"After the blackout, they want to party": Barcelona recovers, but 300 people are sleeping in shelters.

The España Industrial sports center is hosting about 160 passengers who have been stranded in Sants.

People arriving at the municipal sports center of Industrial Spain in Barcelona to spend the night.

BarcelonaThe power returned (partially) while it was still daylight, and people applauded and excitedly photographed streetlights. At dusk, Barcelona became a mixture of darkness and light. Some streets were illuminated; in others, nothing could be seen beyond a few balconies with their bulbs on and cell phone flashlights on for orientation. Why has electricity been restored to the homes and not the streets? It's a question municipal sources haven't been able to answer. As the hours passed and dawn arrived, the center of Barcelona returned to what it was, with an artificial light (almost without dark spots) that revealed drunken tourists zigzagging with bottles in their hands, cleaning crews, and police officers (today twice as many as on other nights) patrolling.

Some central areas of Barcelona, ​​such as this area of ​​Diagonal, are still in the dark.

All this is happening as dozens of people arrive at the designated sports centers. They've been stranded by the transport strike, sleeping on the floor between the free-kick and penalty lines. The power has been back on for barely an hour, when in other parts of Barcelona it's been out since 5 p.m. They've had to catch a train at Sants station and have ended up spending the night on the sports center's court, with a mattress and a Red Cross blanket, their suitcases ready to return home as soon as possible.

Train passengers spending the night at Sants station.

A hundred more slept in the Municipal Sports Center at Gare du Nord, and around twenty more at Can Dragó. In total, almost 300 people spent the night in Barcelona's sports centers. The City Council has made these spaces available because they are strategically located near major stations, where it was anticipated that many people could be trapped. Initially, it also made the Can Ricart pavilion in the Raval area available, but it finally closed it because there weren't enough people, who have been relocated to one of the other sports centers. Breakfast is ready; the lights are dimmed as the night progresses. And there are people who are already snoring. Some are crippled from having waited and waited at Sants station, hoping the train would leave, which it hasn't.

Streets in downtown Barcelona still dark.

Aside from the sports centers, the Catalan capital's city council has also kept the metro running all night so everyone can get home regardless of the time. This has shaken up the lives of thousands of Catalans. They celebrate, surprised and happy, that they don't have to pay for the night. For example, there are about twenty people dancing to the music at the Belive club.

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