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Enjoy British Classics At Kellys, Duquesa

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Kelly’s Bar, tucked into Monte de la Duquesa Square, serves up a warm welcome and a menu that feels like a hug from home.

Arriving on a busy Thursday without a booking, we were relieved when staff kindly squeezed us in. While Spain is known for tapas and local flavours, it was a treat to enjoy familiar British classics in this cosy corner of Duquesa.

We started with the steak and ale pie, served with golden, crisp pastry and a hearty, flavour-packed filling. It was the kind of pub-style dish that instantly evokes memories of home. For dessert, the English puddings proved impossible to resist. After debating the selection, we chose treacle pudding with custard, sweet, comforting, and a perfect finale to the meal.

Generous portions and homely flavours

The menu at Kelly’s is packed with homely favourites like fish, chips and mushy peas, hunters chicken, beef stroganoff, and other classic dishes like roast dinners on a Sunday. The servings are generous, and every bite brings a taste of nostalgia.

Kelly’s also runs a Thursday buy-one-get-one-free offer, making it a great choice for a casual meal with friends. Friendly service, homely food, and a welcoming atmosphere make Kelly’s Bar a top pick for anyone craving a taste of Britain while in Duquesa.

Whether you’re stopping by for a pie, indulging in a jam sponge, or simply enjoying the friendly atmosphere, Kelly’s serves pub classics and proper English puddings with food as comforting as the smiles behind the bar.

Festive raffle at Kelly´s

Kelly’s has also just launched its annual Christmas Hamper Raffle. Tickets are available from the bar, giving customers the chance to win a hamper packed with seasonal goodies. The winner will be drawn on Christmas Eve.

Kelly´s is located in Monte de la Duquesa Square

Follow Kelly´s on Faceboook @kellysbarmonteduquesa

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A City Of Over 10 Million On The Verge Of Mass Evacuation

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“If it doesn’t rain this month, we will have no water at all.” Photo credit: Piyaset/Shutterstock

A major city in the Middle East is teetering on the brink of a major water crisis that could force authorities to ration water, and potentially evacuate some neighbourhoods, if rainfall fails to arrive in the coming weeks. Key reservoirs supplying the urban area have dropped to alarmingly low levels, raising fears for millions of residents.

The city, Tehran, the capital of Iran, is home to over 10million people. Its main reservoirs, including the Karaj Dam, are reportedly at just 8% capacity, with drought conditions now entering their sixth consecutive year. Officials have warned that without significant precipitation by December, even basic water supplies could be severely disrupted.

“If it doesn’t rain this month, we will have no water at all,” a local official said. Experts highlight that the crisis is driven by a combination of rapid urban growth, over-extraction of aquifers, and climate-driven heat and drought. The situation has become a near-worst-case water emergency, prompting urgent calls for contingency measures.

Growing Social and Economic Risks

Households and Industry Under Pressure

The impact of prolonged water shortages extends far beyond taps running dry. In Tehran, some neighbourhoods are already experiencing intermittent water supply, with pressure falling at certain times of day. Agriculture and industrial sectors, which rely heavily on water, are also facing severe disruption.

Extended shortages threaten urban livelihoods, food production, and sanitation, raising concerns that prolonged scarcity could become a social and economic crisis. Officials warn that if reservoirs reach critical levels, mandatory evacuation of the most affected districts could become necessary, though details on such operations remain unclear.

Why Cities Are at Risk

Climate, Infrastructure, and Rising Demand

Tehran’s looming water crisis, and warnings across Europe, stem from a combination of prolonged drought, hotter summers, and reduced rainfall, compounded by rapid population growth and increased urban water demand. Aging infrastructure, including reservoirs, dams, and aquifers, struggles to keep pace with rising consumption, leaving cities vulnerable when dry periods extend beyond normal patterns.

Southern Europe and Mediterranean regions, including Spain, Portugal, Cyprus, Malta, and Greece, face similar pressures. Even typically wet cities such as London are flagged for future water stress, highlighting that climate and demand challenges are now a global urban concern.

What Happens if Water Runs Out

Rationing, Cuts, and Broader Impacts

When water supplies reach critical lows, authorities may implement rationing or targeted shutoffs, affecting households, industry, and agriculture. In Tehran, some neighbourhoods already experience intermittent supply, and officials warn that evacuation of the hardest-hit districts could become necessary if reservoirs remain near empty.

