. On the north side of the square is the
Pazo de los Gago y Montenegro, from the 16th century, with a Gothic arch in the door and five
Voussoirs. On its façade it has the most imposing coat of arms in the town, a large baroque stone coat of arms from 1716 with eight coats of arms inside, bearing the arms of the Gago, Ozores, Tavares, Montenegro, Mendoza, Sotomayor, Oca, Castro and Sarmiento families. It refers to the occupation of the Gago family as guardians of the gate of the
walls of Pontevedra in the tower of the
Burgo Bridge. The pazo was renovated in the 18th century by Antonio Félix Tavares de Tavora. It has a ground floor, two upper floors and five balcony windows on each floor. On the east side, on the edge of Calle Real, is the
Pazo of the Marquis of Aranda (mayor of the
Kingdom of Galicia) from the beginning of the 18th century, with a crenellated tower (at the beginning it had two crenellated towers at its ends) and a coat of arms on its large facade with the only figures of two holders on each side in a coat of arms of the city. . On the south side of the square is the rear façade of the
Palace of the Counts of San Román, dating from the 17th century, which was the largest palace in the city. The façade now has walled arcades and has lost its crenellated tower with six balconies. It has columns of Tuscan Roman order. Inside the palace there is a small chapel with a baroque altarpiece. On the west side of the square there are
Baroque houses with coats of arms and arcades on the ground floor, among which the 18th-century house of the Pita family stands out in the centre, with a large balcony. == The square in popular culture ==