completely alters the classic pattern of solar production. Record day: 2.35 kWh on a cold, clear day in November. Zero day: November 15, with 0% apparent production. And why? It is precisely because of the combination of verticality and battery. Your installation now works with plug-and-play batteryand that introduces a little-known phenomenon: “The battery needs a minimum current to start charging. If the output is too low, it does not accept it and does not send anything to the microinverter either.” In other words, some energy is generated, but it is so little that the battery does not activate and the system does not account for it. That minimum production is left out of the records, which causes some days to appear as “zero” even though they really are not. Position matters. Alejandro Diego’s experience uncovers several lessons that almost no one knows before installing one of these kits. On the one hand, a vertical panel performs better in winter. “In winter the sun is so low that it looks at you from the other side of the street,” says the energy analyst. And it makes physical sense because the sun, being low, affects almost perfectly on a vertical panel and the cold makes for better performance. In fact, this idea is not anecdotal, verticality is beginning to be adopted even in professional installations, as is the case of the company Over Easy Solar in the Valencian Community. On the other hand, shadows are the great invisible enemy. “Shadows travel,” insists the energy consultant. A railing that barely touches the glass panel in June can ruin 20% of the day in January. A neighbor’s awning can cut entire hours of production. And tall buildings create cast shadows that move like clockwork. The batteries and the fine print. Here we come to the kit question: “It’s not plug and play.” The Master in Renewable Energies (MERME) professor details that Plug-and-play domestic batteries help—they shift consumption, allow prolonged injection, improve peak utilization—but they also bring surprises: very low production simply does not enter the system, there are efficiency losses in the charge-discharge cycle, and they weigh more than people imagine. In a market where Ikea, EcoFlow, Zendure or even electric ones are launching batteries “for everyone”, this clarification matters. Urban photovoltaics are unpredictable. If there is one thing that Diego is clear about after almost a year measuring every watt that enters his balcony, it is that photovoltaics in the city do not follow the rules that one imagines from the outside. In its installation, the data changes abruptly depending on the angle of the sun, the presence of shadows or even the type of cloud cover. And there is no need to go into theories: you see it in your daily life. In December, For examplehas reached more than 2 kWh in a single day. It seems counterintuitive—especially considering that December is one of the months with the fewest hours of daylight—but the explanation is simple: the low sun hits a vertical panel almost head-on and the cold improves the electrical performance of the module and the microinverter. However, in April – with longer days and clear skies – there were days that did not even reach 1.5 kWh. “The angle of the sun changes everything,” he explains. In spring the sun begins to rise, hits the panel from above and the verticality penalizes more than intuition suggests. The clouds also influence. This opens another chapter: even small passing clouds can reduce production in a matter of seconds, because they block direct light—the one that really triggers the generation—and leave only the diffuse light, much less usable in such an angle-dependent installation. When the sky is completely covered, the situation is even clearer: production usually sinks to 5–10% of the daily potential, figures that the consultant has seen repeated over and over again. These same extreme oscillations are common in the thousands of solar balconies installed in Germany: very good days, very bad days and a performance that depends more on urban physics – shadows, orientation, tall buildings that cut off the sun at different times – than on the calendar or the general weather. The conclusion, in Diego’s own words, is that a solar balcony is educational, useful and surprisingly efficient for its size, but not magical. It produces, yes, but it produces according to the physical reality of the building, not according to the mental idea that many have before installing one. The real barriers to installing one. In Spain there is a particular ecosystem: plug-in kits are limited by law to 800W, neighborhood communities may require permission if they are on a façade or railing and the regulations require electrical protections and, sometimes, a bidirectional meter. Alejandro Diego had no problems with his community—”from the street you can hardly see it”—but he admits that in other buildings it can be a bottleneck. On the other hand, in countries like Germany, the regulation explicitly protects the right to install them. The result has been more than 1.5 million of kits operating and half a million installed in just one … Read more

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