The social and economic consequences extend beyond immediate shortages. Disrupted water access threatens sanitation, food production, and urban livelihoods, showing that water security is not only an environmental issue but a critical urban and economic concern.

Key Points

  • Tehran faces a historic water crisis, with reservoirs at just 8% capacity, prompting warnings of rationing and possible evacuation.
  • Climate change, prolonged drought, urban population growth, and over‑extraction of aquifers are driving crises in Tehran and beyond.
  • Southern Europe and Mediterranean regions, including Spain, Portugal, Cyprus, Malta, and Greece, are experiencing growing water stress.
  • UK, despite its rainy reputation, is at risk of severe water shortages within decades if preventative action is not taken.
  • Aging infrastructure, rising demand, and irregular rainfall highlight the urgent need for sustainable water management.

Water Security Is Urban Security

Tehran’s crisis illustrates the urgent need for resilient water systems. European and UK authorities must invest in infrastructure, enforce sustainable consumption, and adopt climate-proof water management strategies. Otherwise, more cities may confront “DayZero” scenarios once thought impossible.

The situation also highlights the importance of long-term planning, including rainfall capture, wastewater reuse, aquifer management, and public awareness campaigns. Without decisive action, even major cities with historically abundant water may face unprecedented shortages in the decades ahead.

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Spain Raises Retirement Age: What Expats Need To Know

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2026 also marks the start of the dual pension-calculation system. Photo credit: Wavebreakmedia/ Shutterstock

Spain’s pension system enters a decisive year in 2026. Lawmakers have set the ordinary legal retirement age at 66 years and ten months for the whole of 2026, the final incremental step in the transition begun in 2013 toward a standard retirement age of 67. At the same time the government will start rolling out a new, gradual system for calculating pensions that will be phased in over 12 years.

Rather than a single measure, 2026 bundles several linked changes: the precise legal age adjustment, the start of the so-called “dual” calculation regime, increases in certain contribution surcharges and adjustments to top and minimum pensions. Taken together, the reforms are designed to shore up long-term sustainability while softening the immediate impact for those with extended contribution records.

What exactly changes in 2026

Age, contribution thresholds and the dual computation system

From January 1 next year the ordinary retirement age for claiming a full contributory pension without meeting the higher-contribution requirement will be 66 years and 10 months. Workers who have completed 38 years and three months of contributions will still be able to retire at 65 without penalty.

Crucially, 2026 is also the year that initiates the dual regime for the pension calculation period. Over a 12-year phasing, the system will move towards allowing retirees to choose between two calculation bases at the end of the transition. The long-term option will consider up to 29 years of career history (with a mechanism to discard a specified number of worst months), while the existing reference period remains the last 25 years. In 2026 the computation base will begin with 304 months (about 25.33 years) with transitional discard rules; the full choice between options will be available progressively up to 2037.

Other technical and financial changes for 2026

Contributions, caps and minimum pensions

The 2026 package also raises the surcharge known as the Mecanismo de Equidad Intergeneracional (MEI) from 0.8% to 0.9%, apportioned 0.75% to employers and 0.15% to workers, with a roadmap towards 1.2% by 2029. A solidarity surcharge on higher salaries remains in place and will continue to rise gradually in the coming years.

The maximum contribution base will increase next year by a measure tied to inflation plus an adjustment, leaving it roughly 3.9% higher; that raises the upper monthly base to around €4,922. Minimum pensions and non-contributory pensions will be revalued above average inflation, with an additional adjustment designed to narrow the gap to the poverty threshold.

Rules affecting the initial maximum pension also change: the mechanism that updates top pensions will add a small annual cumulative increment intended to preserve purchasing power over the long term.

How this compares with the UK

Different structures, similar pressures

The United Kingdom is following a parallel path, though under a different model. The current UK State Pension age is 66 and is scheduled to rise to 67 between 2026 and 2028, with further proposals already in place for a future increase to 68 during the 2030s.

The key difference lies in structure. Spain keeps a contribution-based exception, allowing retirement at 65 for those with long insurance careers, while the UK operates a flat age-based threshold with no equivalent early full-pension route linked to contribution years. UK workers must wait until they reach the statutory age regardless of how long they have paid National Insurance. Both countries are responding to the same pressures: longer life expectancy, falling birth rates and a shrinking ratio of workers to pensioners. However, Spain’s system is more finely tuned to contribution history, whereas the UK model is more rigid but administratively simpler.

