From the road, the verdict arrives immediately: a massive concrete block at the entrance to Alcúdia, its facade layered with faded palm murals and decades of graffiti, warning signs along the perimeter. What reads like an industrial ruin was once one of the most ambitious show palaces on the Balearic Islands — opened in 1989 with Julio Iglesias performing at the opening gala and the declared ambition of placing northern Mallorca on the map of Europe's great dinner-show destinations.

Concept
'Pepe' Casas, the entrepreneur behind the project, wanted to bring Las Vegas to Alcúdia: a multi-course gourmet menu plus an opulent stage show under one roof, capacity for up to 2,000 guests, tickets priced at the very top of what the island could offer at the time. He brought in Air Europa co-founder Tomás Cano and travel operator Agustín Pinillos (Mundicolor) — from the start, this was conceived as a major enterprise, not a local dinner theatre.
The opening gala with Julio Iglesias set the tone: spectacular, loud, expensive. But the market didn't follow. Too few tourists made the journey to the north of the island, competition grew, and a subsequent court ruling — the Audiencia Provincial declared the building permit illegal on the grounds that height and volume limits had been exceeded — sealed the end. After barely three years in operation, the palace closed for good. It has stood empty ever since.

Architecture & Atmosphere
The Balearic press called the building a 'concrete UFO' and described it as a 'Frankenstein of architecture' — and both descriptions are simultaneously accurate. From the outside, a brutalist block visible from the motorway; from the inside, a breathtaking amphitheatre that combines the proportions of an opera house with the rawness of an industrial hall. The semicircular tiered boxes from which guests once dined and watched the show still stand in outline. The stage spans several hundred square metres. Light now enters through gaps in the roof and broken glazing — diffuse, accidentally theatrical.
Graffiti cover every available surface. Rubble accumulates in the corners. Rotting timber warns against the upper floors. And yet those who have seen the interior describe it consistently as one of the most striking spaces on the island — not despite the decay, but with it.
The Show
The programme was sensational by Balearic standards: white horses crossing the enormous stage through water curtains (cortinas de agua), flamenco dancers sharing the boards with a big band, acrobats filling the full height of the space. Everything in a single evening, everything in Hollywood style. This was no dinner-theatre in the modest sense — it was spectacle at a level the island had not seen before.
Who It's For & What Occasions
Today Es Fogueró Palace is not a venue. It is one of Mallorca's most fascinating lost places — widely known among urbex photographers, graffiti artists and documentary makers who treat its decay as their subject. A visit is possible but not without risk: the site is officially closed, the upper floors are structurally unsafe, and people live permanently in the ruins who deserve respect and discretion. What begins as a spontaneous detour can end less predictably than planned.
Insider Tip
The ruin carries a darker history than most lost places: a death inside its walls was later classified as homicide and occupied the Balearic press for years. For a full account of the palace's rise and fall, the major long-form reports in El Mundo and the Majorca Daily Bulletin are worth seeking out — they trace how an entire decade's optimism was cast in concrete and then abandoned. Es Fogueró Palace is not a monument to success. It is a monument to the ambition that can fail.




