The beginning of the street coincides with the
Peregrina square and at the corner between the square and Michelena street was the building of the apothecary Perfecto Feijoo's pharmacy where the
Ravachol parrot died in 1913 and where today there is a sculpture of the parrot made by the sculptor José Luis Penado in 2006. At number 28 of the street is the
Bank of Spain building. Its construction began in 1900 and it was inaugurated in 1903. It is an example of the administrative architecture of the Spanish state at the beginning of the 20th century, in an eclectic style. Its main entrance is on Michelena Street and it has a backyard with an entrance on Fernández Villaverde Street. The building's facades are symmetrical and solemn. The main door on Michelena Street ends in a semicircular arch with an upper stone balcony on
corbels. The stone elements that frame and decorate the windows of the façades have geometric decoration in the upper part, which ends in
segmental arches. At number 30 of the street is the
Marquis of Riestra's mansion, built at the end of the 19th century, where the Marquis of Riestra established his residence and the headquarters of his Riestra Bank. It is an
eclectic building with
art nouveau elements. Its façade has galleries,
horseshoe arches and decorative frames. The windows and the
carriage entrance on the ground floor are framed by semicircular arches. The ground floor is surrounded by a granite plinth. The buildings at numbers 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 10, 24, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40 and 42 date from the 19th century. Number 2 dates from 1853 and was the house of
Manuel Portela Valladares. Number 4 dates from 1878 and number 24 was the house of the politician Alejandro Mon. At number 20 of the street, the restaurant-tapería La Muralla has incorporated a section of the medieval walls in the basement, which has become an additional element of the interior decoration. == Gallery ==