What this means for British expats in Spain

Cross-border contributions and planning

British nationals who work legally in Spain pay into the Spanish Social Security system and are therefore subject to Spanish retirement rules, including the 2026 age of 66 years and 10 months.

For those with working histories in both countries, coordination rules allow aggregation of contribution periods made in Spain and the UK when assessing eligibility. This can help some expats reach the Spanish contribution threshold that permits retirement at 65.

However, the increase means some British workers in Spain may need to delay retirement beyond what they had originally planned. At the same time, their UK State Pension age will be increasing along a similar timeline, which could help synchronise income streams but requires careful tax and timing planning.

The essentials at a glance

  • In 2026 the ordinary retirement age is 66 years and 10 months; the statutory 67-year threshold follows the transition.
  • 65 remains available without penalty for those with 38 years and three months of contributions.
  • A dual computation system begins phased rollout in 2026, expanding the periods used to calculate pensions.
  • The MEI contribution rises to 0.9%, and targeted surcharges on higher salaries will increase progressively.
  • Minimum pensions, maximum bases and other technical levers are adjusted to protect purchasing power and system viability.

A technical year with wide ramifications

2026 is more than a modest age bump: it launches a technical overhaul affecting how pensions are computed, how contributions finance the system and how benefits are updated. For workers, employers and expatriates, the changes reinforce the need for careful retirement planning and timely review of contribution histories as Spain locks in the final stage of a reform that will shape retirement for decades.

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Frank Gehry, Of Guggenheim Bilbao, Has Died

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Frank Gehry & Guggenheim Bilbao. Credit: Rudy Mareel – Shutterstock

Frank O. Gehry, the Canadian-American architect whose audacious, sculptural designs liberated modern architecture and whose Guggenheim Museum Bilbao revolutionised urban planning and firmly put the post-industrial city on the global map, died on Friday, December 5, at his home in Santa Monica. He was 96. The cause was a brief respiratory illness, confirmed by his firm.

Widely considered one of the most important designers since Frank Lloyd Wright, Gehry was the most prominent voice of Deconstructivism, a style characterised by fragmented forms, non-rectilinear shapes, and a rejection of traditional cool formalism. His buildings, clad in shimmering titanium and steel, blurred the lines between architecture and sculpture, challenging both critics and the public.

The ever lasting “Bilbao Effect”

Gehry’s most impactful creation, the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, opened in 1997 on the banks of the Nervión River in Spain, single-handedly placing the once-shabby, post-industrial Basque city on the global cultural map and helping the city to regain the pride it needed to put an end to separatist terrorism. The curving, seemingly chaotic titanium-clad structure was an instant international sensation, drawing upward of 1 million visitors a year and generating massive economic and cultural revitalisation.

This transformative process, coined the “Bilbao Effect“, became a global blueprint for urban renewal driven by a single piece of landmark architecture. The success was so profound that in 1997, his peer, the eminent architect Philip Johnson, proclaimed the Bilbao museum “the greatest building of our time”.

A legacy of not only curves

Gehry’s vision extended far further than Bilbao. His other unmistakable works include the sweeping curves of the Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles (2003), the distinctive Fondation Louis Vuitton in Paris (2014), and the bold, raw aesthetic of his own Gehry Residence in Santa Monica.

3 iconic Gehry designs.
3 iconic Gehry designs.
Credit: Credit: John O’Neill; Piotr Iłowiecki; IK’s World Trip – Wiki CC

Essentially, Gehry’s practice pioneered the use of CATIA software, initially developed for the French aerospace industry, to translate his spontaneous physical models into precise, constructible blueprints. This innovation helped usher in the era of digital design in architecture. A winner of the 1989 Pritzker Prize, architecture’s highest honour, Gehry received global recognition eight years before the Guggenheim was even completed, making him recognised as a revolutionary long before the titanium sheen of Bilbao captured the world’s imagination.

Frank Gehry, born Frank Owen Goldberg in 1929, leaves behind a legacy defined by risk-taking and an emotional, visceral power in his buildings that revived architectural spirit after decades of restraint. He will be remembered not just for the spectacle of his forms but for irrevocably changing the way buildings are designed and how cities utilise architecture to dream again.

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